Senior Year Grades - Important to keep grades up?
Is it important to actually keep my grades up senior year? I've gotten extremely lazy and find studying to get anything beyond a B really difficult. I had a solid 3.8 GPA junior year during recruiting, although it's been gradually falling ever since. If I continue to exert zero effort, I will probably finish college with around a 3.5...if I put in a lot of effort, I could finish with a high 3.6 or 3.7. I would obviously rather not do schoolwork and continue to have a great time with friends, etc. but will finishing school with around a 3.5 affect my chances during PE/HF recruiting 2 years down the road or for business school admissions? I will be working for a top bank (think MS, Blackstone etc.) and graduating from Wharton...do my grades from here on out really matter?
If you are at BS M&A like you seem to indicate in your previous post -- 3.5 should be fine; any lower might screw you.
Keep in mind that Westcoasting is referring to PE/HF exits or MBA admissions. So if you are worried about that, then he's right, but "screwed" is a little harsh. Firms like BS won't rescind an offer unless your cum falls below 3.0, I'm pretty sure. So that would be worst case scenario.
Yup I was talking about competitive PE and HF which I assumed was what the poster intended the topic to be about.
so after you do an ibanking stint and are looking to get into PE firms pre-MBA, they still take your undergrad grades into consideration?
Do grades matter Senior Year? (Originally Posted: 10/17/2009)
If you've already accepted a job offer, what importance do your grades senior year really have? If I decided to seriously slack off, is there really a big deal if my GPA drops from like a 3.7 to a 3.6 over the course of the year? What implication, if any, could this have down the road? Do PE firms care (or even look) at your undergrad GPA? Do business schools care that much about your undergrad GPA (assume at a top target)?
I'd appreciate the insight. Midterms are coming up, and my incentives for doing well seem to be evaporating.
care about undergrad GPA. Top business schools will definitely take that factor into account. However, since the poster is at Wharton, any GPA > 3.5 will be fine for business school combined with GS/MS/BS experience. I was lazy my senior year also and gpa went down .12 for the year.
care about undergrad GPA. Top business schools will definitely take that factor into account. However, since the poster is at Wharton, any GPA > 3.5 will be fine for business school combined with GS/MS/BS experience. I was lazy my senior year also and gpa went down .12 for the year.
Search the forums, I answered this question like a week ago.
The answer is, think about your future and B-school and PE recruiting. You don't need to bust your ass, but do keep up your gpa.
Seconded - this same question was asked very recently. Essentially, you should definitely try to keep your grades up unless you have absolutely no intention of leaving the firm that gave you an offer and know you will be kept on up through associate to VP. If you are looking at or considering eventually making a move to a boutique, VC, P/E, or B school, you should definitely keep your grades up as your grades will be considered by your new employer and/or the adcom at b schools. Don't be short sighted - it's a few more months and your done - keep your grades up and move on without that worry later.
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I'm in a similar spot, having to decide how much effort to put in to school these last few semesters. One thing I have considered is what I will need to graduate with honors or high honors. Does this stuff mean much? Probably not, but always nice to tack on to short summaries of your background.
Senior Year Grades? - Feeling pretty screwed right now (Originally Posted: 03/20/2007)
Hi all, So I was wondering how closely business schools check out your grades from senior year. I had a pretty rough last semester and ended up with a C+ in one of my classes, which is ironically a major class as well. How is this going to affect me when I apply to business school? I wasn't slacking off at all during the term, but somehow I still did poorly.
I'm feeling pretty screwed right now. Advice?
Oh man, my GPA tanked from a 3.97 to a 3.64 my senior year. It was a beautiful, perfect-10 Olympic nosedive and I loved every moment. Anybody beat that?
i'm sure you'll be fine. to quote what everybody else on the board says, they'll look at you hollistically. as long as you have a decent gpa/gmat/and work experience you'll be ok
They will definately look at all your grades, but if you have a good overall GPA, it wont matter if you have one C+. A bunch of C+'s however, could hurt.
Wow, Mis Ind.. Your major GPA must have really gone to shit (assuming your school was like mine where you take a lot of your major-related classes senior year).
Are you worried about what it will look like for b-school, or are you not planning on b-school at all?
