<p>Sorry, but from up here in the adult world I see a lot of kids doing stupid, stupid harm to themselves with their Harvard dreams. So, yeah, almost all of them should be learning how to have better dreams, the kind of dreams that actually help the dreamer accomplish something. Almost certainly including you, “therage”.</p>
<p>Seriously, you started this post to find out whether, if you are one of the handful of people out of thousands of applicants accepted for transfer to Harvard, clearly not fitting into or having any chance to fit into any of the categories that actually give people a meaningful chance of acceptance for transfer to Harvard, Harvard will give you credit for your freshman writing class so you don’t have to take another freshman writing class there? What was going to turn on the answer? Having already decided you were going to most likely waste time, energy, and emotion on trying to transfer to Harvard, before even starting college elsewhere, you were going to change your mind because you might have to take one course over? (And not even the same course, just a course with similar objectives?) Of course not! (Of course, they aren’t going to make you take another freshman writing seminar, so the whole thing is moot. Which you would know if you had any common sense, but we already know the answer to THAT question, no?)</p>
<p>It’s like asking what the wi-fi connections will be in the Olympic Village in 2016, because you might try out for the U.S. swimming team.</p>
<p>If you want to be treated like an adult, start by asking mature questions. If you ask stupid, immature questions, people are going to answer you like a stupid, immature kid.</p>