<p>Could I transfer to UW Seattle? Would it have to be after my first two years, or do you think they would let me transfer after the first year? Thanks! :D</p>
<p>NEVERMIND! Okay I finally found the information here:
[url=<a href=“http://www.bothell.washington.edu/registration/policies/crosscampus]Cross-Campus”>http://www.bothell.washington.edu/registration/policies/crosscampus]Cross-Campus</a> Registration for Undergraduates - Policies - Office of the Registrar - UW Bothell<a href=“For%20anyone%20that%20wanted%20to%20know”>/url</a></p>
<p>"Transferring from One UW Campus to Another</p>
<p>A student enrolled at one UW campus who wants to pursue a degree program at another UW campus must apply to that campus for admission. If admitted, the student’s campus and major code are changed. A student cannot be enrolled simultaneously at two UW campuses.
Transfer Credit vs. Cross-campus Credit</p>
<p>A student who attends one UW campus and then is admitted to another UW campus may count toward a bachelor’s degree any number of credits transferred from the first UW campus to the second. The 45-credit limit on cross-enrollment (see above) applies only to credits taken at one UW campus while enrolled at another campus.
Final-Year Residence</p>
<p>Only credits taken at the campus granting the degree are considered residence credit. Credits transferred from another UW campus don’t count as residence credit, and don’t count toward the final-year residence requirement. Exceptions may be granted by the college offering the major.
Counting Transferred UW Credit Toward Requirements</p>
<p>Credits transferred from another UW campus may be counted toward requirements in the same manner as transfer credits from another college. That is, any adviser can determine how the transferred credits will count toward Areas of Knowledge and other general education requirements. The adviser should then send this information to the DARS office (<a href=“mailto:dars@u.washington.edu”>dars@u.washington.edu</a>) so that the courses can be properly tagged.</p>
<p>Individual departments determine whether credit transferred from another UW campus can count toward major requirements.
Transfer Evaluations</p>
<p>When a student is admitted to one of the UW campuses, the admissions office of that campus prepares an evaluation of any credits transferred from other colleges. Bothell and Tacoma transfer evaluations look quite different from Seattle-campus evaluations; Bothell and Tacoma post most transfer credit as UW 1XX, etc. and assign it to VLPA, I&S, or NW as appropriate. Seattle-campus transfer evaluations are more detailed, and most transfer courses are posted as their UW equivalent or as departmental X credit.</p>
<p>When a Bothell or Tacoma student applies to and is admitted to the Seattle campus, the original transfer evaluation is left in place but all the credits are changed to zero. A new, more detailed transfer evaluation is then completed. If this has not been done, or if both transfer evaluations are posted, contact the Seattle-campus Admissions Office for a correction.
Returning to the Original Campus</p>
<p>A student who is enrolled at one UW campus, then transfers to another, then decides to return to the original campus, must file a Returning Student Re-enrollment Application. The student’s campus and major code will be changed back to the original campus. If a student earns a degree before returning to the original campus, s/he must instead apply for admission as a postbaccalaureate student.
Academic Drop and Reinstatement</p>
<p>A student who has been dropped for low grades from one UW campus may apply for admission to another UW campus. If that campus wishes to admit the student, it takes the following steps:</p>
<pre><code>* The student is admitted.
- The student’s campus and major codes are changed.
- The student’s academic status is changed from drop to probation (i.e., the student is reinstated)."
</code></pre>
<p>You might be better off attending a community college for the first 2 years. AFAIK, those who attend UW’s other campuses don’t have an advantage over those who attended a community college in the area. I might be wrong though.</p>