quarter system to semester system transfer

<p>Is it possible to transfer from UCR to Purdue university to the the Electrical Engineering dept after the first year? here are the classes taken by each of the universities.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.engr.ucr.edu/studentaffairs/majors/courseplans/ee_precal_2006.shtml%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.engr.ucr.edu/studentaffairs/majors/courseplans/ee_precal_2006.shtml&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p><a href="http://www.purdue.edu/Admissions/Undergrad/applying/crit_transfer.shtml#chart1%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.purdue.edu/Admissions/Undergrad/applying/crit_transfer.shtml#chart1&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>second link is the admission critieria for purdue transfer students...class requirements etc.</p>

<p>and as a side note ENGR 092 is an elective is it possible to replace it with a programming class?</p>

<p>yeah, just take the basics, like calc I, II, physics, Chem and computer programming, and you should get in easy.</p>

<p>does it matter if you come from a quarter system as opposed to a semester system?</p>

<p>oh yea that link was for the precal option....im in the calc one</p>

<p><a href="http://www.engr.ucr.edu/studentaffairs/majors/courseplans/ee2006.shtml%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.engr.ucr.edu/studentaffairs/majors/courseplans/ee2006.shtml&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>since it doesnt have C++, there are optional classes which imma probably gonna replace with programming.</p>

<p>bump............</p>

<p>no man it doesnt...they just multiply ur quarter hours by .66 and thats how many semester hours ur awarded</p>

<p>hey but if u fill there general ed requirments, how does that work exactly? say u have a 3 credit class, now that equals 2 credits???????</p>

<p>im confused how that works</p>

<p>they just give u however much it was worth at ur cc x.66...so if its worth a different amount at their school it doesnt matter, ull get a different amount of credit</p>

<p>well this sucks = /</p>

<p>thats too bad really,</p>

<p>stupid quarter system</p>

<p>i thought it was 1.5</p>

<p>u get the same thing either way within a few decimal points whether u divide by 1.5 or multiply by .66</p>

<p>ohhhh.....</p>