Random UCLA question

<p>I heard that once CCC students transfer to UCLA (specifically), their GPA starts over from 0.00 so does not continue with the GPA from community college??? Does anyone know if this is right or not??</p>

<p>your UC gpa will start over but your cumulative gpa will still use your community college grades.</p>

<p>Your UC gpa is the one that’s actually going to appear on your transcript. More specifically “cumulative uc gpa”. So yes your gpa that actually matters is going to be 0.00.</p>

<p>Nobody will ever ask you for your community college grades except for grad school applications.</p>

<p>If your gpa didn’t reset, transfer students would have such inflated gpas compared to those who entered first year. Only fair that way.</p>

<p>GPA resets at each university, community college , etc that you attend.</p>

<p>If you go from one school to another you have a separate GPA at each school.</p>

<p>For community colleges, some of them are in the same district so they share their GPA. For example San Diego Mesa, Miramar, and City colleges, but otherwise you get a new gpa in every school</p>

<p>not for ucs from other ucs</p>

<p>You have a clean slate GPA of a blank when transferring from other colleges and community college (UC’s are exempt). UC to UC transfers have their GPA’s transferred. Yet for honors consideration, both your UC and Community College or other college are seen.</p>

<p>“for honors consideration, both your UC and Community College or other college are seen.”</p>

<p>Source?</p>

<p>honors is just judged by your ucla courses. You need to complete 90 units at ucla to be considered for latin honors. The only time your cc GPA matters is when you apply for the honors program at ucla. You will be accepted automatically if your gpa is 3.5 or above. My GPA at UCLA is just the classes i have taken here.</p>

<p>your gpa will still be on file at whatever UC you go to but you will not have a UC gpa because you have not taken any UC courses. Once you have taken UC courses you will have a UC gpa. For graduate schools or employers if they ask, the gpas are usually combined or separated for review.</p>