I'm trying to determine whether or not it makes sense to take a medical withdrawal this semester at school. I'm having an issue with my medicine that I would need to go home to deal with, for a few months at least, and it's becoming difficult to stay in school without addressing it.
The issue is, if I take a medical withdrawal, my transcript will show four w's for the courses I'm enrolled in right now. I have one more year of college, and presuming I get better quickly and return for a great Fall/Spring, which is expected, what is the effect of having this sort of thing on my transcript? When applying to grad school is there even space to explain something like this? Do you have to go out of your way to do so? Do schools not care and just think you flunked out for a semester? Will this horribly scar my future chances?
I am intent on being a competitive candidate and applying to top schools. This issue shouldn't have lingering effects if I fix my medicine now, and it won't stop me from doing amazing when I come back next year.
But I don't want to take the chance if it means no top grad schools will want to consider me.
Does anyone have experience with this? Have any of you gotten into a school despite a medical withdrawal or something similar?
Question
mrs12
Hi guys,
I'm trying to determine whether or not it makes sense to take a medical withdrawal this semester at school. I'm having an issue with my medicine that I would need to go home to deal with, for a few months at least, and it's becoming difficult to stay in school without addressing it.
The issue is, if I take a medical withdrawal, my transcript will show four w's for the courses I'm enrolled in right now. I have one more year of college, and presuming I get better quickly and return for a great Fall/Spring, which is expected, what is the effect of having this sort of thing on my transcript? When applying to grad school is there even space to explain something like this? Do you have to go out of your way to do so? Do schools not care and just think you flunked out for a semester? Will this horribly scar my future chances?
I am intent on being a competitive candidate and applying to top schools. This issue shouldn't have lingering effects if I fix my medicine now, and it won't stop me from doing amazing when I come back next year.
But I don't want to take the chance if it means no top grad schools will want to consider me.
Does anyone have experience with this? Have any of you gotten into a school despite a medical withdrawal or something similar?
7 answers to this question
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