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Backstory: I took multivariable calculus as a junior in high school (yeah I know, I was pretty far ahead), and skipped any math my senior year of high school to do a legal internship instead. By the time I took linear algebra my freshman year of college, it had been well over a year and a half since I had done any math, and even though linear is considered the "easy one" (at least compared to real analysis), it was by far my worst grade in college (a C+), although my grades across the board my freshman fall were pretty mediocre. It also made me remember that I absolutely hated math, and I never took another math course again. Is this something worth writing an addendum for, even though it's just one grade as opposed to say, a personal tragedy that seriously affects somebody's grades across the board for a semester?
Comments
I wouldn't. A single C+ in your freshman year of college (in math, especially) shouldn't be a big deal. An addendum will probably just draw attention to it.
I wouldn't do it for two reasons.
1. It's a lone grade freshmen year
2. I don't think learning you don't enjoy math is worth writing about. It draws attention to the fact that you've only taken that single math class, and that's how you did.
No, you probably shouldn't write an addendum for this. What would you really say to explain it anyway?
Like you said, it's just one bad grade and not a big deal. Addenda should be typically reserved for when there's a good reason (out of your control) for bad grades.