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contesting grades and how it effects transfering
Posted: Sat Jun 26, 2010 12:55 am
by mmribail
i am contesting three of my grades at my law school. how would this effect my transfer chances. lets say i get rejected at one school; would i have an opportunity to submit to the admissions council my new grades to be considered if my law school does in fact end up changing my grade?
Re: contesting grades and how it effects transfering
Posted: Sat Jun 26, 2010 1:10 am
by pocket herc
u are seriously contesting three grades? kinda curious, on what grounds?
Re: contesting grades and how it effects transfering
Posted: Sat Jun 26, 2010 1:33 am
by Bankhead
Wow, good luck w/ that. I've never heard of a prof. changing a grade except for a procedural error (like the test said A- and he wrote B to the recorder).
I'd imagine you'd have to send an addendum, and in holding up your app it might do more harm than good (unless 2 or more grades are changed or the changing of your grades would be the only thing putting you in remote range of getting into your desired schools).
Re: contesting grades and how it effects transfering
Posted: Sat Jun 26, 2010 2:19 am
by MrKappus
You can totally submit the new grades! And law schools LOVE students that complain about grades. You'll be a shoe-in!!
Re: contesting grades and how it effects transfering
Posted: Sat Jun 26, 2010 2:26 am
by PKSebben
I'd to submit until you have the decision. No matter what, contesting three grades is going to make you look like a troublemaker.
Re: contesting grades and how it effects transfering
Posted: Sat Jun 26, 2010 4:50 am
by mmribail
i go to tsu, which has a weird way of calculating grades. 50% professor grade and 50% is the comprehensive exam, which each section takes and all 239 students compete against each other. i scored high on my comps and was in the top ten in most of my classes before the comps; therefore, i want to see how exactly they calculated my grades. right now i am top 12% of my class. if JUST one grade changes then it will likely put me into the top 10% of the class.
Re: contesting grades and how it effects transfering
Posted: Sat Jun 26, 2010 10:31 am
by XxSpyKEx
I've never heard of anyone successfully getting there grade changed after it is submitted. Most schools/professors are pretty firm on that. The only exception I've heard of is mathematical or entry errors (e.g. if your prof completely forgot to count the points from one of the questions on your exam or if he accidentally gave you a B when he meant to give you an A-).
Re: contesting grades and how it effects transfering
Posted: Sat Jun 26, 2010 11:15 am
by 2009 Prospective
mmribail wrote:i go to tsu, which has a weird way of calculating grades. 50% professor grade and 50% is the comprehensive exam, which each section takes and all 239 students compete against each other. i scored high on my comps and was in the top ten in most of my classes before the comps; therefore, i want to see how exactly they calculated my grades. right now i am top 12% of my class. if JUST one grade changes then it will likely put me into the top 10% of the class.
I still don't quite understand what this means. Is 50% of your grade some sort of subjective "participation" grade based upon classroom performance or something? Also, I'm still curious as to what grounds you're contesting your grades on other than just trying to shamelessly boost your class rank. I could understand if there was just one lousy professor that screwed up but contesting THREE grades seems like it would lead to mischief more than anything else. If transfer schools were made aware of this, I think it would quite possibly be an incredible turnoff and make you look hugely self entitled.
Re: contesting grades and how it effects transfering
Posted: Sat Jun 26, 2010 3:13 pm
by CMR
I have to believe that appealing a grade doesn't make you look like a troublemaker in all instances. I had a mathematical error on one of my exams last term (prof forgot to add an entire essay to my final score), and simply sent an email to schools waiting on my transcript stating that I was appealing a grade - none of them seemed to bat an eye (at least I hope). I have to admit raising an eyebrow, however, when I saw that you were contesting three.
Re: contesting grades and how it effects transfering
Posted: Sat Jun 26, 2010 4:07 pm
by MrKappus
CMR wrote:I have to believe that appealing a grade doesn't make you look like a troublemaker in all instances. I had a mathematical error on one of my exams last term (prof forgot to add an entire essay to my final score), and simply sent an email to schools waiting on my transcript stating that I was appealing a grade - none of them seemed to bat an eye (at least I hope). I have to admit raising an eyebrow, however, when I saw that you were contesting three.
I don't think anyone said that appealing a grade makes one appear a "troublemaker in all instances." I think what was said that was appealing 3 grades makes one look self-entitled. And it does. The probability that 3 profs made errors in the way they graded a student is nil.
Re: contesting grades and how it effects transfering
Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2010 4:36 pm
by sanpiero
MrKappus wrote:You can totally submit the new grades! And law schools LOVE students that complain about grades. You'll be a shoe-in!!
+1,000
Re: contesting grades and how it effects transfering
Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2010 4:40 pm
by Kohinoor
Shouldn't this be "and how it affects transferring"
Re: contesting grades and how it effects transfering
Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2010 4:43 pm
by Renzo
mmribail wrote:i go to tsu, which has a weird way of calculating grades. 50% professor grade and 50% is the comprehensive exam, which each section takes and all 239 students compete against each other. i scored high on my comps and was in the top ten in most of my classes before the comps; therefore, i want to see how exactly they calculated my grades. right now i am top 12% of my class. if JUST one grade changes then it will likely put me into the top 10% of the class.
Wait. Let me see if I get this.
Most law schools grade 100% based on the subjective assessment of the professor. Your school is only 50% subjective and you're complaining about that part?
Re: contesting grades and how it effects transfering
Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2010 4:56 pm
by Kohinoor
Renzo wrote:mmribail wrote:i go to tsu, which has a weird way of calculating grades. 50% professor grade and 50% is the comprehensive exam, which each section takes and all 239 students compete against each other. i scored high on my comps and was in the top ten in most of my classes before the comps; therefore, i want to see how exactly they calculated my grades. right now i am top 12% of my class. if JUST one grade changes then it will likely put me into the top 10% of the class.
Wait. Let me see if I get this.
Most law schools grade 100% based on the subjective assessment of the professor. Your school is only 50% subjective and you're complaining about that part?
The best part is that 50% subjectivity is still enough that none of his grades could be overturned on a challenge unless the professor felt like humoring him.