<p>Hello, I am currently a freshman at SDSU and am planning on going to a community college next year then transferring to a UC my junior year. I was wondering what the maximum number of CSU credits I can't take this year to still be considered a CCC transfer student when I apply my junior year? </p>
<p>Hi, I’m currently a freshman at Cal Poly Pomona and I too am seriously considering the CSU to CCC to UC route. From what I’ve read as long as the majority of your units come from a CCC, you are considered a CCC student. For example, if you take 40 units in your year at SDSU, then you’d have to take 41 units or more at a CC to get CC status when you apply as a transfer. I’m scheduling an appointment with my local Community College’s transfer center to ask them a few questions I have about the CSU to CCC transfer process. If you have any questions about the transfer process you can post them here and I’ll be sure to ask them when I get there.</p>
<p>For further UC transfer questions, try here: <a href=“UC Transfers - College Confidential Forums”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/uc-transfers/</a></p>
Can you help me with the CSU to CCC transfer process!
As long as they are lower division units, they will just be added to the CCC units and when you reach 70 units, you can no longer transfer units, just subject credit. Upper division units do get added to your lower division (either less than 70, or the 70 max if you hit it) and can make you ineligible, depending on campus. For UCLA it is 86.5 total I believe, the others slightly higher (semester units).
You need 30 units from a CCC to be considered a CCC transfer student, I believe.