Senior Year Grades - Chance of getting offer revoked? (Originally Posted: 11/19/2007)
Let's say after you've received an offer, you end up getting a D in a really tough class unrelated to business during senior year. Even though that's definitely pretty bad, will firms overlook it if everything else is alright or is there a chance of getting your offer revoked?
think firms rescind offers during senior year based on academic grades, considering it's not like you send them a mid-year report of where you're at. But, if you don't graduate or you get suspended or something, obviously they will.
it doesnt matter. apparently even MDs have been telling SAs who get FT offers that they should drink to excess because its the end of college, and as long as they graduate it doesnt matter. the only reason it could fuck u is for b-school.
what about for future jobs i.e. going into PE after your two years?
MDs are generally at odds with hr and admin
technically, you just need to pass your course - if you look at your offer letter, it's a ground for revoking the offer if you fail to graduate.
However, it doesn't hurt to do well. it probably does not apply to your case, but keep in mind that in bad times, banks always find excuses to fire people. 2 guys from my associate class were fired immediately after the training program apparently because they "did not perform well enough in the program". In good years, I don't think banks would have done the same thing.
didnt do well in the program, not didnt do well in school.
as for your earlier question, PE and HF, after your first job its more or less irrelevant, but even if you got a 1.2 in college and they looked at your gpa, if your MD had a glowing recommendation, you're going to be good to go probably. That is direct proof of your work ethic. Doing well in school is also, but could also be attributed to just being good at cramming 4-5x a semester. being highly recommended by an MD from your group is like getting a 4.0 from harvard.
i say be much more cognizant of impressing people and working your ass off during your analyst stint than being worried about your grades during your sr year of college.
I went to a BBA program. We don't separate out major and non-major GPA's. The 3.64 is what it is.
Also, I shouldn't have to worry about getting into B-school if I play it right, since I'll have bulge-bracket experience, a BBA, and an insane GMAT.
Thirdly and finally, after maintaining a 3.97 long enough to get a bulge-bracket IB offer, I needed a year's vacation from hard work.
Senior Year Grades - How is this going to affect me when I apply to b school? (Originally Posted: 03/20/2007)
Hi all, I just posted this in business barrage, but I figured I'd get a better answer here.
So I was wondering how closely business schools check out your grades from senior year. I had a pretty rough last semester and ended up with a C+ in one of my classes, which is ironically a major class as well. How is this going to affect me when I apply to business school? I wasn't slacking off at all during the term, but somehow I still did poorly.
I'm feeling pretty screwed right now. Advice?
Uh I wouldn't worry about 1 C or 1 bad semester. You're only human! My brother got at least one C and he went to Stanford business school (he did graduate with a strong overall GPA, though).
Senior Year Gradess (Originally Posted: 01/14/2014)
Yo monkeys, I interned for an investment bank over the summer, got a return offer and signed. My senior year grades for this last semester were pretty low (below 3.0gpa). Should I worry about being rescinded? Didnt fail anything, but didnt do too well either
Miss Ind what school did you go to?
Depends on your bank. Mine told me grades no longer mean shit as long as you graduate.
Shouldn't have to worry about it in the BO broski
Lollll hahah i should clarify I did front officee
HR didnt say anything about transcripts or even graduating to be honest
You should care if you want to make your trip to the buyside less of a headache...
I do care about later opportunities and the future, but I guess one thing at a time.
My mine thing here is that will it affect my full time employment?
main*
b-u-m-p bump
you're golden
golden for what?
Senior last semester GPA. (Originally Posted: 05/26/2008)
I just graduated from a target. My questions is how important is your last semester grade to banks, PE, and Bschools? I will be starting in June at a BB - think UBS, C, or ML...still have not been placed into a group. Will my sudden drop in GPA affect my placement into top groups? PE interviews? and Bschool admissions? My cumulative GPA is hovering around 3.67. Before the last semester, it was near 3.8. Many of you on this board have mentioned that GPA doesn't really matter. However, I would like to get your views given current market conditions. Thanks all.
bschool, yes..
while it's expected that gpa's might drop last semester, there's no excuse for getting below 3.0 after your freshman year.
I know that I'm not nearly as wise or knowledgeable as many others on this board, but the fact is you're graduating magna and working at a BB. As far as I know, that's a pretty good situation to be in.
After you do your stint at an IB, top PE firms still want your college gpa.
I would rather have good grades at the end than at the beginning. Nothing that can't be averted by good hard work (for future jobs) or an alt transcript (for B-schools).
But really, a 2.75 the final semester? Did you even go to class?
