UC Academic Update ??

<p>In my academic update in January I put that I would take an Philosophy class along with my other classes during spring quarter, but there was no room available during registration period. So now I'm having to take a Psychology class instead of the Philosophy for this quarter. BTW I applied as a Business Major to Irvine/UCLA</p>

<p>So my question is, if I do update my academic update once again and email the schools to let them know that I've changed it, would that hurt my chances to get in? I called the school and the reps, but no one gave a clear cut answer, so I'm sort of confused.</p>

<p>Any help would be appreciated, Thanks.</p>

<p>YES, you should update it. There is no penalty for deviating from your planned schedule. As far as I know, any difference between the class information on the application and your official transcripts jeopardizes your acceptances.</p>

<p>Thanks! And I am going to change it.
I was just wondering if changing classes so close to the admission decisions might be a factor as to me getting accepted or not?</p>

<p>It’s a non-major related course, you should be just fine. Good luck.</p>

<p>Yup, I was told that admissions probably won’t even notice updates this late in the game.</p>

<p>I have a question about this too. I dropped Spanish 201 at my cc, a pre-req for an english major at Irvine where you need four years of a foreign lang., and I only updated it on the academic update, but never emailed my schools. Should I still email them this late? The only school it would effect is Irvine, cause every other UC only calls for 2 years of a foreign lang which I already have…And I’ve already gotten in at UCSB, which I’d rather go to than UC Irvine anyways, but I’m concerned about Berkeley and UCLA…</p>

<p>What do you guys think?</p>

<p>is it even worth emailing the schools about if the class that you changed wasn’t a major prereq or for igetc? i’ve made a few updates to my spring classes after the deadline, but they aren’t relevant for my major or for igetc.</p>

<p>I would. Better to be safe.</p>