How difficult is to transfer from MSU TO UMICHIGAN(ANN ARBOR)?

<p>I already admitted from the MSU FOR PRE-NURSING.
I WAS THINKING THAT I MIGHT TRANSFER TO UMICHIGAN WHEN I WILL BECOME A JUNIOR OR SENIOR.
What kind of GPA DO I NEED?
Do I STILL NEED ACT/SAT SCORE?
Anyone transferred? Send me a message!!
in addition,I'm definitely majoring nursing(RN).</p>

<p>A solid 3.5 GPA ought to do it, but you cannot wait until your junior year to transfer. You should apply at the end of your Freshman year and transfer at the end of your sophomore year. You are expected to complete at least 2 full years at Michigan in order to graduate.</p>

<p>Hey Ebhssat,</p>

<p>So I was recently admitted to U of M (yesterday, actually) as a transfer student from Eastern Mich. I am currently a junior this year, but the transfer equivalencies will put me as a junior for this upcoming year at Umich. Heres my stats:</p>

<p>3.63 GPA (college) 3.45 (high school)
26 ACT</p>

<p>Hope that helps!</p>

<p>You could also transfer for the second semester of your sophomore year. That's what my friend did; she applied to U of M (LS&A) the summer before her sophomore year and she started there this semester. I'm not exactly sure what her stats were, but her MSU gpa was pretty high (I think around a 3.8) and her ACT was somewhere around a 25-29.</p>

<p>There is information on the Umich website about Nursing transfers - have you seen it? No gpa or testing details though:
<a href="http://www.nursing.umich.edu/admissions/bsn/transfer/apply/checklist.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.nursing.umich.edu/admissions/bsn/transfer/apply/checklist.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>{deleted} .............</p>

<p>Do I need ACT SCORE FOR THE TRANSFER?</p>

<p>According to the website above:</p>

<p>Standardized Tests</p>

<p>You'll need to take a standardized college admission test if you have not already done so. The report should be sent to the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor.</p>

<p>We accept the American College Test (ACT) or Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT I). The University of Michigan-Ann Arbor ACT code is 2062, and the SAT code is 1839.</p>

<p>I would doubt transferring from MSU to U-M would be that difficult. Transferring to U-M generally requires a significantly lesser GPA than would that required of 1st-time freshmen. Plus, given that MSU is comparable to U-M and funded by the same state, all your MSU credits would be recognized and tranferrable into U-M... Plus, isn't nursing less competitive at U-M than, say, Engineering? And don't they still have the policy whereby one applies directly to the college or school within the U as opposed to the Undergrad program as a whole, which is the way it is at MSU?</p>

<p>
[quote]
all your MSU credits would be recognized and tranferrable into U-M...

[/quote]
</p>

<p>Um... by that logic, I'm coming from WMU, all my credits should've transferred. Only 24 of 34 actually did.</p>

<p>U-M and WMU are not comparable. MSU and U-M are.</p>

<p>depends on the course though.... even CC credits can transfer in full if they're basic core type stuff (Intro English/Psych/etc)</p>

<p>im dual enrolling right now and im goin to michigan next year.</p>

<p>ive taken microbiology and microecon at a community college(schoolcraft)</p>

<p>will the credits transfer?</p>

<p>^^^look at the LSA website and there's a transfer credit guide for every CC in the state</p>

<p>
[quote]
Plus, given that MSU is comparable to U-M and funded by the same state, all your MSU credits would be recognized and tranferrable into U-M

[/quote]
</p>

<p>MSU and U-M are probably pretty cooperative about this stuff (in fact, I know the our transfer credit office knows their transfer credit office well; first-name basis kind of stuff), but I wouldn't guarantee everything would transfer. </p>

<p>But you're right that MSU is probably the most comparable public to U-M, and I would expect more credits would transfer from there from than from other places.</p>

<p>As for dual enrollment, credits taken at Schoolcraft will probably transfer as long as you're taking those courses for college credit (not high school credit).</p>