Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Well, the majority of you are not only rude af, but you are wrong. The college AO called us to say everything was squared away and nothing more was needed " after the HS corrected their error"
They admitted to them that they sent it to the wrong school.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Well, the majority of you are not only rude af, but you are wrong. The college AO called us to say everything was squared away and nothing more was needed " after the HS corrected their error"
They admitted to them that they sent it to the wrong school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Well, the majority of you are not only rude af, but you are wrong. The college AO called us to say everything was squared away and nothing more was needed " after the HS corrected their error"
They admitted to them that they sent it to the wrong school.
Honestly though, does it matter?!
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Well, the majority of you are not only rude af, but you are wrong. The college AO called us to say everything was squared away and nothing more was needed " after the HS corrected their error"
They admitted to them that they sent it to the wrong school.
Anonymous wrote:They told you that your daughter screwed up, blame her.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting nobody is mentioning UNC here. A SLAC would have dealt with this quickly by picking up the phone and calling the school counselor. DD might not have even known about it.
With big public universities, you get what you pay for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s really no need to assign blame in this situation. Mistakes happen and this one is really not a big deal.
It's a huge deal and caused a ton of stress for my DD as she also got the email that her admission was on hold. It's the middle of July. Admissions are closed. Had they simply retracted her offer she would up a creek without a paddle. She had already done her housing and established contact with her roommate. This isn't a whoopsie daisy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The verification is the drop down menu. If your daughter accidentally chose the wrong school, it isn’t her high school’s fault.
The problem was fixed. Move on.
Again, the counselor has no responsibility to endure they are sending it to the correct school? My DD has no access to anything to verify and if an error this large is this easy to make you'd think the school would be looking precisely for this because it must happen all the time.
I'm incredulous that my DD was the only senior of several hundred in her class to make such a simple mistake.
We have moved on but I want to know what happened.
Anonymous wrote:There’s really no need to assign blame in this situation. Mistakes happen and this one is really not a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting nobody is mentioning UNC here. A SLAC would have dealt with this quickly by picking up the phone and calling the school counselor. DD might not have even known about it.
With big public universities, you get what you pay for.
Lol sure you need to justify that $90k we get it friend.
And what then justifies the 90k oos for UVA or Michigan?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The HS is lying.
The way the process works is UNC Chapel Hill requests the final transcript from the HS and they comply. Guidance counselors sent the transcript to the wrong state school campus all the time.
This is easily proven by the fact that Chapel Hill has the intial transcript. There would be no explanation for the change.
Your DD didn't 'mis select' anything.
+1 I can't believe it took 3 pages to get here. If UNC has the first transcript, they come back and ask for the last transcript. OP's DD isn't even involved at this point. It's all between the HS and the college.
The only explanation is the counselor is lying to cover his ass.
This is not the way it worked for my child. He had to request a final transcript be sent to the school he was attending. I assume the process is pretty automated. Student selects the school which has a code. HS electronically sends the form as requested. There is no one putting the transcript in an envelope and noticing that an earlier one went to a different campus.
+1 My kid had to go into the form and request the final transcript to be sent. Initial transcripts were sent through the Common App, the final transcript was in a different form with the one school they decided to attend. My kid is the one who has to identify which of the schools he was admitted to he is planning on attending and wants the final transcript sent.