<p>if a non transferrable class is not passed the first time, do the UC admissions take notice in that? or do they only look at the transferrable credits?</p>
<p>to them, those non-transferrable credits "do not exist," as the UCLA rep told me.</p>
<p>no notice of such.</p>
<p>They only look at transferable credits, unless maybe the class is a pre req for major prep. Even if that case, I failed a math class in fall quarter, retook it and passed this winter, and now I am in my first UC transferable math class. I have been admitted to UCSB and UCD, with no other word from other UCs yet. You should be alright.</p>
<p>It depends there are several threads on this board discuss this. I will try to find some proof to what I say. Some UCs and also individual divisions in the UC schools use your overall GPA instead of your UC transferable grade. Which means if got a F in a non transferable classes it will affect your overall GPA and will lower your GPA to one of the UCs that take that into consideration.</p>
<p>I'm pretty sure none of the UCs consider CSU/CC grades.</p>
<p>I would hope that UCs would consider your CC/CSU grades or else you would not have anything to transfer with unless you came from another UC.</p>
<p>For post-transfer GPA considerations.</p>
<p>Yea you have your UC GPA after you transfer but I believe his question is will it affect his admissions before he transfers.</p>
<p>Not one damn bit.</p>
<p>Actually depending on what your major is it will and here is the evidence.
University</a> of California - Counselors
and here is another piece of evidence
<a href="http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/educators/counselors/resources/materials/ETS07/Transfer_Q&A_FINAL.pdf%5B/url%5D">http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/educators/counselors/resources/materials/ETS07/Transfer_Q&A_FINAL.pdf</a>
just go to page 14.</p>
<p>So just for example if he was applying to Berkeley to anywhere but the college of letters and sciences it will affect his admission because that non transferable class will affect his overall GPA. If he applied The College of Letters of sciences it would not affect his GPA because they only use the overall UC transferable GPA. And to even further my point At UCLA any life science major, economic major, or psychology major they will use both the overall and UC transferable GPA in admissions. And at Davis selective majors use both the UC and overall GPA and in non selective majors the overall GPA is used.
In most cases it is only the UC transferable grade that matters but for some students it could make or brake their decisions. So yes it could make one damn bit. Unless your are applying to UCB or UCLA in one of the majors listed above or an engineering major I would not stress out about it.</p>
<p>What if that non-transferable class was not passed in the winter but later passed in the spring? What happens then?</p>