<p>Im nearly finishing my 1st yr at UCD and am thinking of transferring out. Dont get me wrong, its a good school and I know many people would love to go there but right now it doesnt seem right for me. Im interested in business and Davis frankly has no interest in bus besides there grad school.</p>
<p>Im thinking of transfering to UCLA or UC Berkeley if things dont work out. Just wondering how hard it is to transfer, my chances, and what I have to do?</p>
<p>well business at berkeley and business economics at UCLA are two of the most competetive majors for transfers to get into. Haas' acceptance rate is 23% for those who fulfill all the requirements with a gpa range of 3.8-4. UCLA has a 3.8+ average gpa as well. If your goal is to truly transfer to those schools i'd drop out of davis and goto a community college for a year to get transfer priority.</p>
<p>JetForcegeminix, is right. Your chances at transferring from UCD to UCLA (Business-Econ) or UCB (Haas) are extremely slim. If you are intending to dropout for a year from UCD and attending a community college. You MUST stay at the community college for 1 whole academic year to receive that priority, not just fall semester and apply. But one whole entire year (2 semesters). Even with the priority, chances of you getting in to those prestigious schools solely depend on how hard you are able to try.</p>
<p>Although I heard UCB (Haas) was 7% not 23%.</p>
<p>Makebank you actually don't need to stay a full academic year before you apply. You just need one year at a CCC before you transfer. I went to UCSB from fall 07-spring 08 and i've been attending a CCC since summer 08- now. You can use the fall semester when you apply and the spring before you transfer as your one full year. I've spoken to an admission officer at UCSD and she confirmed that you can recieved the CCC priority this way. Think about how some people transfer in one year with CCC priority. They apply in their first semester, fall, and then get their decisions in the spring. If they didn't get priority this way then alot of them would be screwed. I actually went to Berkeley's office of undergraduate admissions in person and the admission officer told me that they don't even care if its 2 semesters as long as you get 30 units from a CCC.</p>
<p>Also for HAAS, the 7% figure is including people who do not finish the requirements.</p>
<p>" 1063 applicants did not show planned completion of the admission requirements and were considered ineligible. Of the 402 eligible applicants, 94 (23%) were offered admission."</p>
<p>Transfer</a> Statistics, Undergraduate Program - Haas School of Business, University of California Berkeley</p>