Early Senioritis after getting an offer/job (Originally Posted: 02/19/2011)
For those of you who have gotten summer offers/full time offers, do you find that senioritis has kicked in hard? With recruiting, I skipped so many classes and wasn't as diligent with my work. On top of that, I was lucky enough to get an offer so I feel no motivation to maintain my grades. When you figure out what you want to do for the next 5-10 years of your career, it's hard to care about classes that are irrelevant to your profession.
fully agreed. my effort, which was minimal to begin with, disappeared instantly after having multiple offers in hand
just try to keep a B average and enjoy your last year
Don't screw up your grades. If you are interested in graduate school, it will absolutely come back to bite you.
Seniorities... got an offer after my SA.. whoops
As long as it doesnt kick in too early you'll be fine. I got mine toward end of first semester senior year, so my last semester I get to cruise to a 3.5. That will only drop overall a couple of points.
By the way, by graduate school I mean PhD. Undergrad GPA matters much less for other types of grad school.
definitely not trying to get a masters or phd, maybe MBA lol
Ok. Chill out with a 6-pack of Miller High Life =)
Keep your grades up for the prestige!!!
Enjoy the senioritis and pass it along to others.
Just do enough to get by but don't screw your GPA. You will need the GPA when you apply for MBA a few years down the road.
interesting idea... definitely a lot less pressure, but i feel like it's just a whole new round of competition... i mean, don't you wanna be better than everyone else in the intern class? Especially being in S&T...
I did my slacking the first 2 years. Worked my ass off my last 2 years. Did not have an offer when i graduated however.
GPA still matters when you apply to other firms in the future... Sure a 2 year BB stint on your resume will make it hard for an employer to say no, but why give him any doubts with a low GPA?
I missed about 10 days of classes before finally getting an SA offer. I'm in a huge hole now but I really don't care, even though I probably should.
Yeah, you should care.... what happens when you don't get a FT offer from your firm?
.
.
will people really be judging my SA performance by my recent quarter gpa lol
Well it'll affect your overall which matters.
Guys, I'm in exactly the same state, and thought about posting something similar. After getting my offer around the middle of the first term, now I literally have 0 motivation. I cannot even keep my mind set on the material while I try to study(which doesn't happen so often), it just wanders off to random topics. At the same time, I really want to enjoy my last months of college, since they're not coming back. However, I cannot do this to the fullest because of my guilty conscious, related to being unproductive.
I'm just doing the bare minimum to reach for Bs/As
Oh wait, didn't realize you only got SA. Nope, it's not over for you yet. Sorry.
guys his name is harvardorbust for gods sake take what he says with a grain of salt. In reality its more like bust4harvard
i mean if you work your balls off this summer... they won't care if your gpa falls a point or two
Who's "they"? Your gpa won't matter in determining whether or not you get a return offer, but if you don't get one, your gpa will absolutely matter when you go through FT recruiting. Getting an SA stint is not the end of the game.... you can work your ass off and still not get a return offer (for a variety of reasons which may or may not be under your control).
Nevertheless, congrats on the offer!
Senioritis - B School Admissions? (Originally Posted: 04/27/2014)
Got a FT offer.
I'll still end up with a 3.8 but I'll have a downward trend. Will this hurt my B School admissions too bad? (Fuqua maybe)
I am wondering the same time. After the FT offers started coming in, I really stopped caring. Up until this semester, I had only one B on my transcript, everything else was an A, now I poised to probably graduate around a 3.89 due to a complete lack of motivation (there was a period of time where I was legitimately concerned that I might not graduate summa cum laude). If they look at just GPA, I think we should be fine, but if they actually analyze the transcript and look at the drop in the final semester, we are screwed.
Trouble is - they DO ask for transcripts.
No one will care. A 3.9 GPA is a 3.9 GPA. Obviously, your major matters, but that's not changing by getting some B's in your last semester. Plus, they're B's, not D's.
@"krypton" I know but just because they ask for them does not mean they actually analyze them. It could be like the same way FT offers require an official transcript to be sent, so they can verify that you have graduated and your GPA is what you say it is rather than analyzing every class you took, your grades, and trends.
average gpa for top schools are around 3.5-3.6. I think GMAT carries a lot more weight than your GPA. I'm also going through the same thing except I'm about to go from 3.6 to a 3.5 :(
if you're getting lazy with school work but doing something else that's productive, like volunteering or contributing back to the school, it'll probably be viewed as a positive. No B-school is going to care if you got a 4.0 or a 3.9 so you might as well enjoy the last semester and start trying to improve the other aspects of your future application.
FWIW, I went to a non-target and had a 4.0 going into the last semester, completely blew off school and got 2 B+'s and now am at a top 5 bschool, so don't sweat it.
