<p>Is it possible to apply to a UC during your first year at a JC or do you have to complete 2 full years and transfer as a junior?</p>
<p>i believe you need 60 units to transfer to an UC.</p>
<p>Junior-Level Transfer
The vast majority of transfer students come to the University at the junior level from California community colleges. To be eligible for admission to UC as a transfer student, you must fulfill both of the following criteria:</p>
<ol>
<li>Complete 60 semester (90 quarter) units of transferable college credit with a GPA of at least 2.4. No more than 14 semester (21 quarter) units may be taken Pass/Not Pass.</li>
</ol>
<p>[University</a> of California - Admissions](<a href=“http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/admissions/undergrad_adm/paths_to_adm/transfer/tr_adm_reqs.html]University”>http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/admissions/undergrad_adm/paths_to_adm/transfer/tr_adm_reqs.html)</p>
<p>yes you can apply for UC during first year and finish all in one year, but its going to be really hard.</p>
<p>You need 60 UC-transferrable units, which puts you at junior standing. UCs do not accept sophomore-standing transfers, but you can always try to complete 60 units in one year (almost impossible unless you took college courses in HS or have a good amount of AP scores up your sleeve).</p>
<p>Lower-Division Transfer</p>
<p>The University admits some transfer students before they reach junior standing, if they have met specific requirements.</p>
<p>If you were eligible for admission to the University when you graduated from high school – meaning you satisfied the Subject, Scholarship and Examination Requirements, or were identified by the University during your senior year as eligible in the local context and completed the Subject and Examination Requirements in the senior year – you are eligible for transfer if you have a C (2.0) average in your transferable college coursework (2.8 GPA for nonresidents).</p>
<p>If you met the Scholarship Requirement in high school but did not satisfy the 15-course Subject Requirement, you must take transferable college courses in the missing subjects, earn a C
or better in each required course and have an overall C (2.0) average in all transferable coursework to be eligible to transfer (a 2.8 GPA is required for nonresidents).</p>
<p>For more information about the Subject, Scholarship and Examination requirements, see the Statewide Eligibility requirements.</p>
<p>there is common sense behind what u are saying. If you can be a jr transfer after oen year, then do it. if you cannot, then just do it in two years. it is kinda dumb to transfer in as soph since you could save money and get more done at a CC.</p>