Will a Disastrous 1st Quarter Affect My Chances of Getting into Grad School?

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Concerns were raised about the impact of a poor academic performance during the first quarter of college on future graduate school applications. The individual experienced significant challenges, resulting in an F and incompletes, but later improved their academic standing at a community college. The consensus is that while the initial poor grades will negatively affect chances, the overall GPA is a more critical factor. A GPA between 2.9 and 3.3 is considered below average for competitive graduate programs, with a threshold of 3.5 often seen as necessary for strong applications.
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Hey everyone, I've been a forum lurker for quite some time and have decided to come out of the darkness.

I have concern regarding my chances of getting into grad school if I decide to go that route. I basically flunked out of my first quarter of college back in 2004 and ended up with an F and a couple of incompletes due to laziness and inability to adapt to the change. I took the next quarter off and came back strong the quarter after at a local community college and have been doing well ever since. I plan on going back to my original school to finish up my Mechanical Engineering degree in near future.

My question is, will that 1st quarter of F/incompletes hurt my chances of getting into grad school? I estimate I will graduate between a 2.9-3.3 GPA.

Thanks everyone.
 
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Yes, it will hurt. Comparing you to someone who got straight A's in that quarter instead, that person will be at an advantage. Will it hurt a lot? Probably not.

I think your bigger problem is your overall GPA. Below 3.5 is not very good. Below 3.0 is bad.
 
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