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Covering up poor grades for school admission

leriot

Hello!
I am going to apply to a grad school in the US and I have some doubts about the grades. Although overall my grades are quite good, I do have three 3/5 ("C" I suppose)  among 58 disciplines. (No GPA system in my country).

Is it important to have an excellent diploma? Is there a way to cover these grades? I was thinking about finishing a MOOC and purchasing a verified certificate. Also, I have read that a reaaally good GRE score could cover up, but as a foreigner I probably would fail verbal section. Maybe it would be better to forget about  scores and focus on polishing a portfolio.

Any ideas? I've read a lot about the US grad schools, and it seems that universities are very picky about grades and other quantitative measures, aren't they?

 
Sep 15, 14 6:04 am
thompson's gazelle

I've seen and heard people with exquisite portfolios get into Harvard even with GPA's around 2.4,  with 2.0 GRE writing scores. As the comment above mentions, I assume your GPA would be just fine. Very few gradschools actually care about your quantitative measures--you just need to provide the bare minimum. The only exception among top-tier schools would be Princeton as far as I know.

Portfolio>>Recommendations>>Essay>>Test Scores and GPA.

Focus on more important things first, and worry about the numbers later.

Sep 15, 14 9:18 pm  · 
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archanonymous

i got a C in my senior studio because i was busy crafting exquisite bong rips and still got into the Master's program. its all about portfolio, personality, and connections.

Sep 17, 14 11:28 pm  · 
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Rajan

I have similar situation. I have a GPA of 2.8 (BSc. of Architectural Studies) and GRE score of V-146 and Q-155 (I don't have my writing scores yet as I just had the test yesterday).

Do you guys think I have a chance at good M.Arch Schools (with funding) if I have strong portfolio, essays and recommendations??

Sep 18, 14 9:53 am  · 
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leriot

Thank you all for the answers! I would definitely focus on portfolio.

By the way, in some countries grades rarely objectively show academic abilities of a student. I know a bunch of brilliant people with poor grades and a lot of narrow-minded and slow graduates with excellent transcripts. I mean that even people with low GPA can perform well at a graduate school.

Sep 19, 14 2:15 pm  · 
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