<p>I am a freshman applying to transfer to a university at which I was accepted last year. Do you think that the admissions officers look at previous admit/waitlist/reject status in making their decisions for transfer (in other words, will this give me a better chance)?</p>
<p>so....bump.....</p>
<p>i think if you were accepted before.. that means you qualified for that university... so i think as long as you have kept good gpa in college and have a good essay stating your reasons for wanting to trasnfer, you have a good chance~
btw where are you applying to?</p>
<p>good luck~!</p>
<p>Probably. I don't know where you're applying, but NYU told me that an acceptance out of high school meant that you have a history of being a strong applicant and that it does help you in the transfer process.</p>
<p>I don't think it's the admit per se that gives you a better chance, but rather what that offer of admission meant. It meant that you were a strong applicant with great grades and test scores and essays and EC's. You have some transfer students that are applying because they got rejected out of high school (like me!). If you and I were in the same transfer applicant pool, you would be stronger than me because you have been strong all across the board (assuming your college grades have been equally as good or better) rather than waiting until college to really excel.</p>