<p>How<br>
so?</p>
<p>It's one application, but for each school you apply to you have to pay 55 dollars (or was it 50, I forgot). But its considered one application because you don't have to refill out the information or rewrite the personal statements.</p>
<p>it's actually $60 heh</p>
<p>isn't 4 of them for free?</p>
<p>depends if you qualify for the waiver or not</p>
<p>do the colleges know what other UCs you applied to ?</p>
<p>UCDHopeful...yes</p>
<p>No. The answer is no.</p>
<p>i thought one can only apply for 4 of the UC universities</p>
<p>You can apply for as many as you want, but it seems pointless to apply for every single one if you know about which ones you can get into.</p>
<p>i applied to everyone and got accepted to everyone.</p>
<p>technically, the UC is one university with several locations scattered across California. one university, one application. :- P</p>
<p>so do they know or not? one of you said yes and another said no? so which one is it? does anyone know?</p>
<p>they know, davishopeful, oh yes they know. muahahaha.</p>
<p>I think in a way they know. I remember last year people got acceptance letter from schools that they didnt even apply.</p>
<p>Certainly the admissions office at each campus can see which UCs you applied to as it is in a database available to all campuses. However, that information is not provided to the readers who review the applications.</p>
<p>Why apply to all UC campuses? It seems like such a waste of money, even if you can afford it.</p>
<p>why not? wouldn't that mean more chance to get into one of them?</p>
<p>i'm applying to cal, ucla, ucsd, uci, ucd, ucsb.</p>
<p>Why would you want to apply to every single UC? Unless you can answer yes when asked if you'll attend UCM or UCR if accepted, I don't see the point. Everyone has a range of UCs that he/she is a fit for. The strategy is to apply to the schools you're hopeful for, and one or two safety schools just in case.</p>