<p>Hey guys, does it matter when we fulfilled the english requirement? i took my first transferable english course during winter intersession, and am taking my second course right now. I got an a in the first course, and am looking at either an a or a b in the second course. will this affect my chances at ucsd, ucla ,and ucb? </p>
<p>im a one year transfer with a 3.88. philosophy major. all pre-req's offered at my ccc are completed. thnx all</p>
<p>Nope. English for IGETC, right? As long as your IGETC courses are completed by the Spring prior to transfer, you will be fine. Just FYI, but according to my counselor, you cannot take courses in the Summer prior to transfer to complete IGETC.</p>
<p>if you are doing TAG/IGETC, then it has to be done a year before you transfers. i.e 2011, your two english courses and math need to be done by fall 2010</p>
<p>That’s not true. I’m taking a critical writing class right now (my very last to be done with IGETC and along with some major prereqs my last CC course) and I’ve been accepted into every UC that’s replied so far.</p>
<p>it doesn’t specifically say “one year prior” on that page, but it does somewhere. basically, it’s one year prior to transfer is all you need to know.</p>
<p>only if you’re doing TAG; math is only one semester, and not necessarily “fall,” just at least one year prior to transferring. say you spend two years at a CC, and you had AP english credit for freshman composition, you could take precalc and critical thinking your first semester, and then stay in CC for another 3 semesters before you transfer and you would be fine.</p>
<p>Oh… cause I am planning on going back to CCC starting summer of 2010 and try to get TAG for UCSD. I took two quarters of english and one quarter of business calc and calc each
I attend UCR right now</p>
<p>The page said you need english and math BY the end of fall 2010 (if you’re transferring 2011)</p>
<p>So that means…you need english and math done 1 semester before your final semester OR you’re doing the english and math requirements at the time of application.</p>