<p>What was your GPA or the person you know's GPA, and what was the UC or UCs you or the person you know got into?</p>
<p>Hi, I transferred to Berkeley last Fall as an EECS major. I think my GPA when I applied was around 3.7-3.8. I applied and got accepted to Cal, UCSD, UCI, and UCSC. GPA’s not the only factor for getting in, pre-reqs and ECs/essays can make a big difference too.</p>
<p>On a slightly related note, if you plan to do TAG for CS somewhere, UCSC is a poor choice. They were my safety school and made the process super stressful, if you’re in a position where engineering will approve your TAG you’re pretty much guaranteed admission without it. So TAG somewhere else if you’ve got choices. :P</p>
<p>Oh nice, congratulations on those schools especially Cal. </p>
<p>If I have a 3.69 by the end of this Fall (peak gpa, if i get straight A’s until the end of fall after this semester), where do you think I’ll stand for Cal, UCSD, UCI, and UCD (since I am going to apply to those schools for sure this November).</p>
<p>I don’t have ECs from college (just 2 from high school, Middle school math and english tutoring for 2 months, assisting an elementary school after-school program for 2 months). I also won a regional DemandTec Retail challenge, 3rd place winner scholarship with a buddy my senior year of high school. I am hoping to find a job soon and keep it till I transfer.</p>
<p>3.36; in at UCD, UCI, and UCSC, waitlisted at UCSD.</p>
<p>I completed: Calc 1-3, linear algebra, differential equations, gen chem 1-2, bio 1, OOP w/ Java 1-2, discrete structures, computer architecture, systems programming w/ C, and whatever else I’m forgetting. IGETC will be done by the end of spring.</p>
<p>I listed some software projects I worked on as well as a few jobs for ECs; I don’t think they care about ECs prior to college, and they typically aren’t a big deal except for UCB and UCLA.</p>
<p>3.69 UC GPA, Comp. Eng. major
No ECs.</p>
<p>Accepted to UCSB (TAG), UCI, UCD
Rejected by UCB, my GPA was low for UCB and none of my comp. science or EE classes were articulated. Only physics and math sequences.</p>