Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks all for your advice. He wasn’t functioning and failed to turn in assignments, and he wasn’t aware of his mental health issue until he had a breakdown and was admitted in hospital. He is taking time off from school now, getting treatment and volunteering in animal shelters, both have been going very well, but I know he worries about his GPA as he is aiming for vet school. Normally he would approach his dean and discuss his options, but mentally he’s not ready yet. Hence I am asking here to get some info before I talk to the dean on his behalf. I’ll support him for any career decisions but honestly I’d hate to see him give up on his dream.
Be very cautious and humble when you speak to the dean on his behalf. Don’t come off like a pushy helicopter mom. Remember you are asking for an accommodation of some kind that they don’t have to give you.
I am curious - was it just an F in one class, or did he do poorly across the board? If just one class, why would a mental health issue affect just one class?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Withdraw from the course before the official end of the semester and retake this summer at the same university.
It will still appear on the official transcript as WF
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid has until next week to withdraw from a class. So, take the W instead.
What schools allow a withdrawal so late in the semester. At my kid’s prestigious school, late withdrawals are only allowed in exceptional circumstances, meaning severe health problems, etc
Anonymous wrote:Withdraw from the course before the official end of the semester and retake this summer at the same university.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Prestigious” college just don’t give out F’s. Gotta try real hard not to pass.
Agree with this poster. Hard to get even a B at “prestigious” institutions, since that would be an admission that an acceptance error was committed.
Can happen at any quality institution for a variety of reasons. Did DC have unexcused absences that triggers the F? Did they fail to turn in an assignment on time or at all?
Retake course and demonstrate commitment to pass. Yes an F will drop the GPA but can be overcome.
This sadly is the issue with limited or unlimited retakes of exams, lowest grade of 50%, etc., common in most high schools today. Kids coast through HS and think they can do the same in college, but at quality universities get a wake up call about what life is like in the real world.
Take class agin if offered in summer. Buckle down and get a B or better, may impact getting into top vet schools but will not be shut out by one mistake, if they learn from it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most likely if he got an F he just didn't attend and/or didn't submit. If he's otherwise doing OK, my guess is he blew it off and misjudged the reprecussions. For example my program states that 4 absences for a course that meets weekly is automatic fauilure - some students test this.
Have a heart to heart with him about how serious he is about school.
Again, this is not always the case. I'm the poster above. My kid probably could have recovered from the failed tests if he had advocated and met with the professor and maybe wound up with a C- (as he did when he retook it), but for him it was indeed the content (a professor created-macro that broke down Excel every time you made a mistake, in the middle of in-class tests--nobody got As in the class and test averages were around 60%). Those of you whose kids haven't experienced professors like this have no idea what you're talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Prestigious” college just don’t give out F’s. Gotta try real hard not to pass.
Not true. OP: My kid failed a class at a "prestigious" school as well. It was far more stressful than I anticipated, as it this school, it means automatic probation, so he had to get better than a 2.0 the next semester. Of course, that had never been a problem, but when that stress is on top of you now, it just feels awful. At his school, the only option is to retake, then they average the two grades together into the GPA. Though the F always shows on the transcript. I hate to say it, but it's following him into his job search as he approaches graduation. I have no advice for you, only commiseration. Sorry!
Anonymous wrote:Most likely if he got an F he just didn't attend and/or didn't submit. If he's otherwise doing OK, my guess is he blew it off and misjudged the reprecussions. For example my program states that 4 absences for a course that meets weekly is automatic fauilure - some students test this.
Have a heart to heart with him about how serious he is about school.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks all for your advice. He wasn’t functioning and failed to turn in assignments, and he wasn’t aware of his mental health issue until he had a breakdown and was admitted in hospital. He is taking time off from school now, getting treatment and volunteering in animal shelters, both have been going very well, but I know he worries about his GPA as he is aiming for vet school. Normally he would approach his dean and discuss his options, but mentally he’s not ready yet. Hence I am asking here to get some info before I talk to the dean on his behalf. I’ll support him for any career decisions but honestly I’d hate to see him give up on his dream.
Anonymous wrote:“Prestigious” college just don’t give out F’s. Gotta try real hard not to pass.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks all for your advice. He wasn’t functioning and failed to turn in assignments, and he wasn’t aware of his mental health issue until he had a breakdown and was admitted in hospital. He is taking time off from school now, getting treatment and volunteering in animal shelters, both have been going very well, but I know he worries about his GPA as he is aiming for vet school. Normally he would approach his dean and discuss his options, but mentally he’s not ready yet. Hence I am asking here to get some info before I talk to the dean on his behalf. I’ll support him for any career decisions but honestly I’d hate to see him give up on his dream.