<p>As I mentioned previously, I have some old credits from a bad year at a private four-year college. This college is very small; I'm sure no articulation agreement exists.</p>
<p>As I understand it, in the admissions GPA only UC-transferrable classes are counted, correct? But how does the campus know which classes from this four-year will be transferrable? I believe the UCs only conduct a review of such transferred units after admission.</p>
<p>Though I hope not, I'm thinking that all of those four-year college classes will count against me in the admissions process even if they're ultimately judged not to be UC-transferrable, yet the 'A' I received in my California Politics class (which is, for now, only CSU transferrable) will not be counted in my GPA for admissions purposes, nor transferred for credit.</p>
<p>have you called the counselors at the UC of your choice to make sure no articulation agreement exists?</p>
<p>maybe this link can help you answer some questions or you can find the counselor’s number</p>
<p>[University</a> of California - Counselors](<a href=“http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/educators/counselors/adminfo/transfer/advising/credit.html]University”>http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/educators/counselors/adminfo/transfer/advising/credit.html)</p>
<p>The college is about 30 years old, has never had more than 100 students (total), and is on the east coast. It’s curriculum and class offerings are rapidly shifting, and none of the classes I took are currently offered, nor are they likely to ever be offered again. None of the faculty that taught me are currently employed by the college; nearly the entire faculty was dismissed by the college’s board at some point after I left. Even with all those issues, the college is regionally accredited.</p>
<p>I currently hold a 3.91 GPA among 33 community college units, yet barely received a 2.2 during my year at the east coast college. Though I unfortunately can’t explain all this on my UC application (it wouldn’t help my case to blame others), I really feel I got a raw deal.</p>
<p>Anyway, I feel pretty confident in my assumption that no articulation agreement exists.</p>