<p>My counselor has not given me a straight answer!</p>
<p>Hi I am a transfer student from a CA community college.
I am filling out my application and I have a problem.</p>
<p>In my last year of high school I attended conccurrent enrollment in the community college where I am now a full time student.</p>
<p>I have two grades and approximately 10 units from that time. Do I include these grades even though i was in high school when I took these classes?</p>
<p>Also, do I change the dates on my application to indicate that I attended the community college and high school at the same time?
(overlapping times)</p>
<p>Hmm, yeah, I think so. It is possible to have two schools overlap. I did concurrent enrollment at Berkeley while going to a CC and I listed both schools for that time period. If you're wondering if this time you spent in high school while going to a CC will transfer, I don't see why not. But that's just a guess... </p>
<p>I think they will realize this and should they deem that these units don't count, then they won't count them. My take is that it is your responsibility to list every college class you've attended and for them to sort it out.</p>
<p>I dont need the units actually.
I have over 60 even without these but I am worried because I took a math class in my senior year of high school (concurrent enrollment) and I got a C.</p>
<p>Will they discount that?</p>
<p>Well, as I said before, I don't know what the policy is. But I suspect it'll count unless of course you took intermediate, or lower, algebra. For some reason it hadn't occured to me you would have gotten a bad grade, which is bad. I wouldn't risk not putting it on your record though.</p>
<p>It was lower Algerbra and Intermidiate Algebra!</p>
<p>The are not as interested in that right?
Plus I was technically a high school student</p>
<p>Thx for the info so far communistsmurf</p>
<p>Ok, here's the deal on that... My CC transfer councilor said they won't like it, but it's not a big deal because it doesn't transfer. The BERKELEY rep. told me he doesn't care what grade I get on non-tranferrable stuff.</p>