<p>Hello, I am a student on the Seattle campus and was wondering about taking classes at the Bothell campus but remaining a Seattle student. I like the smaller class sizes there and it is closer to my home than Seattle.</p>
<p>Are the classes at Bothell exactly the same as in Seattle just at a different location? I was thinking of taking the intro chem class (lB</a> CHEM 142) and BCUSP</a> 126 Calculus II and a VLPA.</p>
<p>I know someone who has taken classes there so they do allow it. I'm just wondering if the credits would transfer smoothly and if they are equivalent to the Seattle class.</p>
<p>Thanks.</p>
<p>You are right, you can take classes at bothell while being enrolled in seattle. Just make sure you don’t go over 45 credits. The system will let you, but it won’t count toward your degree.</p>
<p>“A maximum of 45 credits earned through cross-campus enrollment may count toward a bachelor’s degree. This restriction is not monitored, so there is no restriction to the number of credits a student may complete by cross-campus enrollment, only to the number that may count toward a degree. If there are excess cross-campus enrollment credits, the department adviser should note this on the application for graduation so the credits can be subtracted. DARS is not programmed to know at which campus courses are completed, so a DARS audit will not point out excess cross-campus enrollment credits.”</p>
<p><a href=“http://www.washington.edu/uaa/advising/registration/ccregi.php[/url]”>http://www.washington.edu/uaa/advising/registration/ccregi.php</a></p>
<p>Now, as to your actual question…there should no need to transfer anything. It will still show up on your unofficial transcript/dars/etc with n extra work being done.</p>
<p>on the same link:
Credits completed at all UW campuses are posted on the student’s transcript as UW credit. Which campus offered the course can be determined by the department abbreviation; each campus has its own set of abbreviations, and none are shared. The campus at which the student was enrolled in a given quarter can be determined by the student’s major code that quarter; again, each campus has its own set of abbreviations.</p>
<p>I’m not sure if UW-Bothell uses the same course abbreviations as UW-Seattle but you should do some research because the pre-req classes(Chem., Biol., Calc.) i took at UW-Tacoma do not show as pre-reqs when registering for classes at UW-Seattle and make it a total pain because i have to talk to an adviser every time and most of the classes fill up and i have to get an add code.</p>