<p>Would one year of an introductory language course satisfy UC foreign language requirement?</p>
<p>I meant foreign language course from community college</p>
<p>ill bump this up for you because i was wondering the same thing, most places its 3 semesters though.</p>
<p>It's probably different among the UCs. For UCLA, your language course has to be equivalent to a level 3 course there to pass out of the requirement.</p>
<p>My school is one semester, 5 units. I'm barely getting by. But i'm not a foreign language person nor a school person, i'm a business major, i build businesses. But oh well, the schools will never understand that I could just hire a savvy student to be my intern and acquire contracts for me overseas!!! Too many people in academia think they should do it all themselves!</p>
<p>Please check <a href="http://assist.org%5B/url%5D">http://assist.org</a> Select the CCC you will completing the course through then select “UC Transferable courses.” Select your language and find your course. There will be a note that will tell you which level will satisfy the two year requirement. For example, at Chabot College you must complete Spanish 1B to meet the two year LOTE requirement for freshman eligibility.</p>
<p>I was actually referring to the UC foreign language (exit)requirement rahter than the freshman (entrance) requirement. I take it that classes that have UC-H designation are counted towards fullfilling the foreign language requirement.</p>
<p>Sorry about that, sunfish. Misunderstood you there. Yes, I think the ones listed as UC-H generally would satisfy it. You always should check with the UC though.</p>
<p>I think at some of the schools there is no language requirement for graduation if you are in engineering.
I also heard that some of the UC's don't accept an AP exam score alone for the requiremnet but make you take a test when you get there.</p>