Accepted cal state long beach class of 2014?

<p>anyone accepted yet?</p>

<p>Ive only heard of rejection letters being sent out at this time. :/</p>

<p>A guy from my school got accepted a few days ago but he had a 4.0+</p>

<p>My daughter got in last week, but she had a 4.1 gpa at the time she applied.</p>

<p>I got accepted; I checked online and called the number.</p>

<p>I got the letter in the mail today. =D</p>

<p>is everyone that had gotten an acceptance instate</p>

<p>I’m in state and still haven’t heard but a few of my friends have. aaaah it’s so frustrating lol</p>

<p>i’m also in state and haven’t heard anything from them yet either. do they send an e-mail first or is it just a letter in the mail?</p>

<p>Accepted, I haven’t gotten my letter yet but I called in a few days ago.</p>

<p>C/O 2014? You expect to graduate within 4 years at a CSU nowadays? I don’t think so.</p>

<p>^ Even with the budget cuts, it’s possible.</p>

<p>i have to agree with speakbraille…a lot of my friends at csulb can’t get the classes they need. i’m applying as a transfer student for engineering and i won’t be surprised if it takes me another 3-4 years once i get into csulb.</p>

<p>Power of One-the average time it takes to graduate at CSULB right now is 7 years. It’s possible at SSU and most of the other CSUs, but CSULB is simply too overcrowded to withstand the budget cuts and still get most students out in 4 years.</p>

<p>7 years? Is this for all majors? Does that include AP credits? No offense, but I hope you’re wrong. This is very upsetting to hear.</p>

<p>Their statistical reports posted here:
[Retention</a> & Graduation](<a href=“http://daf.csulb.edu/offices/univ_svcs/institutionalresearch/students/retention_graduation.html]Retention”>http://daf.csulb.edu/offices/univ_svcs/institutionalresearch/students/retention_graduation.html)</p>

<p>Looks like for full-time, first-time freshman, 12% graduate in 4 years, 54% in 6 years. You just have to figure out how to get yourself into those percentages; summer school classes, cc ge credits? There must be a way. I also see in the Load report that the average load is 13, that may explain somethings.</p>

<p>This might be helpful in planning down the road.
[IR</a> Enrollment Planning Reports](<a href=“http://daf.csulb.edu/offices/univ_svcs/institutionalresearch/ep_reports/index.html]IR”>http://daf.csulb.edu/offices/univ_svcs/institutionalresearch/ep_reports/index.html)
Bottleneck courses for 2010</p>

<p>I just got accepted to Long Beach State but I am a transfer student. I started at a community college prior to transferring and I’m an Aerospace Engineering major with a 3.5 GPA. From my knowledge engineering isn’t impacted at Long Beach. I was going to pursue a degree at Cal Poly Pomona but I had to wait an additional semester for that. Anyway, finishing on time will be hard. By the time I got to register, which was after their SOAR orientation, many classes were full and the ones that were available would overlap others. This will slow me down by at least one semester. I also did not know that there’s upper division general ed which I have to complete too on top of two classes that did not transfer. I am two weeks away from my first day at Long Beach. It seems like a school that accepts a lot of students from the local community colleges (Long Beach City College has an agreement with them).</p>

<p>I keep hearing that they got over 70k applicants a year for just a few thousand spots. With that admissions rate I don’t understand why the average SAT score at CSULB is just 1026 which is just about the national average. Any insights? Are they selective?</p>

<p>[California</a> State University - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“California State University - Wikipedia”>California State University - Wikipedia)</p>

<p>CSULB got that high of an amount of applicants because it’s a nice affordable option for many people who can’t afford UC or private school tuition. The CSU system was made so that each of the 23 campuses could take in students in their city/service area. With a minimum GPA of 2.0 to apply, each CSU is “required” to accept those students in their service area who meet this requirement. As a result, the average GPA and SAT scores (tend to correlate with each other) of those who matriculate are usually lower, and thus so is selectivity. The rest of the spots are given to those outside the service area, and these students that do get accepted tend have higher stats than those inside the service area since these spots are few in number.</p>