Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One question regarding GPAs in Naviance.
When it lists the GPAs of accepted students at a college, are those the GPAs that the students applied with (e.g. from the end of junior year or through first quarter senior year) or are those the GPAs that the accepted students ended up with at the end of high school?
I asked this question, too, when we were going through the process. The answer I received was it shows the GPA from the END of high school. I can confirm this is true for at least my child because I can see their SAT score on the chart. I never checked their GPA at the end of the year (senioritis set in and I gave up) and I see their GPA actually went down from when they applied.
Which makes no sense because how does that help anyone gauge whether they have the grades to apply?
DP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's so much that could be better about FCPS Naviance.
- ability to show applicant gender
- ability to show ED or RD
- ability to show athlete or non-athlete
- ability to show just last year instead of the last three years
- ability to show ALL of FCPS not just your school (especially important for small, highly rejective colleges)
As it is, the scattergrams are pretty useless.
But even more useless are the FCPS counselors who just shrug and say "oh well, Naviance is what it is, nothing we can do about it".
That’s frustrating. My kid’s district shows TO, ED/EA/RD, and it also shows waitlist followed by accepted/denied. Ours does not show hooked acceptances. So it’s fairly helpful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also take some of the test scores with a grain of salt, depending on your counseling office. DD retook the ACT and moved up to a 33, but Naviance still only shows her first test score, despite multiple emails to the counseling office (She graduated in June, and I just checked Naviance because I was curious.)
Does the guidance counselor have to input the updated SAT/ACT scores (beyond the first set) into Naviance? Naively, I was thinking the process might be automated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One question regarding GPAs in Naviance.
When it lists the GPAs of accepted students at a college, are those the GPAs that the students applied with (e.g. from the end of junior year or through first quarter senior year) or are those the GPAs that the accepted students ended up with at the end of high school?
I asked this question, too, when we were going through the process. The answer I received was it shows the GPA from the END of high school. I can confirm this is true for at least my child because I can see their SAT score on the chart. I never checked their GPA at the end of the year (senioritis set in and I gave up) and I see their GPA actually went down from when they applied.
Anonymous wrote:There's so much that could be better about FCPS Naviance.
- ability to show applicant gender
- ability to show ED or RD
- ability to show athlete or non-athlete
- ability to show just last year instead of the last three years
- ability to show ALL of FCPS not just your school (especially important for small, highly rejective colleges)
As it is, the scattergrams are pretty useless.
But even more useless are the FCPS counselors who just shrug and say "oh well, Naviance is what it is, nothing we can do about it".
Anonymous wrote:Also take some of the test scores with a grain of salt, depending on your counseling office. DD retook the ACT and moved up to a 33, but Naviance still only shows her first test score, despite multiple emails to the counseling office (She graduated in June, and I just checked Naviance because I was curious.)