Anonymous wrote:My kid got a 4.0 (4 As). I was impressed. Worked hard but not that hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a college professor with a MCPS magnet kid.
In high school I suspect my kid will have a 4.0ish. Their first semester freshman GPA is shaping up to be an unweighted 4.0 (there will be a few B+A=A grades).
If they get to college and pull a 3.6 average across all 4 years that is a success to me.
Honestly, people. Get a grip.
NP- I’m not that happy with my kid’s 3.5 in junior year because she was originally pre-med and from what I could tell that was too low to get into med school. Now, she’s thinking law school. I looked at some random, not so great schools. The bottom quartile of U Minn had a 3.6 I believe. That’s why I’m worried. What’s your view on needing high grades for grad school/law school.
Why are YOU researching law school
admissions data for your college junior????
Seriously, your “kid” is 20 years old. They have the same access to the internet as you do. Plus all the pre-law resources on campus (info sessions, advisors/counselors etc.)
If they can’t take responsibility for navigating law school admissions, they absolutely are NOT READY for law school.
Stop doing everything for your adult “kid.” Maybe then they will step up and show the maturity, motivation, and initiative you’re hoping to see.
You really need to chill out. A parent checking GPA requirements for law or med school out of their own curiosity is not "navigating law school admissions." You're just being an a$$.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a college professor with a MCPS magnet kid.
In high school I suspect my kid will have a 4.0ish. Their first semester freshman GPA is shaping up to be an unweighted 4.0 (there will be a few B+A=A grades).
If they get to college and pull a 3.6 average across all 4 years that is a success to me.
Honestly, people. Get a grip.
NP- I’m not that happy with my kid’s 3.5 in junior year because she was originally pre-med and from what I could tell that was too low to get into med school. Now, she’s thinking law school. I looked at some random, not so great schools. The bottom quartile of U Minn had a 3.6 I believe. That’s why I’m worried. What’s your view on needing high grades for grad school/law school.
Why are YOU researching law school
admissions data for your college junior????
Seriously, your “kid” is 20 years old. They have the same access to the internet as you do. Plus all the pre-law resources on campus (info sessions, advisors/counselors etc.)
If they can’t take responsibility for navigating law school admissions, they absolutely are NOT READY for law school.
Stop doing everything for your adult “kid.” Maybe then they will step up and show the maturity, motivation, and initiative you’re hoping to see.
Anonymous wrote:DS 3.95 Purdue engineering. He works hard, doesn’t miss class, and isn’t on screens all day. He only had a 3.7 uw at strong FCPS high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:4.0 3 A+’s and 2 A’s
I am so proud of my kid in an honors program no less.
UMD?
Yes!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:4.0 3 A+’s and 2 A’s
I am so proud of my kid in an honors program no less.
UMD?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a college professor with a MCPS magnet kid.
In high school I suspect my kid will have a 4.0ish. Their first semester freshman GPA is shaping up to be an unweighted 4.0 (there will be a few B+A=A grades).
If they get to college and pull a 3.6 average across all 4 years that is a success to me.
Honestly, people. Get a grip.
NP- I’m not that happy with my kid’s 3.5 in junior year because she was originally pre-med and from what I could tell that was too low to get into med school. Now, she’s thinking law school. I looked at some random, not so great schools. The bottom quartile of U Minn had a 3.6 I believe. That’s why I’m worried. What’s your view on needing high grades for grad school/law school.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not saying some you can't ask to know your student's gpa. I guess you have worries. You have concerns. It's weird though that you think every parent is asking or expects to know.