This form is a sample letter in Word format covering the subject matter of the title of the form.
This form is a sample letter in Word format covering the subject matter of the title of the form.
The acceptance rate at Franklin University is 61%. This means the school is moderately selective. The school expects you to meet their requirements for GPA and SAT/ACT scores, but they're more flexible than other schools. If you exceed their requirements, you have an excellent chance of getting in.
Academic Requirements A minimum cumulative GPA of 3.0 is required. A minimum cumulative BCP GPA of 3.0 is required. The Franklin College PA Program utilizes CASPA to calculate a BCP that includes only biology and chemistry classes. This is different than the BCP reported by CASPA, which also includes physics classes.
With a GPA of 3.47, Franklin College requires you to be around average in your high school class. You'll need a mix of A's and B's, and very few C's. If you have a lower GPA, you can compensate with harder courses like AP or IB classes.
OPTIONAL: Send us your SAT or ACT scores. Franklin College will also accept SAT or ACT test scores that are listed on your high school transcript, sent directly from a school counselor or a copy of your score report that shows your full name. They do not have to be sent from the official testing agency.
1. What's the lowest GPA a college will accept? Most four-year programs typically don't accept GPAs below 2.0, but options like community colleges or alternative admissions programs can help you succeed.
The acceptance rate at Franklin College is 92.9%. In other words, of 100 students who apply, 93 are admitted. This means the school is a nearly open admissions school. They accept nearly all students, so for the most part, you just need to submit an application to get in.
“There never was a good war or a bad peace.” -Letter to Sir Joseph Banks, president of the Royal Society of London, July 1783. Also cited in a letter to Quincy, Sr., American merchant, planter and politician, September 1783.
In an influential pamphlet, Benjamin Franklin warned against allowing people of “swarthy complexion” to enter the United States. His worry focused particularly on Germans, believe those emigrating to the United States were “generally of the most ignorant Stupid Sort of their own Nation.” Dr.
In the decades before the American Revolution, Benjamin Franklin and his son William collaborated intimately to promote the British Empire in America. But when war broke out, their family, like countless others, was torn apart. Benjamin Franklin supported George Washington's army and sided with the rebels—the Patriots.
Just before leaving America for England, Benjamin Franklin dashed off this eight-page letter to John Lining, a physician who had immigrated from Scotland. Lining lived in Charles Town (now Charleston), South Carolina, a pestilential swamp regularly visited by yellow fever epidemics.