No one will give a shit, just do well on the GMATS and in your job. GPA is a very small part of your application, assuming its above 3.5 (and even then not that important, I got into a MBA business schools">M7 with a 3.35).
Actually, respectfully disagree that the GPA is a small part of the application. In your case, the quality of your 3.35 is what helped you. By quality I mean more than trend, but the rigor of what you took, the course load, how much you challenged yourself, and frankly, your intellectual curiosity. If you are indeed an ops dude, I am guessing you are an engineer and you probably busted ass. A 3.5 in political science (my own major, by the way) doesn't blow anyone away.
Having said, that -- back to the OP, one or 2 bps in a GPA shouldn't matter, but a 3.9+ is so pretty, it would be a shame to mess it up.
My program was decently hard, but I'm almost certain I got in because of high GMAT , which business schools weight considerably more.
Senioritis (Originally Posted: 12/24/2010)
Grades for the fall semester just started pouring in and it's pretty fucked up.
Not that I really care personally (since I have a signed job offer) but it's bad enough to mean a 0.12+ decrease from the GPA (eg. 3.80 -> 3.67) I listed on my resume for fulltime recruiting. I can probably improve it somewhat next semester but do employers really care? Should I even be worried at all?
You should not be worried at all. As long as you graduate on time the bank will not give two shits. If you choose to improve your GPA it's a matter of pride (getting Magna Cum Laude instead of Cum Laude).
The place it will hurt you most will be b-school applications and post-banking hiring. It will not be a valid excuse to tell future employers / b-school admission committees that you already had a job offer and simply didn't care.
get it back above 3.7 and then you are a boss
Stay in the 3.5 range and you're solid. Longer you work, less b school cares about undergrad gpa
its ok...i dropped from a 3.97 to a 3.5.
However, i did transfer schools
I thought PE firms/other future employers only see the GPA you put on your resume whereas B-school do look at the transcript to track any major drops.
So ultimately it doesn't matter if you drop .4 or .3 points as long as the cumulative ends up being 3.5+
Is this true?
i would say it depends. if you had a 3.9 in two years at a school and then all of a sudden had a 3.3 then something would be suspicious and it might affect your application. however, if you have a legitimate reason for the drop (transferred to a harder school/changed major/family problem) then you should have nothing to worry about
Do college grades matter at this point? (Originally Posted: 02/19/2014)
I got an internship offer at a VC/consulting firm and know they'll hire me full-time if I do a good job at the internship. As long as I don't fail out of college, do my grades mean shit anymore? How important are senior year college grades for MBA or other sorts of grad school?
Grades are always important. Anyone that says otherwise is probably not working in tech, fin, banking, etc.
sorta important~
Your GPA is an important component of your MBA (or any other grad school) application. Assuming you get an offer, have a good time your senior year, but try to stay in the same ballpark. It probably won't affect you much if you go from a 3.8 to a 3.7, but it definitely could if you go down much more than that.
Disclaimer: My GPA dropped ~.2 my senior year after I got a job offer and was overloading to get credits to take the CPA. Was incredibly regretful when I was reviewing my transcript this year as I applied to b-school, even though it may not have had much of an effect.
Coming from someone who has a TERRIBLE GPA. It will always sadly matter, continue to do well.
Do college grades matter at this point? (Originally Posted: 02/19/2014)
I got an internship offer at a VC/consulting firm and know they'll hire me full-time if I do a good job at the internship. As long as I don't fail out of college, do my grades mean shit anymore? How important are senior year college grades for MBA or other sorts of grad school?
Last semester GPA when you already graduated (Originally Posted: 11/15/2010)
So i had an about 3.66 GPA when i was applying to grad schools, fall of senior year and then when got accepted, or in the meantime bombed the last semester (had a rough time/family issues) and it dropped to about 3.5.
Went for my MS at a target and now im sending my resume with undergrad GPA but would prefer to put the 3.66 which really mattered when i was applying and skip that last anomaly of a semester. Can i put something like this on the resume: "8 semester GPA:3.66/4.0" (8 because i spent 9 semesters, the last bad one which i didnt have to take as it was just for another degree) and then be able to convince HR about what happened once they check my transcript or will they screw me over this and i should put the 3.5?
The last semester just doesnt fit my previous and later performance...
I would put the 3.5 because of a) its actually still pretty good, and b) if I saw "7semester GPA:3.66/4.0", I would almost immediately assume that you got like a 1.0 in that final semester.
Another suggestion is to also put your Major GPA in addition to your Cumulative, assuming its better.
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