<p>Back in November did you apply as a junior transfer (60-85 units) or senior transfer (86+ units)?? Even though if someone has 100+ units from ONLY a California community college, would they still have to apply as a senior transfer because of their 100+ units or would they have to apply as a junior transfer because of the 70 max transferable unit cap?</p>
<p>I believe that even if you have 100 units (from a cc) you can only transfer 70 of them so you would still be a junior. If the units are from a 4 year school it is different though.</p>
<p>gaiou is right. i have tonssss of units, but not all of them will transfer from ccc (max), and i applied as junior</p>
<p>Junior. Always apply as a junior when transferring from a CC.</p>
<p>You’re still a junior cause in a community college you can only take lower division courses. It doesn’t matter if you have 100 or 200 units you’re still considered a junior.</p>
<p>I know someone who just transferred with over 200 units :D</p>
<p>I know a guy who transferred with around 300 units, not joking. He started taking CCC classes since 6th grade. He ended up going to UPenn.</p>
<p>Alright thanks for the responses, had a feeling it would be junior transfer status. That’s crazy how some people have that many units. You can get a masters or even a Ph.D if you’re a traditional student with that much.</p>
<p>@Cupertino</p>
<p>wow, with that many units and starting from a young age, I would’ve expected him to have gone to Harvard or something close to it; a bit anticlimactic.</p>
<p>He got rejected to Harvard and some other top Ivies from hs so he decided to go to CCC. Ended up transferring to Upenn from that CCC and then decided to transfer again, this time to Cal, after a semester. Graduated from Cal with a 4.0 and is now a self-made millionaire at 29. He’s an amazing guy and he’s going to be helping me with my admissions essay this Fall.</p>
<p>Btw, Upenn is pretty close to Harvard…</p>
<p>^cupertino, ***!!</p>