A few days ago
Anonymous

If you fail classes in college and don’t want to retake them, does it affect your GPA?

I’ll try to make this short:

I went to community for a semster, did well. Went to a 4 year college, failed some classes. I was too embarassed to try to schedule classes for the next semester. I’ve just been working since then. Now I’m back at community for this semester, but I want to give the 4 year college another shot.

Will I be able to get into a good school again? If I’m able to, am I required to retake the classes I failed even if they aren’t part of my major? Will they affect my GPA in the end?

Top 2 Answers
A few days ago
Mark S

Favorite Answer

I think that you should be able to go back to the university again. You left on your terms, not theirs. If the case were that the university expelled you, then you wouldn’t be able to go back.

These failed classes already affect your GPA and will remain to do so until you retake the classes. Most likely, your university has a policy of not awarding people their degree with an F on their record, so you will have to retake the classes, especially if they are part of your required courses for your degree. If you changed your major or something like that, and these classes are no longer part of your required course work, you *MIGHT* be able to have some kind of waiver for these classes, but this is a long shot.

0

4 years ago
Anonymous
in basic terms credit flow, no longer grades. Your GPA starts over once you flow. in spite of the indisputable fact that, scientific colleges will ask for all your previous transcripts, and that they are going to see which you have have been given failed all those training. And it is not going to look reliable in any respect.
0