<p>@ kiwicheese</p>
<p>My first choice is UCD, but going to UCLA wouldn’t be bad either. I will be submitting transfer applications to UCD, UCLA, UCSD, and UCB. My transfer major for Davis will be Physiology while my transfer major for UCLA will be Psychobiology. I haven’t researched the other schools enough yet to decide on my transfer majors there. </p>
<p>Preliminary 2009 transfer student profiles for UCLA can be found at this link:
[Profile</a> of Admitted Transfer Students by Major, Fall 2009 - UCLA Undergraduate Admissions](<a href=“http://www.admissions.ucla.edu/prospect/Adm_tr/Tr_Prof09_mjr.htm]Profile”>http://www.admissions.ucla.edu/prospect/Adm_tr/Tr_Prof09_mjr.htm)</p>
<p>UC Davis 2008 student profile can be found at this link:
[UC</a> Davis :: Undergraduate Admissions](<a href=“http://admissions.ucdavis.edu/profile/]UC”>http://admissions.ucdavis.edu/profile/)</p>
<p>I’m currently sitting on a 3.6 GPA right now. Looking at the UCLA site above, this means I’ll need to bump up my GPA just a tad in order to be “guaranteed” admission to the major I want. However, I’m hoping my extracurricular activities will compensate for the 0.1 I am currently missing. :P</p>
<p>The classes aren’t awfully difficult, but there is a huge discrepancy in the grading difficulty of professors in the Writing Department. For instance, my previous writing professor allowed one revision of each of the papers we turned in while my roommates’ writing teacher allowed an infinite amount of revisions in addition to being an easier grader (read: Easy A). This type of thing happens on every campus, so just be aware of who grades easier and take their course if the classes doesn’t pertain to your major (such as GE requirements). Ask around when you get here. You’d be surprised at how much you can learn about professors just by asking around and by checking ratemyprofessor.com.</p>
<p>On the other hand, taking “harder” instructors early on will prepare you for the upperdivision courses much better than taking “easier” professors.</p>
<p>I’ve found that having a good mix of “easy” courses and “hard” courses has been most effective. I still have time for extracurricular activities and I am not tired of school or under huge amounts of stress. Find what works best for you early on. :)</p>
<p>From what I’ve had experience with, all of the professors in the Natural Sciences department are excellent professors who will sometimes go out of their way to explain a concept to you individually. It’s awesome getting this type of personal attention, especially at a UC campus. Professors encourage you to stop them even if you see them in passing. I’ve regularly walked by professors explaining concepts to students outside of the office and lecture hall. </p>
<p>Also, because the school isn’t big yet and the current academic profile of the average UCM student isn’t all that great, competition in classes in almost nonexistent. Curves (being graded on your rank in relation to how your classmates did) help instead of hurt. I had some friends at UCB tell me that students regularly perfect midterms, skewing curves as some professors allocate a fixed amount of students who would be eligible for an A. In other words, you could’ve gotten an A on a test, but because your classmates got higher As than you did, you might be dropped down to a B. Because students don’t regularly perfect midterms/exams (for better or for worse), we don’t see this type of competition at UCM. </p>
<p>Overall, the classes that I have taken are great and I have learned a lot. The lecture hall is new, the laboratories are new, and competition isn’t to be found. If you’re looking to go to graduate school, going to UCM for your undergraduate degree is a pretty good option.</p>