<p>Is there anyone who attended a community college and then transferred to Cornell?
If yes, how did you guys manage to do it? Was it difficult to keep up with the classes? </p>
<p>Thanks!</p>
<p>Is there anyone who attended a community college and then transferred to Cornell?
If yes, how did you guys manage to do it? Was it difficult to keep up with the classes? </p>
<p>Thanks!</p>
<p>Here is some info on it:
<a href=“http://cals.cornell.edu/admissions/apply/transfer/transfer-agreements/”>http://cals.cornell.edu/admissions/apply/transfer/transfer-agreements/</a></p>
<p>
3rd &4th year classes are more difficult than 1st and 2nd year classes. You may see your GPA drop quite a bit from community college to Cornell.</p>
<p>there been people who went to community college and transferred to MIT, Yale, and Harvard. So yes to Cornell.</p>
<p>Yes, Cornell has articulation agreements with many New York community colleges (and ones in other states as well). If you go on their transfer page for each major you’ll see the classes that they expect applicants to have taken by the time they apply, and as long as you’ve completed them with a decent enough GPA, you’ll probably be fine for the contract colleges. The endowed colleges are harder to get into as transfers, though–I know CAS has around a 10% acceptance rate for them if even that. </p>
<p>There are plenty of people on here who finished up their associate’s before going to Cornell. I don’t know if many of them are still active, but if you look on past transfer threads you should be able to find their posts.</p>
<p>Good luck! </p>