<p>I'm going to attend a UC in the fall as a freshman, and I am currently taking a math class at a community college for the summer session. Will my college find out that I didn't send my transcript by the time summer is over? </p>
<p>I'm reserved about sending my transcript not b/c I'm failing/have a bad grade in the course but because I don't think that I learned enough to do well in the next course at the UC during the fall quarter. If I were to send my transcript to the college, I may not take the math class again and must be moved to the next level...which I don't think I'm well prepared for. </p>
<p>On top of that I couldn't get some of the easier GE classes during registration so taking the next math course in the series might be very challenging for me :/</p>
<p>Will my college and the grad schools I apply to later on be able to pull up my record at the CC and hold me accountable for not sending my grade?</p>
<p>They likely won’t find out by the time summer is over, unless you told them in advance that you were attending a CC. However, the answer to your second question is yes (via the National Student Clearinghouse), and withholding your transcript is not worth potentially losing both your undergraduate and graduate degrees. I hope you can somehow salvage the situation you’re in – best of luck.</p>
<p>Yes, you have to send the transcript. However, since you think you will need to repeat the course, contact the UC that you will be attending and find out how to arrange to do that. If for some reason you cannot repeat it and you are obligated to enroll in the higher level class, find out about where to go for tutoring and help with that higher course. If you work with the tutoring center, the class may not turn out to be so bad after all.</p>
<p>Just because the course is at a CC does not mean that you are not learning enough – plenty of CC students transfer to UCs and do well in advanced courses after transfer.</p>
<p>You may want to check the old final exams for the UC course that the CC course articulates to in [Welcome</a> to ASSIST](<a href=“http://www.assist.org%5DWelcome”>http://www.assist.org) to see how your knowledge of that course material is.</p>