<p>I just noticed/figured out by the time this school year is over i will finish my 2nd year at a community college and only have 55 credits out of the 60 needed for an associates degree in science (this is including me taking summer classes) but i already applied to transfer so if i take more classes for the next semesters, it wont show up on my transfer application because i already sent one in, what should i do? Will this affect acceptance or should not worry about it?</p>
<p>You are not being very clear in your question. You say you have already applied for transfer and that you will have 55 credits at the end of the year including summer. This would mean that your transcript sent for the application will by necessity have fewer than 55 credits on it. This is normal and schools will make a determination on the transcript they have from you (they might ask for an updated transcript in the spring). Once you enroll, they will want your final transcript to determine your transfer credit.</p>
<p>What I don’t understand about your question is when do you plan to take the additional courses you mention? You are obviously thinking of getting an AA but this really does not make sense to do when you are already in a 4 year school. You might want ot clarify this.</p>
<p>Lemme try again, don’t you need to have your associates degree before you can transfer from community college to a university, needing 60 credits for one? On the college application it asks for what your plan is for your classes in the next semester and on your transcript it shows the classes youve taken and are taken but out of all the classes I said I would of taken i would not have 60 credits needed for associates according to the application i sent. So they would see that i wouldnt have the associates, even though i now plan on taking those classes needed in the summer? Or is this just a stupid question</p>
<p>oo and i see, the title should be already applied to transfer, i did not transfer</p>
<p>Your post is very confusing. You already applied this year, for 2014-2015? That’s an early application deadline… Anyways, you don’t need an AA to transfer. However, most schools prefer 60 units and many require it for transfer. It would help a lot for you to tell us the school you are applying to. On your application, did you list the classes you are planning to take? Are you taking so many classes that you couldn’t scatter 5 more units over the next two semesters and get the 60? If you could do that, you could probably notify the college you’re applying to of your increased schedule and they would add that to your application, because it’s probably ages until they actually review it. I didn’t even know any schools were collecting applications yet.</p>
<p>4-year colleges require general education courses and courses related to the majors from CCs. An associate degree has nothing to do with 4-year colleges. Many CC courses designed for associate degrees don’t meet 4-year college application requirements and are not transferable. You need to check the requirements of the 4-year colleges you want to transfer to first.</p>