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Don't you know? UMC/UC people NEVER make mistakes. It's very impolite to suggest that a UMC/UC person could make a mistake. Every employee must grovel before their superior attention to detail and superior intelligence. |
Yes - they sent it to the wrong school. But they didn't say why/how that happened. If it was your DD's fault, would you want the HS telling the college that? |
Good gracious, move on already. Problem solved, crisis averted. Model better behavior for your daughter. Mistakes are made throughout life. Moving past them is a skill you need to show her. |
FFS. They weren't going to retract her her offer until she had a chance to get the last of her paperwork in. A few students make this mistake every year. It needs to be fixed, but it's not the huge deal that you are making it out to be. It was a mistake. It was fixed. That's all the university wanted you to do. The only way they would have retracted her offer is if you didn't fix the problem after at least a couple of warnings that there was a problem. |
Funny - but OP said the school name was changed for privacy. |
+1 I'm a professor and so many of my advisees have holds on their records at the *end* of fall freshman semester before for HS final transcripts that they forgot to be requested to be sent. The biggest thing that happens is that they can't get their first semester grades nor register for the next semester courses until they do this. |
Really OP - I'm trying to talk you down from a ledge here - you are way too worked up about this and and inappropriately laser focused on blame. It's healthy for you or DD and the blame-game is a bad role model for DD.
It's ok for the two of you to wonder whether "the wrong drop down choice was sent" or not. You will never know if it was DD or the school at fault, and it is annoying if it was the school that someone would tell some CYA lies. But you just won't ever know the full truth. And it just doesn't matter because you can choose to move on and are grateful it all worked out. All the things that could have gone very wrong, did not. |
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Corrected your daughter's error. The AO was being polite. And it's an understandable error. NBD. OP, why are you so defensive? This is a great opportunity for your daughter to learn to be a little more careful with these things. My kid just sent his transcript to graduate school. I didn't check whether he picked the right school in the drop-down menu. He's an adult. If he made a mistake, he'll quickly learn if they don't receive it. You're setting up your daughter for a difficult life ahead if you don't want her to own any of this. The world doesn't double-check each transaction you do as an adult. And to make such a HUGE deal over a minor thing that was fixed is concerning. Let it be. |
Exactly. OP needs to chill on this one. |
AMEN |
PP's kid didn't turn down UNC. I heard she's on the wait list at CNU. |
DP but transcripts were due like three weeks ago, so it's very likely it was waaaay overdue. Which also points to the school at fault. |
And the lie would be what, exactly? That she made a mistake on a dropdown menu and had to re-request a needed document? As one might do, for example, on an insurance claim, a tax form, or any one of the thousands of other documents passed back and forth by adults every day? I just don't understand what's at stake here, OP. Enlighten us. |