No, but you might be put on probation.
Yes
You would have to fail 2 classes in 2 semesters meaning getting 1 or 2 es or d- in each semesters
I am not clear if you are asking about a college math class or high school math class. If it is college you take it for one semester. Some math classes are divided into two parts and you take one the first semester and then the second half the next semester. If this is high school it could be for the entire year.
have u got admission yet??????? register for class, attend class. whether you pass or fail the class, you have the credit hours officially assigned to the class. most classes are 3hrs per semester. That's how you earn a college credit hrs.
Your financial aid will get pulled from you. And it will not pay your money back for the classes you have failed.
Each class is three credits, except for labs, those are four credits. You can take as many classes as you want. Depending on your school full-time is either 3 or four classes, but you can take as little as 1 or as many as you can without getting overwhelmed. You don't really pass semesters, you pass classes. For example, you can fail 3 out of the four you take and still go on to the next semester, you would just need to repeat those classes at some point.
it depends on what school your in but in my school if you fail 1 grade for the whole school year your fine. fail 2 classes for the school year summer school 3 then you repeat so you should be fine and also D's are passing in my school
If you have a failing semester average you will be okay if nof failed to badly. year average failing can result to summer school. Failing in middle school will not be against you in college and work
you can fail
No they do not affect your GPA. However, if you fail them, they will be looking at your academic progress, especially if you are receiving financial aid.
If you fail ROTC classes, you do not get to be an officer in that particular unit of the military. You also get a failing grade on your overall grade point average.
If you're failing classes in your intended major, you really should rethink your major or school all together. Are you failing because it's too hard for you, or because you're uninterested in the subject, or because you're uninterested in college in general? If it's college in general, stop wasting yours and/or your parents' money and take a break until you're ready to be serious with school. If it's that the classes are too hard, look into more remedial classes to prepare you for the tougher courses or reconsider your major entirely. If you're finding the classes completely uninteresting, then it's definitly time to switch majors. In short, no, it's not normal to fail classes.