Should I report these changes to UC's?

<p>I'm an intercampus transfer and applied to UCB, UCLA, UCSD, and UCD. My UC operates on a quarter system and so for Spring 2013 planned courses I said I'd take a course that fulfilled the last GE I need (to fulfill UC reciprocity), a course in my major (though it is in my major field, it doesn't satisfy any requirement as I've fulfilled all lower division requirements; I'm taking the class because I'm obviously interested in my major field and want to demonstrate interest in it), and two random courses (Philosophy and Computer Science) just because I was interested in them.</p>

<p>When I met with an admissions evaluator from UCB, my top choice, earlier this year, she made sure to emphasize the importance of demonstrating interest in my major and finishing my GE's to fulfill reciprocity. Unfortunately, that last GE class filled up, though I was able to get into another class that fulfills the same GE. I'm in the same politics course I originally inputted. But, because the new class that fulfills my last GE is 5 units, as opposed to the 2-unit course I intended on taking, I only want to take one other course and ended up enrolling in a Mathematics course (Calculus of Several Variables), because I enjoy math and will likely pursue a double major in economics. I'll likely take this new course that satisfies my last GE pass/no pass since it's an upper division Music course that relates in no way to my major; it was literally the only class available to me that satisfied this last GE. Anyways, is it worth it to report these changes to my schedule to the UC's or should I wait until I receive an offer of admission? In my opinion, none of my changes are significant as I'm still taking the politics course I said I'd take and I'm still fulfilling the last GE, which has absolutely no relation to my major whatsoever. And given that neither philosophy nor computer science affect my major, I figure taking Math instead of those courses won't be a big deal. I'll still have enough units to transfer even though I'm now enrolled in 15 units as opposed to my planned 17 units.</p>

<p>So, should I report these changes now at what I'm sure is an incredibly busy/stressful time for UC's, or should I wait to report these changes given the relative insignificance of my schedule changes? Not that it matters, but I'm not trying to hide these changes from the UC's or anything, which I think is pretty evident; I just don't want to increase their workload at such a busy time if I can avoid it. Thanks!</p>

<p>I thought they wanted applicants to update their information whenever it changes. I dropped a course 2 weeks ago and I reported it.</p>

<p>You may as well report it. If they don’t check the update, at the very least it’s not your fault, it’s theirs. Don’t give them any reason to reject you.</p>

<p>I’m currently uc student, and if ur already accepted by any of these schools, then you should know any of conditions. Pretty much other than ucb or ucla, they will still accept u for any problem. But you should call their admission office for make sure first.</p>