13S12 wrote:
Hi,
My undergrad grades are less than stellar due to me having an anxiety disorder, which wasn't correctly diagnosed till i was in my last year and caused all sorts of havoc on my GPA. I graduated with about 58% in my class. The average person in my class got around 67-69%, but I have no idea if the committee would know statistics for MY course (since class percentages vary a lot from course to course in my university)...
I went from flunking engineering to doing sub-par in the field I switched to (Geology). However, while i was in university i got a start-up grant from the government, set up and ran a successful business for around 6 months. I have loads of community work in my resume. I went on to found an online business that did pretty well, and then started one more business which i'm currently doing. So... I have about 2.5-3 year of entrepreneurial experience.
Anyway, I have a good explanation for my grades - but I've been advised not to mention my extenuating circumstances. But it would be so strange to have absolutely NO reason for having low grades. I'd like to honest... but I dont want people to feel like I can't cope with an MBA because I had a disorder. I've gotten proper treatment and I'm quite prepared for academics now. But is it better to look like a delinquent who simply didn't study properly for so many years cos they couldn't be bothered than to explain such a circumstance?
What if I were to talk about a medical condition that affected my grades without mentioning what exactly it was, being as vague as humanly possible.. XD lol. Im out of ideas.
FYI I have a GMAT of 710 (Q: 48, V:40, IR: 6). Dunno.
any advice would be appreciated.
So being vague is probably not a good idea but if you could mention these circumstances while making another point at the same time, it could be a good idea to bring them up. For instance, why was the disorder discovered so late? What did you learn from that process and that diagnose? Etc. etc. (You know your circumstances better than I, so you can probably think of a better positive spin than I can)
What I am saying is that just mentioning it as an excuse might not be a great idea but if you can mention it as an example of something you’ve overcome/learned from or similar, that might be a way to solve your dilemma.
So while I understand why you were told not to bring this up, I also think you could, just in the right way.