✔ 最佳答案
If the course will not double counted to any major requirement, no impact.
The only consequence is since P/NP is chosen, the best estimate for the grade will be C (in some cases, such estimate may be needed).
2013-09-10 10:54:57 補充:
What you mention is the exact case. Another example will be postgraduate admission.
Haas prefers all students to take all courses in letter grades (Otherwise, a P grade will earn you 2.0 in GPA).
2013-09-10 14:50:13 補充:
It may be considered as a C.
Regardless of your chance of admission (which is extremely low in reality), if you are the admission officer, do you prefer a P grade or letter grade?
2013-09-11 10:45:49 補充:
This is exactly what I mean - if you are an international student, your chance for UC Berkeley's admission is almost none (less than 4%).
It is even worse for Haas.
2013-09-11 15:32:56 補充:
1. Local Students (from California)
2. California state law mandates that University of California must preserve local students admissibility. Therefore, as an example, more than 75% of UC Berekely admits are local students.
In this case, your admission chance has been dramatically increased.
2013-09-11 15:36:54 補充:
Due to the design of Haas's program, your preparation work may not work in other campuses (such as UC Riverside and Irvine - IGETC; and CSUs - IGETC and CSU Transfer Pattern).
2013-09-11 15:38:22 補充:
Given the admission chance is still low even your chance has increased due to Haas (such as ESL classes will dramatically slow you down and affect your GPA), you must make sure that you are well-prepared for other campuses as well.
2013-09-11 15:38:55 補充:
As a result - N/NP is strictly not recommended, especially from community college.
2013-09-12 13:01:26 補充:
No actual difference.