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<p>Alright, I noticed that Cornell has three campuses that are related in some way to the SUNY college list?
-Cornell, NYS College of Agriculture & Life Sciences
-Cornell, NYS College of Human Ecology
-Cornell, NYS College of Veterinary Medicine /</p>

<p>So my question is this. Can I simply go to a college during my freshman year, and transfer into one of these colleges during sophomore year? Are these three campuses different in a lot of ways, and how does it all work out. </p>

<p>The majors/careers of pre law/med are supported with these, but can someone PLEASE give me an estimeation on what kind of GPA I would need in my freshman year at ANOTHER college to transfer into one of these three, mainly Cornell, NYS College of Agriculture & Life Sciences? WIll I also need good SAT scores, or will they just look at grades from my Freshmen year at a college?</p>

<p>Thanks</p>

<p>Sorry for the title, it won't let me edit it out =/</p>

<p>Why not just transfer as a junior? Like how CC students do it.</p>

<p>Those 3 colleges are not SUNY schools. They are contract colleges that receive some state funding but are privately operated by Cornell and employees are Cornell employees, not SUNY employees. </p>

<p>(see Statutory</a> college - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia) </p>

<p>The vet school is not undergraduate.</p>

<p>I believe that they still look at your SAT scores and your GPA may depend on your major and what school you are transferring from. If you are transferring from a community college, you really should have as close to a 4.0 as possible.</p>

<p>Most successful transfer applicants have at least a 3.6 at other colleges (teh majority have a 3.8+) as well as a very solid high school record and SATs. </p>

<p>When you apply, you will have barely completed 1 semester in college so this is the only college work they'll see ... high school and SATs will still play a significant part of your application.</p>

<p>I agree with Cornelli2008 and gomestar. Others correct me if I am wrong, but how they look at your current GPA may very well depend on what type/caliber of school you currently attend, what major, etc. Nevertheless, I would imagine that a high (3.8+) GPA last semester would certainly help.</p>