<p>It’s also interesting how the number of California applicants has decreased for all except for Merced. I’m not sure if that’s good or bad? Do UC’s have a cap for oos and int students? If they do, that’s great for us.</p>
<p>The birth trend was downward until 1999, then turning upward. Freshmen entering college in 2017 and junior transfers entering four year schools in 2019 are likely to find it easier to gain admission than now, if colleges’ capacities and the percentage of people applying to college stay the same.</p>
<p>The increase is a result from the rise of applications by international students and not domestic students. This means CA CC students should have a better chance than in recent years past so as long you don’t account for the rise in the mean GPA, provided that even occurred among CCC transfers. Bundle this with increased funding from the state and several UCs’ desires to increase enrollment and you’re looking at a great year for transfers.</p>
<p>Transfer applicants from California community colleges are down slightly, relative to 2012. This follows exceptionally large increases in transfer applicants between 2008 and 2011.</p>
<p>Hopefully. I did a little research on my major for UCLA. The number of admits went from 70ish to 30ish to 20ish over the years. It’s also crazy how the average GPA admitted spiked from a 3.6ish to a now 3.9+ over a time span of three years. I hope it’s a lot of increased enrollment.</p>
<p>The actual numbers. Each year the applicants range from 200-260ish. Average GPA applied is around 3.30 - 3.40. The last two years resulted in a 10% admit rate.</p>