<p>Hey all, do you think you'll spend 2 years finishing your undergraduate at the uc you end up going? Or are some of you planing on taking your time? I'm thinking of taking it easy and taking three years.</p>
<p>Two years for me, I have lots of prerequisites completed already and I want to get started on my MA asap because I am already older than most of you. Also, it took 2.5 years for me to transfer because they no longer accept Spring admissions at the UC schools. Two years will be enough time for me anyway, and I don’t want the extra debt of an additional year as an undergraduate. If you can take your time, enjoy, and maintain good grades, that is always a good idea.</p>
<p>2! im 25 and need to finish up! lol</p>
<p>I plan on going for 2. I have been at my CC for 3 so I’m ready to graduate.</p>
<p>Definitely 2 years. There’s absolutely no need to pile on more debt than necessary. Also the faster you’re done with school, the faster you can move on with your life: For me it would be getting my master’s and a job.</p>
<p>I will be there most likely be there for 2.5 years because I am double majoring.</p>
<p>I was under the impression that transfers had to finish in 2 years because of unit ceilings. Is taking 3 years common?</p>
<p>^ I have only heard of unit ceiling for Cal, UCLA and UCSB for transfer students. I don’t know about the rest though…
But I personally know a guy transfered from my CC to UCSC and next fall will be his 3rd year there. He’s double majoring, and doing 3 + 3 (3 CC, 3 UCSC)</p>
<p>2 is ideal. I would like to study abroad in Spain so if I could still take enough transferrable classes over there and graduate in 2 years, that would be superb. But I’m okay with 3.</p>
<p>From what I’m seeing, I’ll probably be done with my BA in 2 years when I transfer, and maybe another semester in the 3rd year. All the pre-req classes offered at my CC are already completed, so that leaves me with 2 more at UCSB which I’ll be taking it on the first semester there. Shouldn’t be a problem completing my upper division classes if I don’t plan to study abroad :P</p>
<p>Based on the plan my advisor set up for me, I’ll be spending 3 years at my UC, since I have to take a few lower division courses that weren’t even available at my CC in order to get into the higher division courses that are required for my major.</p>