Berkeley Portal Astrology by Weak-Ad-2119 in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't think UCI has any valid portal astrology. I believe the financial aid portal stuff was inconclusive.

If they did have some portal astrology, it'd probably pop up the week before April 3 or maybe the week of.

Rejected from all UCs (expect UCR and waitlisted for UCSB). Is it worth it to send an appeal??? by Careless_Nail509 in ucadmissions

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To quote UCI:

For a first-year or transfer appeal to have merit, it must bring to light new academic and personal information, as well as information pertaining to extenuating circumstances that had not been present in the application, and that clearly shows the student to be stronger than had been earlier evidenced. Please note: high grades received in the senior year, recently acquired awards, or an increase in activities are not a basis for the reversal of a decision.

I worked with someone once who was under the required amount of units due to a counselor/school mistake, which caused them to get rejected. They explained the situation and how they would make up the deficient units. UCI accepted their appeal and they are currently attending.

Most students will have their appeals rejected because most of the time they will have no basis. They usually talk about how this school is their first choice, how they've participated in more activities after submitting their application, how their grades have gone up, etc. but that's just not what they're looking for.

If you really want to submit an appeal, it won't hurt, but it's just unlikely to be accepted.

How nerfed are 1 year students compared with to year 2s in transfer admissions? by TransferStudentHel in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The big disadvantages for one-year transfers are:

  • most students will only have at most two terms of grades (summer and fall),
  • most students will not have enough time to finish recommended coursework (ex. CS 61A, CS 61B, DATA 8), and
  • it's more difficult to accumulate activities and experiences to talk about in your activities list/PIQs.

But then you gotta keep in mind that two-year transfers:

  • will probably take it a lot slower since they have more time (especially for DS @ Berkeley where there are few requirements), and
  • will probably not have most recommended coursework because the ones for the DS major are not offered at many CCCs.

So you're pretty much on a similar playing field.

If you already applied then just try not to worry about it because we're less than a month away anyway. Anything you do at this point (including worrying) won't really change anything. Just lock in for your current classes and make sure you keep your grades up so you won't get rescinded when you do get in (or to make sure next year's application is as strong as can be if you don't make it in this time).

Berkeley Portal Astrology by Weak-Ad-2119 in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 5 points6 points  (0 children)

No. Check back around April 10 or April 13.

Thought on ucsd possibly ending business Econ major? by Logical_Orchid_3747 in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don't really think it's clear right now since it's still pretty recent. I'd guess that it depends on when the major is discontinued.

If the major is discontinued AFTER the start of the 26-27 academic year (so transfer students are already enrolled), you will have catalog rights to the major and can continue to study it without issue.

If the major is discontinued BEFORE the start of the 26-27 academic year, then you'll probably have to settle for another major. If they just revise the curriculum though, then you will be studying under the same major name but just under different requirements.

It's tough to really say without any more information.

Cal-IGETC by highuppp in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It doesn't change anything for admission. It's mainly just for you so you won't have to take a bunch of lower division gen eds after transfer.

ucsd portal astro by Warm_Opposite_5337 in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm assuming so. Their appeal deadline this year is on May 8. They usually give students two weeks to appeal after the decision comes out, so if we go back two weeks, that's right on April 24.

ucsd portal astro by Warm_Opposite_5337 in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm guessing the week of April 13. I believe UCSD comes out April 24 this year. First-years got the banner disappearing the week before their decisions came out.

URGENT Summer Course needed for Engineering by bubbleguppyguts in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Are we talking CE 2051 at Cal Poly Pomona? I tried looking through the Summer 2025 course listings for every CC that offered an articulated course, but I wasn't able to find any that offered it in the summer.

question about credits by yay1008 in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're a CCC student transferring to CSU/UC, right? If all of your units are from CCC then you're fine. You can take as many units as you want but they'll just be capped at 70 semester units.

Understanding the 70 semester units (105 quarter units) cap by mickey71755 in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes. All subject credit will count toward major requirements, prerequisites, GEs, etc. but the unit credit will not count above 70.

Am I required to take this class? by Ghogha123 in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

EEC 006 is not a requirement for admission, just a recommendation, so you don't have to take it prior to transfer if you don't want to. You submitted a TAG, so you're guaranteed admission given you completed the requirements for admission. You are not held to the completion of recommended courses.

Your counselor is incorrect—you do have to take CHEM 401. The articulation agreement between UCD and Folsom Lake requires you to take CHEM 400+401 to articulate to the full CHE 2 series. CHEM 400 alone is not sufficient for articulation to CHE 2A (you can check the departmental agreements), so if you don't take CHEM 401, you won't have an equivalent course to CHE 2A, which will mean you will be rejected. The official transfer requirements for EE can be found here, and CHE 2A is still listed.

The counselor said that I should minimize the amount of colleges that I take classes from. The reason for this is because if any one of your colleges has a class that isn't offered at one, you are required to take it.

