Vindicarre wrote:
If one B is enough to drop your grade from an A to a B, then it's more than a singular "little late" in effect.
Depends on the circumstances. I had classes where the teacher accepted nothing late and some individual assignments were worth as much as 25% of your grade. I agree, though, that if the student is chronically late on everything, that's more worthy of a ding on the transcripts, since the bad habits will likely carry forward into college and career.
Vindicarre wrote:
Are you really going to stand behind the opinion that being accepted to an "Ivy League" school for your undergrad really equals "gravy train", and that not being accepted makes the "rest of your life" "significantly harder"
Before I went to law school, I would have said it didn't matter
that much, but now I believe it really does. Most of my current colleagues were on the Ivy League express, and the degree to which they were able to coast into six-figure salaries once they got into Harvard/Yale/Columbia/etc. as undergrads is genuinely shocking. Harvard undergrads with mediocre grades going straight into $100k/year investment banking jobs at age 22; Columbia Law graduates
at the very bottom of their classes getting their pick of a dozen different offers at top law firms paying $150-200k; and so on.
To use myself as an example: I did my first year of law school at a Tier 3 school (because of crappy college grades), where it was typical for graduates to send out 200 job applications and get maybe a handful of responses. I did well in my first-year and transferred up to a top 20 school. Immediately upon arrival at the new school, I was added to the on-campus interview program, lined up a dozen interviews and, shortly thereafter, had several offers for $40k summer jobs that inevitably (literally 95-100%) lead to a $150k+ permanent position at the firm after graduation. And
the only difference was that my transcript now said "Top 20 Law School" instead of "Tier 3 Law School". I hadn't even taken any classes at the new school yet!
So yeah, the kids who get into Harvard/Yale/etc. as undergrads have their tickets pretty much punched. They can still screw it up, of course, or choose not to go the big money route, but the opportunity to coast into financial success is very much there in a way that it simply isn't anywhere else. And since getting into those schools requires near-perfect high school performance, I'm inclined to give kids as many second chances as possible to get their grades up, as long as they're willing to do the work.