<p>I am planning on going towards grad school for an MBA after undergrad and I heard GPA in undergrad is very important. Is it difficult getting a good gpa (3.6 or above) at UCSD?</p>
<p>I think it will be.</p>
<p>Totally depends on your major, but in most cases yes. 4/5 chance that your GPA will be sub-3.5...</p>
<p>It depends on your effort (and also your ability).</p>
<p>Slorg put it perfectly.</p>
<p>There are some majors that I feel are genuinely more difficult to do well in (sciences, engineering) because your classmates are as nerdy and driven and intelligent as yourself. Then there are other majors that lead me to question why you'd pay $15,000 to a year to "study" ... but my questions are usually answered when they graduate, only to enter the workforce as baristas* or something like that.</p>
<p>I mean, when a freshman enrolls in an upper-div lit class alongside juniors and seniors and still manages to snag an A, you wonder: what is it that you're supposed to learn from these classes?</p>
<p>*not bashing baristas, just thought of it first</p>
<p>i thought baristas were people who worked at starbucks</p>
<p>yeah, so? .</p>
<p>Majors such as what, astrina?</p>
<p>I think astrina meant this one.</p>
<p>^What does that mean ?</p>
<p>Its an articulation for a Home Economics major.</p>
<p>edit: and as you can see.. its blank.</p>
<p>I see what you mean now.</p>
<p>Is communications generally known as the 'stupid people' major? JW.</p>
<p>to morons who are high enough to judge people's intelligence based on their major yes</p>
<p>anyways..... depends on your study habits/ dedication/ and some luck</p>
<p>but there are some people what are amazing and do 3840398392 extra stuff and still manage 3.8 gpa</p>