Schools UC schools view of retaking classes , what do you tihnk?

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The discussion centers on the implications of retaking classes for admission into University of California (UC) schools, particularly for a California resident with a history of withdrawing from classes and receiving low grades. It highlights that UC admissions do not penalize students for multiple withdrawals (W's) and only consider grades of C or above in GPA calculations. A student who retakes classes, earning A's after initially receiving D's, can maintain a 4.0 GPA, which is favorable for UC admissions, including competitive campuses like Berkeley and UC Santa Barbara. However, the conversation notes that graduate schools may have stricter policies regarding grades and withdrawals. Additionally, it clarifies that community college students can apply to UC schools without being limited by senior standing, as this status only applies to those who have attended a four-year university. The ability to apply with numerous units from a community college is seen as advantageous for transfer opportunities.
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How negatively do UC schools in California view retaking classes ? By the way, altogether it would be about 8 W's & repeating about 6 classes total.

How about, if you have a 4.0 but retook classes and got A's, however got D's in them ALL the first time, would you have a very good chance of getting into a UC? Such as Berkley, or UC Santa Barbara as opposed to a Cal state school ?

(The student is a resident of CA by the way if it matters.)

Also, the student has taken TONS of units because the student changed their major twice.
 
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For CC transfers: UCs do not put weight on the number of W's and only factor in grades C and above for the GPA. So if the student had 6 D's and retook them for A's, the student's GPA would still be a 4.0 for the UCs. Grad school, I hear, is not as forgiving though. Also, since the student is coming from a CC, he/she will never be considered senior standing and can apply with as much units as he/she wants, provided they all come from a CC. They only count 70 towards graduation though, but you get subject credit for the rest if they articulate.
 
soleil said:
For CC transfers: UCs do not put weight on the number of W's and only factor in grades C and above for the GPA. So if the student had 6 D's and retook them for A's, the student's GPA would still be a 4.0 for the UCs. Grad school, I hear, is not as forgiving though. Also, since the student is coming from a CC, he/she will never be considered senior standing and can apply with as much units as he/she wants, provided they all come from a CC. They only count 70 towards graduation though, but you get subject credit for the rest if they articulate.

"Grad school, I hear, is not as forgiving though." Not as forgiving of what? Of which grades the student receives at a junior college, or of the grades received at the school that the student transfers to after the junior college?


What is, "senior standing" ?


"and can apply with as much units as he/she wants" , can apply for what ? And is that good or not good?
 
I don't know about UC transfer policies, but I can say that your chances of getting into Berkeley are vastly diminished if you do not spell it correctly.
 
Jurrasic said:
"Grad school, I hear, is not as forgiving though." Not as forgiving of what? Of which grades the student receives at a junior college, or of the grades received at the school that the student transfers to after the junior college?

Not as forgiving when it comes to W's.

Jurrasic said:
What is, "senior standing" ?

It is your status regarding units taken. In UCLA, junior standing is from 60 to 86 semester units (or 90 to 129 quarter units), so anything above that is considered senior standing. These figures would probably be the same for Berkeley, but you better check just to make sure. Google is your friend.

Jurrasic said:
"and can apply with as much units as he/she wants" , can apply for what ? And is that good or not good?

Can apply as a junior transfer to any UC campus, since most only take juniors. The thing about it is though, is that "senior standing" only applies to students who have been to a 4-year university, so if you come from just a community college you can apply with as many units as you want since you can never hit the unit cap for senior standing.
 
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