If you get a D in a math class 1 quarter will colleges eyeball that and reject you?
I got a D in my math class because my math teacher assigned one of the hardest tests i have ever taken in my entire life. Theres no retakes which is a bummer but im ready to take a D (not a gay way) in the class. Would colleges care more about this 1 d or the overall grade in the course?
Anonymous2021-02-11T19:01:32Z
Nurse in Tennessee fainted after receiving COVID vaccine
Question: why should we take it if it has such side effects?
Nurse in Alaska had anaphylactic shock
Trump and Biden are in cahoots to chip everyone via needles on the vaccines
5G will kill vaccinated
Population control = depopulation = Georgia Guide stones 500 million max population
LA RESISTANCE ! ! !
Doctor Fauci = son of Mother Theresa; Theresa supplied Jeffrey Epstein's island with kids to fondle with
Adrenochrome will be extracted from dissidents in underground re-education camps; dissidents were taken there (when electricity was turned off for a few days) at 4AM after drone with scopolamine gassed them (Project Pogo and Project Zyphr)...
Project Pogo = gov't shills Alex Jones, Qanon, Adam Green, etc. tell you something funny and you comment or like, then you'll be exterminated under Project Zyphr... David Goldberg revealed this and other stuff (like how Trump converted to Judaism) and he got executed..
Here's what you need to know: 1. Admissions staff will only see grades that are reported on your transcript. If your high school reports quarter grades permanently on your transcript, it will be seen. If you school only records semester grades, that D will be incorporated into your final grade for the semester. 2. One bad grade will not derail your chances at 90% of universities where your cumulative GPA is in line with those who are admitted. One C, D, or F in any class won't fly for the most competitive and elite universities. 3. Admissions staff are looking mostly at the big picture. They want to see how well you do overall, how well you do progressively over time, and how much your challenge yourself academically with your course choices, etc.