<p>I was wondering what transcripts law schools look at to determine your admission eligibility. Right now i'm at a ccc and planning on transferring to a UC. I had a not so great grade in my math class, which was below college level, so it's not transferable. Now I heard it's still going to be on my transcripts when I send my them to UC, but they just won't calculate it as part of my GPA. What does law school do? Do they just look at my over all gpa including non transferable classes? Any insight would be appreciated, thank you.</p>
<p>For law school you will need to provide both your cc and UC transcripts to LSAC for your LSDAS report (go here for info: <a href="http://www.lsac.org/LSAC.asp?url=/lsac/lsdas-law-school-reports.asp%5B/url%5D">http://www.lsac.org/LSAC.asp?url=/lsac/lsdas-law-school-reports.asp</a> ) which will then provide it to the law school. The schools will see all your courses and grades from both the community college and the UC and they do look at everything in the transcript.</p>
<p>wow, so there going to include non transferrable classes (below college level), to accumulate my GPA? That reallys sucks.</p>
<p>I did more research and to me it seems the only classes that count towards your LSDAS GPA are the ones that you received credit for.</p>