<p>I'm transferring in and was not offered on-campus housing for the fall. I'm looking for a place off-campus, maybe St. John's or Clover Ridger. It would be a lot cheaper and more fun if I have someone to live with.</p>
<p>Thanks, </p>
<p>Matt</p>
<p>Good luck Matt. Check out the transfer acceptance board, usually there are a lot of people looking. Also, do they still have the top poster list over there? If so, tell me where I rank (I am just a bit curious, lol)...it may be under Irish80122</p>
<p>What do you typically need, GPA and SAT wise to transfer? Also, where is the transfer acceptance board? thanks</p>
<p>Transfer acceptance board is on ND's website and you get all that information once you have been accepted as a transfer. For all your other questions, I will point you to my website though I will give you a quick and dirty answer here as well. My website of all things transfer is at <a href="http://www.nd.edu/%7Emnadorff/transfer%5B/url%5D">www.nd.edu/~mnadorff/transfer</a>.</p>
<p>GPA: Above a 3.5 but higher is better (transferring is getting more selective so I will have to bump this up soon if you take the right courses, which is crucial. It also depends on your school, a Ivy League school can get away with a little (but not much) lower and a community college will require you having a 3.9-4.0.</p>
<p>SAT: doesn't really matter because it predicts how well you will do in college and your college GPA is a better indicator. They look at it, but it isn't really weighted much. I know a transfer with a 17 ACT.</p>
<p>Hope that helps</p>