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What's the best way to do this if I do, and has speaking to a professor about changing your grade ever worked for you? Any negative consequences or regrets?
.Mithril said:Don't be a bloodsucking premed.
If you were good enough, you would have received that grade.
There are probably a bunch of people .1, .2, .3 points away from the cutoff. Where do you draw the line? Why should he/she bump you up?
Yea, and it's annoying as hell to professors.Asking for a higher grade is weak. True, no one is going to know that you did it. But it really is pretty lame. There is no dignified way of asking for something you didn't earn or deserve, so you can get that out of your head right now.
True, but that "guilt" is only temporary. If these higher grades results in the acceptance to some "top" medical school, will you really be looking back and thinking to yourself, "Crap, should have taken the grades I deserved, because I really should not have been accepted at this 'better' school".Asking for a higher grade is weak. True, no one is going to know that you did it. But it really is pretty lame. There is no dignified way of asking for something you didn't earn or deserve, so you can get that out of your head right now.
Heck, the professor himself probably tried cutting corners back in his day. 😛Yea, and it's annoying as hell to professors.
What's the best way to do this if I do, and has speaking to a professor about changing your grade ever worked for you? Any negative consequences or regrets?
True, but that "guilt" is only temporary. If these higher grades results in the acceptance to some "top" medical school, will you really be looking back and thinking to yourself, "Crap, should have taken the grades I deserved, because I really should not have been accepted at this 'better' school".
Basically, boo dignity! You can worry about it once you get into medical school, get that MD, and that job you really want.
This is the problem with our generation right here.
Do it as soon as possible. Find the professor, go to his office, email him with something along the lines "Are you available during the finals week?" I am pretty sure the professors are still around for some time during the finals time.How are we suppose to do it in person if our vacation starts right after exams and grades come out a week later? Do ppl wait to bring it up next semester too?
How are we suppose to do it in person if our vacation starts right after exams and grades come out a week later? Do ppl wait to bring it up next semester too?
Most schools give you back your exam grades, from which you can estimate your final grade, before the end of the semester. They do it partially so you can check and make sure there aren't any mistakes in the grading. At least at my school once the grade was officially on your transcipt it was a bureaucratic nightmare for the professor to change it, so your only real chance to grade grub was before the end of the semester.
Really I see the same situation as a problem with the education system in the US rather than the students involved in it...
I rather have an average grade system over gpa because frankly a student that gets 89.9 (if theres was no B+) is not same as someone who gets 80% so why make them equal
Asking for a higher grade is weak. True, no one is going to know that you did it. But it really is pretty lame. There is no dignified way of asking for something you didn't earn or deserve, so you can get that out of your head right now.
This. While I agree that in some, maybe a lot of circumstances grade grubbing can make someone seem weak and pathetic, (and they may very well be so) there are exceptions, and a generalization is especially not applicable to this topic. It's easy to say that you get whatever grade you deserve, but what about subjectively graded courses? Why is it your fault that the professor learned bad news mid-grading your class' essays and yours came afterward and he numbly handed out an 85%? (random hypothetical...) Does that mean your work didn't merit a higher grade, or does it just mean that the teacher is human and makes mistakes like everyone else? And who says that student-teacher interaction doesn't apply toward the evaluation of your performance in a course? Much fewer courses are graded strictly off of "did you answer this question correctly" than one would think... Regardless of what the syllabus says, the professor can always bend rules to help out students that they feel genuinely care about what they are spending their time teaching them. A professor is very understandably going to view the grade a student receives as a measure of their performance in the course more holistically than just what percentages they got on tests, etc... and when a student demonstrates active effort to comprehend and master the material (going to office hours, talking to the professor for help, etc...) they'll easily see this as part of the student's performance. Everyone makes a big deal about students expecting an "A for effort" and in the case of someone who makes a solid B and asks for a bump, yeah they clearly didn't put in the work required to get the grade they wanted, so their effort doesn't merit the grade. But in the case of someone who gets an 89.**, who's to say that the teacher can't determine that they deserve an A, based on their numerical performance in the course (which is very close to A level) and the qualitative effort they put in?Your dignity could be the difference between wasting several thousand dollars in application expenses and entry into the medical school of your choice. I don't see the harm in asking for a .1+ if you have a good relationship with the instructor.
This is the problem with our generation right here.
This. This is why its worth it sometimes to inquire, because grades aren't always given objectively based on what you "deserve."The second time was for a conservation bio class, in which we had to write a paper and give a presentation. Considering I got As on the papers I wrote for English and History, I wasn't terribly worried about the grade, but the professor gave me a B on my paper, and it was over little things... word choice that wouldn't make much difference one way or the other, just that she preferred it her way. She had told us that if we brought our papers to the writing center, she would bump up our grade, but I always turned my papers into them before I turned them in so that I could turn in the best paper. She refused to budge. Also gave me a 94 on my presentation and wouldn't tell me why. Her only complaint against my presentation was that she couldn't hear me well at the back of the room (though the girl sitting right in front of her said she could hear me just fine). She had given us a rubric, and I followed it to a T, but she still knocked my grade down and had no reason to do so. Both those instances weren't to bump my grade up (I did well enough in other aspects of the class that it didn't really matter), but because I thought her grading policy was unfair. One of my mentors at school even looked over my paper and presentation and couldn't figure out why she had knocked my grade down. I guess my complaints fell on deaf ears, though, because nothing came of it, either for me or for others who later took the class.
Really, this? Out of all things, this is the problem?