Originally Posted by Cosper123
Go and speak with your professors. They can sign a form that allows you to withdrawl from a class without it showing up as an incomplete or withdrawl.
Also, some colleges offer the ability to redo a class if you fail it, but the number of times that you can do this is limited...so go speak with a counselor and see what your options are.
I would question both of these heavily. A "W" or "I" showing up on your transcripts has to do with the rules set forth by the administration of the college, not the professors. Colleges/universities spell this out very specifically and one can find the information in the student handbook: withdraw from a class before a particular date to avoid a "W" showing up on the transcript, don't fill the particular requirements of the class by the time the class ends and you get an "I" until the requirement is fulfilled, etc. Professors have no say in this.
One can usually retake a class as many times as they need, so long as they are still admitted to the school. If you fail it or get a passing grade but don't like the grade you can retake the class as much as you'd like. However, a certain number of "F's" will no doubt get you kicked out of school.
Chloe, my first degree was 15 years ago in psychology. I failed a 4-credit class my first semester and, after my first year in college, I had a 1.8 GPA. I was fortunate enough to not get kicked out and finally "grew up" and did better but still only managed a 2.54 GPA upon graduation. Years later I decided on a career in health care, took some pre-reqs, then went to a very difficult, very well respected nursing school in this area. I managed to graduate with a 3.8 GPA, did well on my GRE and had great recommendations from my manager, co-workers and college instructors. To answer your question, I am living proof that you can fail a class in college and still get into CRNA school. Get yourself "fixed" and you'll lick the rest of your classes no problem. Yes, you'll likely have to answer to the "F" you received or the lower GPA, as I did, but it is no way a barrier to CRNA school. I wish you good health, good recovery, and all the motivation needed to do well as you move on.
The following members say Thank You: