<p>Hey,</p>
<p>I was hoping someone could tell me if I have a chance at transferring into Cornell, College of Human Ecology. I'm a dual enrollment student at a community college, and high school; however, I'm full time at the CC. Being a transfer student, the SAT/ACT is not required, so I'm choosing not to take it.</p>
<p>At the CC:
-Fall quarter- (Credits)course, GPA
(4)Cell Biology, 3.7
(1)Cell Biology Lab, 3.7
(5)General Psychology, 4.0
(5)English Composition, 3.7</p>
<p>-Winter quarter-
(5)Macroeconomics, 4.0
(5)Nutrition, 4.0</p>
<p>-Spring quarter-
(3)First-Aid Safety, 4.0 (probably won't transfer it : /)
(5)Abnormal Psychology, 4.0
(5)Developmental Psychology, 4.0</p>
<p>for a C. GPA of 3.921</p>
<p>My EC's are:
Varsity sport 3 years
Volunteer Ski Patroller 3 years (every weekend, Saturday + Sunday, 8:30 AM - 4:00 PM)
Research Assistant at a first tier university (1 summer)
V.P. of Spanish club
Spanish club member (3 years)
Member of Phi Theta Kappa
Dean's list
President's list</p>
<p>Thanks!</p>
<p>Have you graduated from high school yet? If you are in a dual enrollment program and have not yet graduated from HS, then you will apply as a freshman. </p>
<p>[Cornell</a> University Undergraduate Admissions Office - HOW TO APPLY](<a href=“http://admissions.cornell.edu/apply/transfer/]Cornell”>http://admissions.cornell.edu/apply/transfer/)</p>
<p>Oh wow, I wasn’t aware of that! I haven’t graduated high school yet, hmm . . . do you think they would maybe push my high school transcript to the side, and focus on my two years of college? Because I didn’t have the best freshman year (3.3 C.GPA), from there on I showed a upward trend though, 3.5 first semester sophomore year, then 3.8 second semester, and those would be my junior year grades at the CC above.</p>
<p>You should also be aware of the fact that (I’m almost certain) they won’t take community college credit if it was used to fulfill high school graduation requirements. So I’d be willing to bet you used macro and eng comp (and maybe bio) for filling hs graduation reqs, and so those won’t transfer to Cornell.</p>
<p>I’d check on that, but I’m almost certain that’s the policy. You will apply as a normal high school student (freshmen) but you may get advanced standing from your CC credits.</p>