<p>could you briefly explain the colleges of UCLA???
I'm sort of stuck in the application process(which is really sad:()
but i have hard time, truly, understanding the pros and cons from the school's actual site because they only tell people general stuff... could anyone go in details and tell me from what they really know (preferably from experience???) thanks a lot in advance.. :)
ps-med and engineering>?</p>
<p>Well, I don't really understand your question as you can't really choose the "college" without regard to your major. Are you thinking about UCSD and its six Colleges?</p>
<p>well... I mean like school of engineering, school of architecture...</p>
<p>to ucapplicant05: do you go to UCLA?
i was talking about these:
College of Letters and Science</p>
<p>School of the Arts and Architecture</p>
<p>The Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science</p>
<p>School of Nursing</p>
<p>School of Theater, Film and Television
=) basically I'm interested in engineering, but i know it's hard to get into...does bioengineering really impact the admission of freshmen? or do you know which majors(w/in engineering school) really have competitive spots?</p>
<p>CS, CSE and EE are the most impacted majors in the HSSEAS.</p>
<p>what about bioengineering??? compared to other engineering majors?</p>
<p>Yeah I do, but I don't know a whole lot.</p>
<p>I was just thinking that it doesn't really matter since your major will determine which college. All I know is that it's harder to get admitted to any college other than L&S and even harden to transfer into when you're here. Sorry I can't really answer your question. :-(</p>
<p>Bioengineering is very impacted at the admission level, due to the paucity of the student body (fewer than 100 per year), but not at the enrollment level (very small major-related classes). I'd say that it's probably just as hard to get into as CS/CSE/EE at UCLA.</p>
<p>flopsy: what do you mean when you say at the enrollment level?</p>
<p>The enrollment level is when you have to log onto URSA and select your courses for the next quarter, based on their availability.</p>
<p>Last year (Fall 2004) only 41 Bioengineering majors enrolled at UCLA.
<a href="http://www.seasoasa.ucla.edu/ucee_a.html%5B/url%5D">http://www.seasoasa.ucla.edu/ucee_a.html</a></p>
<p>based on the link, Bioengineering was a new major in 2004, so that explains in part why its enrollment number is so much less than the other engineering majors</p>