locally determined rules?

<p>If a community college student completes a 4-unit course and earns a D and then repeats the course, this time offered at 3 units, and gets a C or higher, does UC award 3 units of C and one unit of D?</p>

<p>In determining eligibility, UC would use only the course in which the student got a C. During the selection process, however, campuses may apply locally determined rules and might include one unit of D in the calculation of the student's GPA.
University</a> of California - Miscellaneous</p>

<p>so in this case...which campuses include one unit of D?</p>

<p>I don’t know the answer to your question, but why does it really matter? Assuming you had a 3.0 and 57 units, aside from this class, that one D unit would take a 2.94 to a 2.91. Not a big difference.</p>

<p>This is extremely unlikely to be the case.</p>

<p>But a 3.0+ and a 2.9 is a big difference x_x</p>

<p>I actually retook the same class at another college. (One has a quarter system and the other uses semesters)</p>

<p>I can say this much, when I applied to UCSD and was rejected, I spoke with an admissions officer and she went over my grades and calculated the GPA while I was on the phone, and it was done the exact same way it’s done on the UC TAG page (and likely, your community college’s transcript).</p>