<p>Hey guys! I was planning on taking a Spanish 3 course this summer, but I'm not going to be able to because of some scheduling issues. It's not part of the IGETC, my 60 units, TAG, or major pre-reqs, so it shouldn't affect my admission decisions. All of the other UCs I applied to (UCSB/UCLA/UCSD) had email addresses specifically for the purpose of changing schedule information, but all I could find for UCB was this answer from the 'Ask Oski' tool:</p>
<p>"Changes in Academics Reporting
If your academic information changes (this includes courses, grades, attendance at another school, or attendance at the same school for an additional term), submit the changes in writing to the Admissions Office of each campus to which you applied."</p>
<p>Do I actually have to send them a letter in the mail? Does it have to be handwritten instead of typed? I keep thinking I'm looking at an outdated answer or something, sending the admissions a handwritten letter by snail mail seems kinda archaic to me.</p>
<p>Just spoke to admissions officers and they said that it generally wouldn’t be considered anyways, but that I should go on to myberkeleyapp and remove it, noting why I removed it in the comments section. Thought I’d post just in case someone has a similar issue.</p>
<p>Yeah this is what I found on their site:
Q: I have recently had a grade changed by one of my teachers/instructors/professors. Will this affect my application or my chances of admission?
Q: I added (or dropped or changed) my coursework after submitting my application. Do I need to let you know?
A: You must let us know, in writing, about any changes to your courses or grades by mail or fax. Please send your signed letter to:
Course/Grade Change Request
Office of Undergraduate Admissions
University of California
103 Sproul Hall #5800
Berkeley, California 94720-5800
Fax: 510-642-7333</p>
<p>I wonder too if it has to been handwritten or typed. I recently dropped a course,but I also have a course to add from Fall 2010. The letter is to explain why I dropped the course right?</p>
<p>I believe so, but I’m not sure - the admissions office woman didn’t seem to know what I was talking about. It was a ginormous hassle getting through to a real person anyways.</p>