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Get Into College

Your Academics Speak Loudly

Courses You Took in High School

By now, I *REALLY* hope that I have ingrained into you the fact that there’s nothing more important in your application than the strength of your academics. Unlike essays and the SATs which can be polished in several weeks, the transcript is a factual culmination of four years of academic work you did.

There’s little you can do to change your academic record. That is why ADCOMs (college admissions officers) will always turn to the transcript before anything else. After all, to get an idea of how you will perform next time in college, it’s only logical to assess how you've been performing so far.

What courses you take in high school and what grades you get will determine where you end up in September. When ADCOMs look at your folder, the first thing they will see is your transcript. “Has this student challenged herself?” “Are his grades showing an upward trend, declining, or stagnant?” Challenged means taking the toughest courses you can handle.

Please bear in mind that when while you are encouraged to go for the most demanding schedule, you must be able to do well. No point taking the toughest courses if it eats into your social and extra curricular activities. ADCOMs can see that you're trying too hard, and it may instead work against your favor in the college admissions process.

“Is it better to get a B in the Advanced Placement class or an A in the regular class?”

Not surprisingly, this question is asked a lot of times. Of course, the best thing would be to get an A in the AP class. But seriously, ADCOMs would rather you get a B in the AP class. AP classes are much tougher than regular ones, and getting a B – despite the grade itself – shows that you can handle tough workloads.

Just think about it, if A was so important, then every student would try to pad his and her transcript with courses like Getting Slim for the 21st Century just so they could fatten their GPA. That is why grades alone are not enough.

An important thing to note here is that while ADCOMs consider grades, they also consider your performance relative to your classmates. That is where class rank comes in. Class ranks help ADCOMs determine whether the C you got in Calculus is a result of slacking on your part, or a really strict marking system. If your school does not rank, don't despair. Colleges are adept enough at coming up with a ranking for you based on your school profile and academic trend in your school report.

For example, my school does not rank. But my guidance counselor was able to predict my rank as if there was a ranking system, by looking at the performance of my peers in my class that year. So she will write something like “Top 5% of the class this year” for her students. Even if your school policy forbids ranking – as mine do – your transcript can still tell a great deal about what kind of challenges you went through in high school.

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