- Joined
- May 20, 2016
- Messages
- 181
- Reaction score
- 137
Hey everyone, sorry for being one in a million who's asking about their potential IA and whether they should report or not. Here's my situation (nothing unique):
Just finished my Junior year and filling out my app for this cycle and I've been strongly debating whether I should report an incident that happened my first semester Freshman year. I got what my university calls a university reprimand for being a little too loud in my room while I was drunk. This is just a warning that my behavior is not acceptable and if I didn't do anything else to violate the student code it'd be destroyed in a year. I never had anything else and the record was deleted. University policy, after checking with the office of conflict resolution, states a university reprimand does not go on a student transcript, so technically I guess I never had anything on my transcript to begin with. When I went to the office to request my history of disciplinary action, they gave me a letter that states that if someone, like a certain med school, came and asked for my disciplinary history, they would give them a statement saying, and I quote, "...the applicant has no disciplinary records subject to release." In other words I have no history to report. The receptionist told me that I could choose not to report it and the office would tell them what I summed up in the quote. The part that's concerning to me, should I choose not to report it, is that they said that if someone conducts a background check they said that public records (i.e emails) of the incident MAY exist and MAY show up in a background check.
That begs the question, how thorough do schools investigate IAs? If the office guaranteed they have nothing to report and it was never on my transcript, can I simply not report it? I realize I might be making a big deal out of this one issue, but I feel like I'm a boarderline applicant and would like to minimize any factors that might impact my application negatively. I've been in and out of the student conflict office trying to get a yes or no answer on if I can not report it or not and at this point I'm torn.
Just finished my Junior year and filling out my app for this cycle and I've been strongly debating whether I should report an incident that happened my first semester Freshman year. I got what my university calls a university reprimand for being a little too loud in my room while I was drunk. This is just a warning that my behavior is not acceptable and if I didn't do anything else to violate the student code it'd be destroyed in a year. I never had anything else and the record was deleted. University policy, after checking with the office of conflict resolution, states a university reprimand does not go on a student transcript, so technically I guess I never had anything on my transcript to begin with. When I went to the office to request my history of disciplinary action, they gave me a letter that states that if someone, like a certain med school, came and asked for my disciplinary history, they would give them a statement saying, and I quote, "...the applicant has no disciplinary records subject to release." In other words I have no history to report. The receptionist told me that I could choose not to report it and the office would tell them what I summed up in the quote. The part that's concerning to me, should I choose not to report it, is that they said that if someone conducts a background check they said that public records (i.e emails) of the incident MAY exist and MAY show up in a background check.
That begs the question, how thorough do schools investigate IAs? If the office guaranteed they have nothing to report and it was never on my transcript, can I simply not report it? I realize I might be making a big deal out of this one issue, but I feel like I'm a boarderline applicant and would like to minimize any factors that might impact my application negatively. I've been in and out of the student conflict office trying to get a yes or no answer on if I can not report it or not and at this point I'm torn.