Is it possible to transfer to Ross after transferring to LSA?

<p>I got accepted to LSA for 2011 fall as a junior transfer. I have earned 63 credits at my current college and confirmed that 55 of them will be transferred to U-M. </p>

<p>I found on Ross website that there are certain requirements for internal transfer to Ross.
•Any course in Calculus I, II, or III
-I took Calculus I at my current college, and I will take Calculus II and III at U-M
•Economics 101
-I took it at my current college
•First-Year Writing
-English composition courses?
•Earn at least 27 credits at U-M Ann Arbor, fall-winter, in the year you apply
-There will be enough time to earn 27 credits until 2012 fall deadline.</p>

<p>My question is,
Is it possible that a junior student transfer to Ross?
Anyone transferred to Ross after transferring to LSA?</p>

<p>It is possible, but you are already a Junior and you will lose one more year to get into Ross, which is a three year program. That means Ross will delay your graduation by two years. Might as well graduate, work for a couple of years and go for your MBA down the line.</p>

<p>Thanks for the FAST response!</p>

<p>I am willing to spend extra years for Ross. How competitive to transfer to Ross internally?</p>

<p>From LSA, I would say at least a 3.6 GPA if you want a good chance of getting in, although some get in with sub-3.5 GPAs.</p>

<p>Alexandre, I plan on going to UM next year and I want to get into Ross after freshman year. How likely do you think my chances would be if I earned, say, a 3.8 or a 3.85 GPA and joined a business club at the university?</p>

<p>I am not the one making the decision, but a GPA over 3.7 typically results in an acceptance, assuming the essay and on-campus activities are good.</p>

<p>

You are willing to spend an extra two years (i.e., a total of four years at Michigan) to attend Ross? Why?</p>

<p>What kind of on-campus activities is Ross looking for to gain admission?</p>

<p>Thank you for the reply Alexandre,</p>

<p>GoBlue81:
Ross has been my dream school since high school. And I don’t think my parents can support for MBA. And I don’t want to get a loan, so I guess undergraduate will be my last education.</p>

<p>who the hell would even think about having their parents pay for an MBA? you’ve got to be kidding…</p>

<p>Actually Bearcats, I knew several students from upper middle income who attended Michigan over fellow top universities with the understand that the savings incurred as a result of that decision would go toward their graduate studies. Typically, those savings were enough to pay for most graduate programs.</p>

<p>I think Bearcats is referring to the fact that the OP isn’t choosing to get an MBA, because his parents won’t pay for it, even though the OP will be around 24-26 years old when applying for an MBA…</p>

<p>It seems like most people pay for the MBA themselves.</p>

<p>If you need your parents to pay for your MBA, you probably won’t benefit from it.</p>

<p>Get ur employer to pay for it</p>