Queens Health sci
I still have not gotten any rejection from them via email or through their website. I have a 94.5 average, lowkey thought I did bad on supp app cuz i didn’t even try on it, what is y’all’s opinions?
I still have not gotten any rejection from them via email or through their website. I have a 94.5 average, lowkey thought I did bad on supp app cuz i didn’t even try on it, what is y’all’s opinions?
My friend has a 95.2 average and she has still not gotten accepted. Does anyone know why?
I also got a $3000 scholarship with it; Average: 94.5%
I’m not used to getting bad grades, and that’s exactly why this has been so frustrating. In most of my classes, I know what I’m doing. I’ve been able to achieve high marks in subjects like biology, chemistry, and English because I understand the material and can show it. So when I started getting marks in the 60s, 70s, and low 80s in calc, it didn’t just feel like a bad grade, it felt confusing. It made me question myself and wonder how I could be doing so well in some areas but struggling in another. Struggling in a class does not mean I am not capable. It means I am being challenged in a way I am not used to. Not every subject measures intelligence the same way, and not every challenge is supposed to feel comfortable. In fact, the moments that feel the most frustrating are often the ones where the most growth is happening. There is also another perspective that matters. Students who succeed in everything all the time do not always learn how to deal with failure. They do not experience what it feels like to fall short, adjust, and try again. That ability to respond to setbacks is just as important as getting high grades, and it is something that can only be learned through experience. This struggle is teaching resilience, patience, and the ability to keep going even when results are not immediate. These grades do not erase the success I have had in other subjects. They do not suddenly make me less capable or less intelligent. If anything, they show that I am willing to challenge myself and step outside of what comes easily to me. Being a strong student is not about always getting the highest mark. It is about how you respond when you do not. It is about staying consistent, reflecting on what is not working, and continuing to put in effort even when it is difficult. At the end of the day, one course does not define me. One test does not define me. Struggling does not mean I am failing. It means I am learning.
My OUAC says that my midterm grades were sent to the universities on April 27, however when I click on it, it says "date received, March 18th". Does anyone know why this is and if something is wrong?