Summer or fall transfer

Hi I want to transfer in the fall as a sophomore with roughly 38 hours and my GPA will be around a 3.5 3.6 which should I apply yo get an easier acceptance

I’d say summer. Though either one would be okay because FSU pretty much accepts all transfer students.

Would it be better to do the 13 week summer or just the 2nd six? also coming from a 4 year public school in georgia

FSU doesn’t accept anywhere near all of their transfer students. The only way they “guarantee” anything for a transfer is if you do the TCC 2 FSU program and meet all of the requirements.

FSU requires that transfers with under 60 completed credits meet the same standards that freshman, first-time-in-college applicants meet. If you wouldn’t be accepted as a freshman applicant (ex: low SAT/ACT, Ds and Fs on transcripts, or something similar), you aren’t accepted as a lower-division transfer.

You’re better served to get your AA wherever you are. If you’re still adamant about transferring to FSU, it probably doesn’t matter which one you pick, but if you are looking to start in classes that are within your major, starting in the summer probably won’t be what you’re looking for.

would i need to send all my test scores, and high school transcripts to?

i just read that freshman requires a minimum 21 E/W on ACT is there any chance since I have a 19 even though all my other scores are decent and my college grades were good?

You’ll get accepted either way, transfers pretty much always get accepted as long as you meet the minimum.
I was a transfer from a Community College. Personally I’d recommend Summer Term mostly because it’s easier to transition during the summer. It’s overwhelming and chaotic during the Fall. I transferred during Summer and so glad I did because once Fall rolled around it was just crazy. During Summer the prof’s are easier to deal with and much easier to explore campus and the Tally area when it’s nice and quiet/calm.

Except he doesn’t meet the minimums. Not to mention that FSU’s transfer acceptance rate isn’t as high as you make it out to be.

There’s a chance, but I wouldn’t count on it. You’d be better off completing your Associate’s degree and then transferring, so that only your college stats are used in making a decision.