How Admission Decisions Are Made: Academics Dallas TX

In evaluating your application, your high school transcript is almost always the most important ingredient. (Keep in mind that there are exceptions to this rule, especially for students in areas like art, music, and drama.) Among the many pieces of paper they review, admission officers will probably receive a profile of your high school detailing the curriculum and the grading system — it may even list average grades for each class.

Dallas Theological Seminary
(214) 824-3094
3909 Swiss Ave
Dallas, TX
K D Studio
(214) 638-0484
2600 Stemmons Fwy Ste 117
Dallas, TX
Everest College - Dallas
(214) 234-4850
6080 North Central Expressway
Dallas, TX
ATI Technical Training Center
(972) 755-4508
6627 Maple Ave
Dallas, TX
Aviation Institute of Maintenance - Dallas
(214) 333-9711
7555 Lemmon Avenue
Dallas, TX
El Centro College
(214) 860-2037
801 Main
Dallas, TX
Wade College
(214) 637-3530
1950 Stemmons Freeway, Suite 2026 INFOMART
Dallas, TX
Everest College
(888) 581-9141
6080 N. Central Expressway
Dallas, TX
Southern Methodist University
(214) 768-2000
6425 Boaz St
Dallas, TX
Ogle School of Hair Design - Dallas
(214) 821-0819
6333 E Mockingbird Ln Ste 201
Dallas, TX
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How Admission Decisions Are Made: Academics

How Admission Decisions Are Made: Academics

In evaluating your application, your high school transcript is almost always the most important ingredient. (Keep in mind that there are exceptions to this rule, especially for students in areas like art, music, and drama.) Among the many pieces of paper they review, admission officers will probably receive a profile of your high school detailing the curriculum and the grading system — it may even list average grades for each class. Don’t worry, though. This comes from your high school, not from you!

Admission officials are skilled at understanding the discrepancies among schools and the ways that grades are awarded, recorded, etc. They know, for example, that at some schools, only students who walk on water will earn A’s, while at others, anyone who hands in their homework is considered an honors student. They can read between the lines of transcripts and school profiles to ascertain your school’s strengths, such as what percentage of graduates go on to four year colleges and what advanced classes are offered.

Apples to apples
They also recognize that good students at challenging, competitive high schools (public or private) may have lower grades and class ranks than their counterparts at easier ones, and that some students may not be ranked — or even graded — at all. They have even learned to interpret the records of homeschooled students who submit detailed narratives in lieu of transcripts.

So wha...

Author: Amy Ambler

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