<p>I took 3 classes at community colleges during High School. One was just a pass/fail class to fulfill a graduation requirement. The two classes though were for a grade, and I got B's in both.</p>
<p>Does this have any effect on graduate school applications? One was a Spanish class (taken to fill a college application requirement) and the other was a Math class (taken to get ahead). I know that neither count in my UCLA GPA, and would graduate schools discount them too?</p>
<p>That was your HS record- not your college record. You can safely ignore them. You may want to find out if they even show up at all on your college transcript as credits, such as AP credits may- they would not hurt you at all as they would be HS credits.</p>
<p>yea, community college grades count</p>
<p>But- do they count if done as a part of HS? That’s different than taking them after HS.</p>
<p>No, you must send all transcripts of any college you attended–even if you took freshman orientation in elementary school at your community college for credit.</p>
<p>It probably won’t matter to grad schools. Those grades are seperate. You’ll probably submitted two seperate transcripts - one from the community college and the other from your high school. Since these classes were intended to fulfill high school purposes, and unless you decide to submit another copy of your community college transcript, grad schools will not look at them.</p>
<p>While it probably won’t matter and you don’t need to send your high school transcript when a grad school says “send all transcripts from all colleges you have attended” it means all and there’s no reason to risk getting into some kind of trouble latter for not sending them.</p>
<p>Send the transcripts. The grad schools will look at them, and they will put them into your permanent file. However, since they are so old and aren’t related to your current field of study the grades that you earned basically don’t matter.</p>
<p>Well I plan to be a Math major, and one of the classes is a math class I would use to skip a lower division course.</p>
<p>Wait a minute. Are you just starting at UCLA for your undergraduate degree this fall? If that is the case, grad school is FOUR YEARS AWAY. Who knows what you will want to do by then!</p>
<p>If your community college Math course is going to be used to place you into a higher level math class at UCLA where you are planning to pursue a Math major, assuming that you do pursue that major and continue on to grad school it really won’t matter at all where you took that pre-requisite course. The grad school will be looking at the higher level courses that you took at UCLA when they are deciding whether to admit you or not.</p>
<p>You still will have to send the community college transcripts. Don’t worry about that B in Math there. It is to be hoped that you will have earned better grades at UCLA.</p>
<p>OK, thanks a lot. I know any possible grad school is a long way off, but as a recent high school student that slacked off a little the last semester I wasn’t sure about the long-term impact. Thanks.</p>