<p>UCLA came to my community college and they said I need calc 1 and 2 in order to transfer but do the other UCs require it like San Diego, Santa Barbara, Irvine, and Davis I need to know because I am way behind in math I preferably want to go to San dIego</p>
<p>I believe you can look this up on assist.org</p>
<p>You can look them up on assist.org, as phoebenghoang said.</p>
<p>And UC San Diego actually requires up to Calc III for Econ. The others will likely require up to Calc II.</p>
<p>Most likely yes. As much as it sucks to hear, single variable calculus (Calc I) is considered basic math. Intro econ courses don’t use it but as you get further Economics uses calculus to solve a variety of problems.</p>
<p>UCSB requires Micro, Macro, Calc 1 and 2, or Calc 1 and Statistics.</p>
<p>In general, you will need frosh calculus to major in economics. If you want to go on to a PhD program in economics, it is recommended to take the sophomore level math courses (multivariable calculus, linear algebra, differential equations, available at CCs) plus more advanced math and statistics courses (after transfer to a four year school). Berkeley offers the option of taking math-intensive intermediate microeconomics and econometrics courses that require sophomore level math (Economics 101A, 141).</p>