<p>I, unfortunately applied under undeclared/aerospace engineering for my major and I did not receive an 'admission' letter. Thus, I would like to know if anyone who did not receive this letter had been admitted to UCLA's engineering program and possibly list your stats. Also, I heard that the engineering school does not consider the applicant's alternate major? I would like to know if that statement is true. Thanks.</p>
<p>I don’t think any school of the UCs consider your alternate majors. And in the other thread a member named raffles said some people got in without getting that letter. I’m in the same boat as you (except I applied for Comp Engineering) and I didn’t get one. (4.2-4.3 UC GPA, 2130 SAT, maybe 90 hours of CS which is low but oh well) We’ll see, hopefully we get in.</p>
<p>BUMP!!! Neeed more replies…</p>
<p>If you applied to engineering you’ll be accepted/rejected into engineering. You won’t be considered for the other majors you chose.</p>
<p>I got accepted into engineering (HSSEAS), more specifically Computer Science and Computer Engineering, B.S.</p>
<p>Yes, I got the likely letter. Don’t know if this helps but oh well, post if you want stats (not really that great at all).</p>
<p>
Welcome to the best major on campus :)</p>
<p>i had a 2260 sat, and soemwhere around a 4.2 or a little above weighted, im not exactly sure right now. 700 USH and 800 Physics. 1st place SV science fair, state runner up. piano, soccer, swim, key club (300 hrs~)</p>
<p>i got rejected from BioE, is it really that hard to get into? i believe the engineering majors are slightly harder than others… right?</p>
<p>what did i do wrong…?</p>
<p>^ I don’t know how hard it is to get in as a freshman, but I know for current UCLA students, in order to even be CONSIDERED for BioE, you need a 3.5 university GPA with the recommended coursework. (Which is pretty damn high.) Apparently, it’s their most competitive engineering major at the moment.</p>
<p>BioE is definitely one of the toughest, if not the most competitive major - it’s relatively small since we’re still growing the staff and lab facilities. The other stat is pretty telling too - highest GPA/SAT going into UCLA engineering, lowest GPA after attending.</p>