<p>how does withdrawing from a science course look when u have decided to never pursue science again, and decide to switch to business school?</p>
<p>not following ur question be more specific</p>
<p>well so im a bio sci major, and i wanna withdraw from chem 208, b/c i am switching majors anyway. i am doing horribly in chem 208, like a c- range. is it better i withdraw? or just take the c-? furthermore, how will the aem committee look at a W? how will grad schools look at it</p>
<p>oh i would ask someone who specifically knows how grad schools consider such things</p>
<p>Withdrawing from a course is a bad idea. From what I have heard, admins assume that you got a failing grade. Maybe talk to your advisor or study hard for the final.</p>
<p>yeah, is the withdraw course deadline tomorrow? how does it look, is it better to take C- than withdraw?</p>
<p>You are much better off going to advising…today’s the last day to drop, so go talk to them ASAP and they can give you some advice. CC is great, but I wouldn’t take the advice of the posters on this board for something so important.</p>
<p>I’m sure some of you know chem 208’s final grade is based on a 1000 pts system (makes it easy to calculate percentages). Does anyone know the usual cut-off %s for every chem letter grade? (For example 90% would get A , 86% A- , 80% B etc–just random #s that I guessed). For chem 208, the mean grade is either B or B-, if the highest final % I can reasonably get is 75% (750/1000 pts), would I be able to make to the mean grade? What letter grade does that usually correspond to? people who have taken 208 or know the 208 grading scheme are please comment.</p>