The number of missing assignments needed to fail depends on the grading policy of the class. In general, consistently missing multiple assignments can lead to failing the class. It is important to complete all assignments to avoid failing.
That doesn't give enough information for me to tell you what impact would happen to you grade, I would need to know the weight of different assignments and I would need to know how many different assignments you had already in order to tell you what impact it would have.
Not sure what assignments you are trying to find. If you are trying to find assignments for your High School Classes or College Classes, you will need to go to their website and you should be able to find your assignments there.
It depends on which school you go to but two F's to fail is the normal rate! :)
The answer is not in here and i need it for my project or ill fail
Need to submit assignments
You need to have the B2K(Back to Karkand) DLC. It includes maps, vehicles, and the assignments which once completed, unlock new weapons. there are also many new weapons and assignments in the premium expansions, Including the M417, and the up coming DLC "aftermath"s premier weapon is the tactical crossbow.
You need to pass with 25/30. If you get 6 wrong you fail.
No, thank you.
You can't just delete it. You have to have a "Help" sign on it or it may say "Needs assistance." thats when the student can delete. Only the teacher can delete assignments if they need or want to.
yes
Yes, for many, many reasons. You'd need to provide more details if you want more information on what to do.
Extra assignments come in two categories. The first is when a teacher hands out assignments because a student is failing or in danger of failing, and needs extra credit to boost their marks. This happens most commonly amongst those that fall in the lower and upper extremes of intellect. Those that are below average intelligence will fail to grasp the concepts of the lessons, and need more practice to learn the same knowledge and skills as their peers. Those that are above average intelligence can become bored with the regular curriculum, and start to fail simply because they no longer care about the work. In this case, extra assignments can allow them to excel while simultaneously bringing their marks up to satisfactory levels. We could consider these reactive adjustments, because they reflect changes to the normal course in response to a failure condition. The second category is related to those of above-average intelligence. Sometimes, a teacher will recognize that a student is too intelligent for their course, and thus increase the requirements for that student to pass the course. This may manifest itself in terms of increased challenge levels (such as requiring better test times or more difficult questions), or in terms of extra assignments required to pass the class. Most students, especially those below the average intelligence mark, may see this as a form of punishment, and is thus unfair. In other cases, where teachers offer selected students additional work, those students may see it as unfair as well as their peers that did not receive the extra assignments, usually manifested as "Why did Jimmy get more chances to get good grades than I did?" This question is ambiguous in nature. Is it fair for teachers to give you extra work, or is it unfair for teachers to fail to give you extra chances to make the grade? Teachers are not obligated to hand out extra assignments, so it is fair if you ask for extra assignments and do not receive any, and thus fail the class. The teachers are there to assist your learning, but they are obligated to pass you if you honestly need to repeat the class because you do not understand the concepts. It is also fair for them to hand out extra assignments to all students with an option to complete the assignments for extra credit. Finally, because it is their responsibility to teach their students to learn any way possible, it is perfectly fair to assign extra assignments to those they feel need an extra challenge or will need the extra points to even complete the course successfully. The only time this situation should be considered unfair is when the challenges are exceptionally more difficult than the grade level they are expected to teach for, and the extra assignments cause the student to fail because of the overwhelming challenge, when they would have otherwise passed their course with satisfactory marks.