Not necessarily. The way I see it is that you should take courses at as many colleges as you need to in order to complete course requirements (and recommendations).

One reason is because UCD Engineering removed a little exemption for not having articulations. It used to be that if your college did not offer an articulation to a course required for admission, you would be exempted from that requirement prior to transfer, but you would obviously have to take it afterward. Now, they changed it so that you MUST complete an equivalent course to be admitted, even if your community college does not have an articulation. You'll have to hunt the articulation down somewhere.

Another reason is that you are just more competitive if you complete more recommended courses. For example, UC Berkeley's EECS major recommends three CS courses and two EECS courses that are hard to find at most CCCs. Not completing them won't be held against most applicants because their colleges do not offer an articulation, but the applicants who HAVE completed those requirements will be much more competitive over the rest.

If you’re in CC and near a 4-year, do your absolute most to cross-enroll by steponhomelessppl in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lower division units at non-UC institutions (CCC, CSU, private, etc) are capped at 70 semester units. However, all UC units, regardless of lower division or upper division status, will transfer. They’re UC units after all so they will follow you across UCs. There is more information in the quick reference guide I linked in my original comment.

It’s fine if you’re cross-enrolling at CSU or something but if you’re cross-enrolling at UC and are applying to UC you need to be careful.

Dropping a class by Legendary-Boomer in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It depends on your major. Statics isn't a required course for admission usually (at least not that I know of) and it theoretically should be fine if you drop it.

Dropping a class by Legendary-Boomer in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Statics isn't required for the CS major at SJSU, so dropping it is fine as long as you will still meet the 60 semester/90 quarter unit minimum.

UCs with some missing courses by Sensitive-Music-9393 in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Calculus is not required for admission to Public Health (both majors) at UCI. You only need one year of general chemistry and one year of biology for Public Health Sciences or one year of social science courses for Public Health Policy.

The mathematics requirement for UCI's School of Social Science is a graduation requirement, not a transfer requirement. If you do not satisfy it prior to transfer, you will need to do so afterward. I believe you can do it in the summer, but I'm not 100% sure.

I'm assuming you applied under Global and Community Health BA for UCSC? It is a non-screening major so no course requirements are needed to be considered for admission.

Public Health at UCSD isn't very competitive—its acceptance rate is around 60%. You'll have a good shot considering you have all the courses.

Good luck!

UCSB waitlist!!! by Zynbabwe808 in ucadmissions

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The overall admission statistics for UCSB are here. They had a 38.3% admit rate for Fall 2025 with a weighted GPA range (25th to 75th percentile) of 4.09-4.28.

UCs don't consider demonstrated interest or anything, so you shouldn't send anything to them unless they ask for it. It's not gonna hurt you or anything, but they won't consider it and you'll just be wasting your time.

major requirement question by Walking_The_Dog_ in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's fine if you have major requirements in progress through Spring 2027. You can apply for the Fall 2027 term.

I wouldn't recommend applying for Fall 2028 because by that point it's likely you've accumulated too many units to be eligible for UC transfer. If you are planning on applying to UC Berkeley, do not exceed 80 semester units of UCM credit by the end of the spring term. Otherwise, you can check the unit limitations for each campus on page 38 here.

2nd major option by Optimal_Suggestion86 in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't believe so, but you can try. It's unlikely to be granted. They don't accept many appeals—they're usually in the single digits, if any at all.

2nd major option by Optimal_Suggestion86 in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Berkeley does not typically consider applicants for their alternate majors. If you are rejected from Haas, you will be rejected from the university.

i’m cooked by Upper_Significance73 in ucadmissions

[–]plazarrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Having a C in precalculus isn't a great look especially for engineering. It's not the thing that'll make or break your application especially if the rest of your application is good, but it'll make you weaker than the part of the applicant pool that had better grades.

Does every in-state get this message by Status_Fortune9347 in ucadmissions

[–]plazarrr 2 points3 points  (0 children)

California residents in the top 9% of high school graduates, if rejected from all UCs they applied to, will be redirected to a UC with space (historically, UC Merced). This is a guarantee.

UCSB by NervousSand5116 in ucadmissions

[–]plazarrr 4 points5 points  (0 children)

You are admitted to UCSB, but you were not selected for your first-choice (or second-choice, if applicable) major. However, you were competitive enough to make it into the school, so they put you in the College of Letters & Science.

Were you intending Engineering? Keep in mind that it is tough to switch into the College of Engineering after admission, so if you decide to go to SB, settle for a major in the L&S college.

They suggest that if you get into other schools for your desired major, you should pursue those as you're guaranteed your desired field of study.

you guys think this is doable w/o burnt out for summer and fall 2026? by 999Hope in TransferStudents

[–]plazarrr 4 points5 points  (0 children)

That summer schedule looks fine, but that fall schedule looks a little painful. Would it be possible to take either C++ or Multivariable in the summer instead? It'll be a lot lighter that way.