<p>It's my first year at a community college in Georgia and I hate it with a passion! I feel like I'm missing out on the college life, meeting new people, walking around campus, etc. I need help with transferring decisions and tips!</p>
<p>Since I'm living in Georgia, I am considering transferring to University of Georgia and Georgia Tech. However, I am leaning towards University of Georgia because my college advisor told me that it might take me a little over two years for Georgia Tech due to my math (taking college algebra). </p>
<p>Which school is better for a business major?
Which school will give me better job opportunities?
Is it difficult to transfer into the two listed above?</p>
<p>If I finish two years at my community college rather than one, will it be easier for me to transfer? (UC schools, Georgetown, NYU, etc) </p>
<p>60 credits always amounts to more lenient requirements for transfer students (usually that is 2 years of CC). Personally, I found it wicked easy to transfer to UGA from my CC in Vermont as both a transfer with a 3.64 GPA and <60 credits and with that GPA (because I haven't completed my final semester yet) at >60 credits. I don't know which would be better for your major... I decided to apply there originally on a flukey idea of humoring the (then) bf who lives in GA, and wasn't really serious about it till I moved down there for a couple of months in June, and liked the area. Oh, and the transfer app to UGA, easy as pie... no essays or anythig... actually that is why I even applied for fall semester (had to fill out the app in spring among tons of classwork which I decided came first before apps), and it was the only school I applied to for fall because I was leaning towards first completing my associates before transferring. The only bad part was dropping $50 to send an app for a term I wasn't sure I wanted to enter for. It did give me the acceptance that drove me to re-apply for spring though.</p>
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<p>As for the other schools, just make absolute sure that your credits from your CC will transfer to where you want to go... Nothing like spending 2 years on classes that count for nothing towards your bachelors degree.</p>