Will Stanford Rescind?

<p>Ive been admitted through REA early reading in October for sports. But this semester I had all B’s(taking 3 AP classes, 2 of which were 80’s). I am concerned because last year I had straights A’s (1 AP and 1 Honors). My GPA last semester was an 88.25 and my GPA last year was 94.64. Is this too large of a drop or am I ok? </p>

<p>Also I’ve had B’s my freshman and sophomore year so I’m not a complete straight A student. And please don’t play the “your an athlete” card because my letter says the same thing that everyone else does about academic performance. </p>

<p>To put my mind at ease, can someone with real experience or knows someone that has gone through tho situation please give me some feedback? Thanks</p>

<p>You will absolutely be rescinded simply because you revived a 4 year old thread. </p>

<p>I’m joking. Stay away from C’s and you will be fine. Stanford A.O rarely rescinds because it understands the added stresses of senior year (besides you’re not doing HORRIBLE, just not…great).</p>

<p>Ok for the people getting C’s in math are you doing science/ math/ engineering related majors? Cuz I can’t see Stanford rescinding your application just because you’re not very good at math, especially if that isn’t the area you’re strongest at (which I"m assuming is what’s happening here). Furthermore, if you can explain to them that your math class is harder than the normal AP, I don’t see them even caring.</p>

<p>No school wants to rescind an offer unless you flunk out or get arrested. The “bad PR” from the media and in the academic world of rescinding a student who makes a B or C is too great for any elite university to take. By May the adcom is busy with travel for next years applicants.</p>

<p>I don’t think so. A D is borderline</p>

<p>I concur Mrinal2207</p>

<p>If you have a problem with one subject, you are fine. Multiple subjects on the other hand would worry a college that you are slacking off and not taking school seriously.</p>

<p>They want to you to come in on a high rather than a low.</p>