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gpa in undergrad vs gpa in post bac cert


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so anyway, my undergrad gpa will be garbage low, even if i ace ALL of my courses in the next 2 years it will be 2.7.... however, i plan on taking a post bacc certificate for speech language pathology assistant (this is in canada, so this is what it is called) however all the courses im taking now count towards my last 20 courses / 10 credits / 60 credits however u wanna put it and so far im getting a 3. something in those so i plan on kicking that up.

in my post bacc cert which is 1 year i plan on doing well. so say i get 3.8 in that, is that a significant enough improvement to get me into schools? considering this certificate will covert what i need in terms of csd courses (since i dont have a lot of options in undergrad as of right now)

 

thoughts?

 

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a few people have done it and had no issues.

states college vs uni might be different

If you are talking about American Post Bacc program that is different.  That is undergrad course work.  If you are talking about Canada CDA program, then no, they are not going to consider your grades as it is a post graduate certificate program, not an undergraduate program.  Canada does not consider college courses as university undergrad courses.

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so in canada, we dont have undegrad in csd, so in order for me to get the required pre req courses that asha put forward, im taking a one year post ungrad, grad certificate program from a college

here it is for reference

http://www.georgiancollege.ca/academics/full-time-programs/communicative-disorders-assistant-coda/

http://www.durhamcollege.ca/programs/communicative-disorders-assistant-graduate-certificate

 

there is 2 more. so these courses are gonna be my pre reqs so it should at least be obvious that i am now serious about my education... if anything...

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so in canada, we dont have undegrad in csd, so in order for me to get the required pre req courses that asha put forward, im taking a one year post ungrad, grad certificate program from a college

here it is for reference

http://www.georgiancollege.ca/academics/full-time-programs/communicative-disorders-assistant-coda/

http://www.durhamcollege.ca/programs/communicative-disorders-assistant-graduate-certificate

 

there is 2 more. so these courses are gonna be my pre reqs so it should at least be obvious that i am now serious about my education... if anything...

allissavar, yes, i took the durham college program.  Those are not the courses that ASHA or Canada wants because it is from a college.  You should know this if you are a Canadian.  Yes, Canada has an undergrad in CSD.  Brock university.  That is where i did my undergrad.  I also did the durham college CDA program and i applied to schools, and i know that the certificate is useless for graduate schools.  If you want a certificate program, you can take the one offered at Brock.  I know a lot of people who took the certificate at Brock to help them get accepted both in Canada and America.  But, if you are taking the CDA program thinking it will help you get into a graduate program, then you are so wrong.  It is not going to help you.  Colleges are different than University in Canada.

Edited by Persis
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allissavar, yes, i took the durham college program.  Those are not the courses that ASHA or Canada wants because it is from a college.  You should know this if you are a Canadian.  Yes, Canada has an undergrad in CSD.  Brock university.  That is where i did my undergrad.  I also did the durham college CDA program and i applied to schools, and i know that the certificate is useless for graduate schools.  If you want a certificate program, you can take the one offered at Brock.  I know a lot of people who took the certificate at Brock to help them get accepted both in Canada and America.  But, if you are taking the CDA program thinking it will help you get into a graduate program, then you are so wrong.  It is not going to help you.  Colleges are different than University in Canada.

 

weird lots of people i know did it and had no problem....

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weird lots of people i know did it and had no problem....

 

Very interesting! I suppose it might vary from school-to-school. In the meantime, do your best to aim for A average in your last 60 credits now that you have 2 years left. This is the part of your application that you still have control and will increase your chances of still applying to Canadian schools. Most US schools also look at last 60 credits, but the strong emphasis is on the speech credits for 3.75+.

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Very interesting! I suppose it might vary from school-to-school. In the meantime, do your best to aim for A average in your last 60 credits now that you have 2 years left. This is the part of your application that you still have control and will increase your chances of still applying to Canadian schools. Most US schools also look at last 60 credits, but the strong emphasis is on the speech credits for 3.75+.

exactly my plan... i mean my overall is not great. but i already have a few programs in mind that focus on last 60 and im doing my best to just hit that 4.0.... if i come close i'll still be pretty happy

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exactly my plan... i mean my overall is not great. but i already have a few programs in mind that focus on last 60 and im doing my best to just hit that 4.0.... if i come close i'll still be pretty happy

 

Someone told me that U of T undergrad had some courses in speech, is that true?

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alissavar, I did see child language disorders, adult language disoders and reading disorders. What was your experience overall? Do they grade hard?

Edited by Articklish
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alissavar, I did see child language disorders, adult language disoders and reading disorders. What was your experience overall? Do they grade hard?

 

Yea those are the courses my friend took and overall U of T courses are a bit more advanced than some of the U.S. COMD courses. She also took Phonetics and Disorders of Speech and Language. She got in to a U.S. school with those courses and not doing a post bacc so... 

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Not a post-bac, but do you think graduate programs care more about major gpa than overall undergrad gpa?

For California schools they look into the communication disorders courses and last 60 units. They don't care about your previous major grades. That's the case for at least a majority of the CSUs
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