Spring 2012 Semester ends after transfer admission notification?

<p>Okay, I know students need to have 60 units by end of Spring 2012.</p>

<p>I'll be enrolled in enough units by Spring to meet the 60 unit requirement, however my Spring semester at CC doesn't end until the end of May. Yet UC notifies transfer admits by May 1st at the latest.</p>

<p>Am I screwed? </p>

<p>I don't understand how UC could possibly accept an incomplete transcript as credit. Website doesn't provide a lot of info on the issue.</p>

<p>The May 1st means that will be the last day they send out your admittance to the University by using up all your grades up to Fall 2011. You send in your Spring 2012 grades after your done, and if something happened where you did not meet the requirements during your Spring 2012 classes then they will rescind your admittance – in other words take back the letter saying they accepted you and reject you.</p>

<p>But I won’t have 60 units by the end of Fall 2012.</p>

<p>Are they just going to judge my admission solely based on 30 units+10.5 for AP for Fall 2012? I’ll be taking close to 20 units in Spring semester to meet the 60 unit demand. </p>

<p>They won’t consider my Spring 2012 GPA at all?</p>

<p>You are admitted based on your grades up to fall 2011. They’ll see your Spring semester courses/grades when you send in your official transcripts after being admitted, so they’ll see you’ve finished the 60 units.</p>

<p>So, your Spring grades won’t help you get admitted, but if they’re horrible (D’s and F’s) you could have your admittance rescinded.</p>

<p>All right thanks for the clarity. Wish I took easier classes this Fall then because my GPA is getting ruined. </p>

<p>I have another question, off-topic though. My school lists Math 60 as pre-algebra, but UC lists Math 60 as calculus or another college-level math. Other community colleges list intermediate algebra as Math 101. </p>

<p>What do I do? I put intermediate algebra as the title but it still registers the class as transferable, even though I know it isn’t.</p>