Anyone transfer student?

<p>Are there a lot of students that get it CP as a junior transfer? Specifcally engineering.</p>

<p>I’m starting cc in the summer, and I was looking at the articulation and it does not look good :/</p>

<p>[ASSIST</a> Report: MISSION 11-12 CPSLO Articulation Agreement by Major](<a href=“Welcome to ASSIST”>http://www.assist.org/web-assist/report.do?agreement=aa&reportPath=REPORT_2&reportScript=Rep2.pl&event=19&dir=1&sia=MISSION&ria=CPSLO&ia=MISSION&oia=CPSLO&aay=11-12&ay=11-12&dora=CPE)</p>

<p>Mostly all the major courses say no articulation established, while at the UCs there are only 1-3 classes like that so I’m not that worried about them.</p>

<p>SLO is my first choice</p>

<p>Hello. I’m transferring to Cal Poly this year in the major of Chem. I noticed that you go to Mission College? so you live around the Santa Clara area? I really suggest you go to De Anza or Foothill College instead. Message me if you want more advice :)</p>

<p>I am a transfer student who got accepted for this Fall in the major of Animal Science. I had the same problem where on the assist.org website, there was “no articulation established” for most of the classes between the community college I went to and Cal Poly. And yet I still got accepted :slight_smile: It just means that the “no articulation established” classes will have to be taken at Cal Poly once you get accepted. Just make sure you complete 60 transferable units at your communty college, as well as your “godlen 4” (math, english, speech, critical thinking). After that, look on the assist.org website. Whichever class ARE articulated, take those at your CC as well. Try to have everything completed with a descent GPA before you apply, then you’ll have a better chance of getting in.</p>

<p>So don’t worry too much about the “no articulation established”. As long as you have everything else done, it shouldn’t be a problem. Good Luck!</p>

<p>I actually live closer to Evergreen Valley College so I’ll probably go there instead, Mission is about 10 mins away but De Anza is about 30-40 minutes…</p>

<p>Is there really an advantage of going to De Anza? Since there are so many students, I thought I’d have trouble getting classes. I heard there are about 20k students at De Anza, but EVC only has about 8-9k and Mission has around 11-12k.</p>

<p>I live close enough to EVC, Mission, and San Jose City to consider them, but I can’t really consider De Anza because its so far, but given enough pros for it, I might go.</p>

<p>I am a transfer student majoring in Business Administration and got accepted into Cal Poly for fall 2012. Is anyone sure when transfers register? Is anyone majoring in business or going to live on the on campus apartments?</p>

<p>Also, join <a href=“https://www.facebook.com/groups/383585158347817/[/url]”>https://www.facebook.com/groups/383585158347817/&lt;/a&gt; a facebook group I want to start for transfer students going to Cal Poly this fall!</p>

<p>To transfer into Cal Poly, especially as an engineer, is difficult. Many that do get accepted have been at a community college for at least three years. I am currently finishing up my second year at Cuesta College. At the end of the semester I will have completed a total of seventy-five units, all required science math courses, all of my general education classes, and all of the recommended major support classes such as intro to electric circuits and statics. My GPA as of now is 3.86. I applied to Cal Poly for the fall of 2012 as an aerospace engineer. I was wait listed. However, that is aerospace. I have a friend who is finishing his third year with around ninety units and a GPA in the 3.0-3.4 range and he was accepted to Cal Poly for Materials engineering. So if you really want to go to Cal Poly I would plan on being at community college for at least three years.
As for the course articulation, talk to a counselor at your community college. Sometimes there is a course offered at the community college that meets the same requirements as a course offered at a university and it just hasn’t been articulated yet. After some digging in both the Cal Poly course catalog and my community college’s catalog I found a course that matched. I told my counselor and withing a couple of months it was up on assist.org as being articulated.</p>