I think I'm at a 2.5 or so right now.
Anyway, here's the full story, just because I feel like telling it...
So, I got really fed up with High School about half way through my Junior year. Like, really fed up. I was fed up with it before, but I was annoyed to no end because:
1. In order to continue in math I was interested in, I would have to go to PSU. Even CCC only had one more math class I hadn't taken (which I'm actually not minding at this point now that I've switched from math major to Music Major) which I was actually interested in.
2. Administration was bogus
3. Classes weren't focused heavily enough on tests and projects.
Anyway, NCSD has a program called CEO. Basically, you get in the program, pick a community college -- any community college, though 99% of the students in the program go to CCC because it's across the street -- and then they pay up to $700 per term of your tuition and $450 per year for your books. This doesn't operate against your 4 years of financial aid eligibility, so if you're like me, where you plan on getting an AAS in Audio Recording, then getting a JOB in a studio or play with a band part time while you go to PSU studying graph theory and statistics, it's pretty perfect, because I plan on spending 7 years in college before I get my Bachelor's, then I'll probably wind up going for a Master's, maybe even Doctorate because I'm not mainstream enough to get a normal job, and that would be my only reasonable excuse for doing so. Anyway, I started the program last fall after grinding through my Junior year of high school. Started off terribly with something like a 2.7 GPA fall term -- the worst I'd done since Middle School. Got a 1.8 Winter term. Spring term was a little better, but still dismal because 3 credits of A were unexpectedly dropped from my schedule, so instead of the 2.4 I worked for, I got a 2.0.
So that's where I'm at right now. I beat 98% of the seniors at my high school on the SAT with a 2170 (as a junior), yet I'm going to a Community College, barely passing most of my classes, and failing far too many for comfort.
Either I'm going to be rich in 10 years, or I'm going to be homeless.