Yes. Guaranteed admission to UVA with a 3.4 GPA from any VA community college. |
Said the parent of the D kid. This is all nonsense. |
| Your kid will be able to get into college so the grades aren't a big problem. I would work on their soft skills/people skills and try to find a career path that actually motivates them. |
D is for Diploma is also a saying. I think B or C kid who is very personable and driven will go further than an A introvert. The problem is getting the initial opportunity which is much easier with a higher average from a better known school |
| I was a B/C (sometimes D) student in HS (graduated with a 2.6.) Went to college. Graduated with a 2.7. Got into grad school and graduated with a 3.5. Have been gainfully employed since graduation. I am great at my job. I am not great at school. |
This was my experience. Good, not great, student. No real opportunities so I had to manufacture them. But once I did, the sky was the limit. Go the best school you can, it makes the first step easier but it won't dictate your success. You will. |
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I think my husband graduated HS with a 2.0 or thereabouts. He couldn't get into Arizona State as a resident.
Went to CC, went to university, got engineering degree, worked for a while then went to law school. Undergrad took longer (changed majors a few times plus had some major tragic life events) but tuition was also dirt cheap in the 90s. Turned out ok. |
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C student, Business major, earning 145K in govt. I've earned 200-220K a few years, but that's the cap. First gen, low income.
School is boring for a lot of kids, especially boys. Some of us lunch later. |
| *launch |
| Kicked around a bit in HS and college. Finally got myself motivated when I got to higher division classes and went to law school. Now earning 7 figures. All is not lost, OP. |
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I mean, I didn't even really have all B's and C's (I had some D's and even an F) and I went to Indiana University and graduated in phi beta kappa. My SAT score was fine, but nothing great. Having said that I was in high school in the 90's, was depressed, didn't study for the SAT, only took it once, and skipped ALOT of school my last two years of high school. I was initially recruited by a different school for a sport I was good at, but I didn't participate in that at IU so that was a non-factor.
Not sure how much an experience from that many years ago is worth. I think going to a large state school can be a solution (maybe not UMD though) and/or find a small school that the kid is interested in and then have them demonstrate the interest. Or take a gap year and let the kid get a real taste of life without a college degree and then they will be more motivated. |
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Oh and I meant to say that I took a gap year, which is how I know it might motivate a kid to go to college and do well. That's what happened to me. I got recruited for a sport, didn't want to go do that (depression), so I didn't go to college right out of high school. Over the course of the following year I figured out I DID want to go to college so then I applied to Indiana, got in, and went and did very well.
People around here make it out like what happens to you immediately following high school makes or breaks the rest of your life, but that isn't true especially if you have a family that can help support you taking a little more time to figure things out. |
Troll. |
Most 17 year olds are very uncertain of what they want to be. I was the average student in high school you describe. Attended a very good but not highly competitive college. The job I have now has nothing to do with what I studied. During those 4 years in college I grew academically as well as personally. I now have a successful career and make more money than I ever thought I would. Encourage and support your kid to pursue a college degree- it’s a wonderful way to explore interests, challenge beliefs and grow up. |
| I went to college and became an engineer. It was the 1980s and average grades were normal. |