<p>HI guys, I am currently studying in a cc. However, I have taken courses in a out of state four year institution before. One of the course is Business Law (titled Legal Environment for Business). I know business law from community colleges are transferable to UCs. And I compare the course descriptions they are similar. So does that mean that it is very likely the business law course from the four year university is transferable? In addition, I didnt find any business law course in the general catalog in UCSD and UCI, so it is not transferable then? I need to ask this beacause I am currently applying for admission but without that class transferable it would put my transferable units below 60... I recently realize this because I made a mistake counting the transferable courses previously.. ANYONE who knows the answer pls help!!!</p>
<p>Just because a course isn’t offered at a UC doesn’t mean they don’t accept or give credit for courses previously taken prior to transfer.</p>
<p>99.999% sure it will transfer, I took Business Law at my CCC and it will transfer I know it’s not exactly the same but if you’re saying the course descriptions are nearly identical then that’s pretty confirming.
Mid you want to be 100% sure then call the campuses directly and ask, though hypothetically let’s say it’s not transferable, there’s nothing you can do about it now anyways right? </p>
<p>So just wait for the letters in a month or so and you’ll get your answer I’m almost entirely sure though that it will transfer.</p>
<p>@Matt4200 If it is transferable from a ccc then it’s likely that it applies to a four year institution as well? </p>
<p>I am hesitating whether to take one more class just to be safe… but if i do that i will have to take six classes this semester which seems will be heavy work for me…</p>
<p>I’m pretty sure the units will transfer.</p>
<p>I did a year at an OoS CC, and transferred to Berkeley. They accepted all the credits (the number of credits) as transferable… and that was a CC. Whether or not the class articulates (gives you subject credit) is a different story, but that won’t be officially evaluated until after you transfer and bring syllabuses and paperwork to the right people.</p>