<p>It is required that you list all schools, including community colleges you've attended while in high school. It is not optional. If you get caught omitting any schools, you could have an admission offer withdrawn or an earned degree rescinded! Colleges assume applicants understand the meaning of the word "all" and do not accept excuses that the term is in any way vague or open to interpretation.</p>
<p>UCLA does not require cc courses to be listed during high school ONLY IF they were taken to make up for a non-passing AP class. I asked a UCLA rep last year who visited my cc, and called the undergraduate office to confirm. This is something not many people know.</p>
<p>Berkeley wants everything to be included.</p>
<p>Whether you omit your (make up) courses or not, they will find out anyway if you're accepted, as they will request high school transcripts.</p>
<p>I know, that would be ridiculous. I have applied to like 10 community colleges where I haven't taken a class, and I can't even remember which ones.</p>
<p>If the campus has any record of you attending (transcripts), even if the records show all W's or is blank, it must be reported as a school that you attended. If you contact the campus and they say they have no records of you attending (transcripts), even if you applied, then you did not attend the school. If you can submit a transcript then you attended the school. I hope this helps.</p>
<p>Please list the school on your application update so that we are aware of the school. In the additional comments section please state that did not list the school but did attend but, did not complete any coursework resulting in a blank transcript. You might want to contact the school to make sure they do have a transcript before you go through this effort.</p>
<p>"I have applied to like 10 community colleges where I haven't taken a class, and I can't even remember which ones."</p>
<p>You only have to list schools where you have registered. You don't have to list schools to which you applied if you never registered. </p>
<p>Students who register for classes and never attended may think that they were dropped from those classes without any adverse notations on their transcript, but many schools record Fs on the transcripts of students who register for courses but do not formally withdraw from those course. There is a grade appeal process at most schools but appeals from students who fail to follow the registration and withdrawal rules are usually rejected.</p>
<p>dude who ever heard you have to list all the colleges you regiestered has wrong info. I just talked to Cal rep and she told me not to... only classes u took</p>