Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The A students work for the B students, the C students own the company, and the dropouts invented the product the company makes.
Keep telling yourself that so you can feel better.
You really think Elon Musk, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg were C students in high school?
When you got the facts wrong, you conclusion and decision based on it be could be way off. I feel bad for you and your children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my cross country search/research project for my child, I found northern Michigan (above) and Wichita state give auto admission at 2.25. NMU is already fairly low cost, and they give a “bridge scholarship” to incoming out of state students to get cost close to their in state tuition.
There are also a couple open admit schools in Utah. We investigated Utah Tech for a while-scholarships there start at a 2.3.
Springfield College in MA gives scholarships starting at a 2.5.
Slippery Rock in PA gives a reduced oos tuition at 3.0, BUT the tuition is already rather low AND good performance at the school can qualify you for sophomore year and above. I love the second chance feel of that.
We plugged in my daughter’s sub-2.5 gpa to the COA calculators and Randolph, Meredith, Alma, Shenandoah and Emory & Henry claim she can still qualify for scholarship money.
how on earth do these small colleges survive with giving out so much aid to people with low scores?
Anonymous wrote:In my cross country search/research project for my child, I found northern Michigan (above) and Wichita state give auto admission at 2.25. NMU is already fairly low cost, and they give a “bridge scholarship” to incoming out of state students to get cost close to their in state tuition.
There are also a couple open admit schools in Utah. We investigated Utah Tech for a while-scholarships there start at a 2.3.
Springfield College in MA gives scholarships starting at a 2.5.
Slippery Rock in PA gives a reduced oos tuition at 3.0, BUT the tuition is already rather low AND good performance at the school can qualify you for sophomore year and above. I love the second chance feel of that.
We plugged in my daughter’s sub-2.5 gpa to the COA calculators and Randolph, Meredith, Alma, Shenandoah and Emory & Henry claim she can still qualify for scholarship money.
Anonymous wrote:I have a dyslexic kid with a 2.8 GPA. School has been torture for him...and he wants to be a teacher. He's on a mission to make things better for kids like him. So no irony in a not-great student becoming a teacher. I think we need more of them, frankly. You need to be creative, smart, empathetic, and hard working to be a teacher, but I don't know that finding school fun or easy is a criteria.
I hope your daughter finds a great fit school and becomes a fabulous teacher. We need her.
Anonymous wrote:I was a C student in high school. I attended NVCC for 3 years and then transferred to GMU.
I now work as an HR manager and make 90K. My husband makes twice as me. Your daughter will be fine!
Anonymous wrote:I was a C student in high school. I attended NVCC for 3 years and then transferred to GMU.
I now work as an HR manager and make 90K. My husband makes twice as me. Your daughter will be fine!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend graduated HS in PG county with a 1.8 GPA. He had to complete night classes to pass. Opted for PGCC, transferred to UMCP, graduated magna cum laude with an Accounting degree. He was assumed to have a learning disability. In reality, he was disengaged.
It's no longer 1985
Ok Smart Ass thanks for the ageism
It's true, though.
- NP