<p>UF only accepts Junior and Senior-Level Transfers (upper-division students). However, with all of your AP/IB classes you’re likely to be a “junior” by your 2nd year. </p>
<p><a href=“Transfer - How to Apply - University of Florida ”>http://www.admissions.ufl.edu/ugrad/trqualifying.html</a></p> ;
<p>Here is a link to the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS) transfer guide: </p>
<p><a href=“http://cals.ufl.edu/docs/pdf/students/Effective%20Summer%20B%202013%20Transfer%20Guide.pdf ”>http://cals.ufl.edu/docs/pdf/students/Effective%20Summer%20B%202013%20Transfer%20Guide.pdf</a></p> ;
<p>
The Basics of Transfer Admission</p>
<p>The College of Agricultural and Life Sciences (CALS) has a tradition of working closely with
community/state college students to ensure a smooth transfer to the University of Florida. Prospective students can choose from 21 majors in CALS. The Biological Engineering major is offered by the Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering through the College of Engineering.</p>
<p>CALS applicants must meet the following requirements before transferring:</p>
<p>Obtain an Associate of Arts degree from a Florida public community/state college. Students transferring from private institutions, state universities in Florida or institutions outside Florida must have at least 60 semester hours of transferable credit. Vocational coursework is not accepted.</p>
<p>Complete two years of sequential high school foreign language courses or 8-10 hours of sequential
college-level foreign language courses (or prove proficiency).</p>
<p>Have at least a 2.0 G.P.A. at each higher education institution attended as calculated by UF.</p>
<p>Meet the G.P.A. required for the major (all graded attempts calculated, NO grade forgiveness).</p>
<p>Complete specific prerequisite courses required for the major with the required G.P.A.</p>
<p>This transfer guide includes G.P.A. and course requirements organized by major and specialization.
</p>
<p>About 1/3 of the undergraduates at UF are transfer students! You can also save a bunch of $$$ as a transfer student, by taking classes at a local state university or CC. It’s not a bad backup plan, if you don’t get accepted.</p>
<p>Good Luck!</p>