<p>What are my chances at both schools if I have a GPA of 3.47 and will be missing 1 prereq for Davis and 2 prereqs for Santa Cruz. My major is computer science.</p>
<p>Thanks</p>
<p>What are my chances at both schools if I have a GPA of 3.47 and will be missing 1 prereq for Davis and 2 prereqs for Santa Cruz. My major is computer science.</p>
<p>Thanks</p>
<p>Can someone please chance me as well. I’ve posted on here and have yet to receive answers. I messed up and got a D my second semester and the next semester came and I didn’t do so hot but my GPA is 2.8 and i’m majoring in Clinical Nutrition hoping to get accepted into UC Davis. Someone PLEASE give me hope lol</p>
<p>@bhav007
You’re almost certainly in. I got into both with about a 3.3; for Davis, I was missing only the equivalent of ECS 60 since my CC didn’t offer it, and I don’t remember what I was missing for SC.</p>
<p>@firefly94
I don’t know much about the difficulty of getting into nutrition, but going by GPA alone, I’d say your chances aren’t that great. If you can get your GPA to about the 3.1-3.3 range, your chances would increase dramatically.</p>
<p>@derse4444, thanks for the feedback. I’ll be missing discrete math for UC Davis while I’ll be missing discrete math and C++ data structures for UC Santa Cruz. UCSC seems like they want C++ instead, but I took Java and Java data structures, so that’s worrying me. What exactly happens if you miss the prereqs? Do you just take them at the university?</p>
<p>Anyone else? The more, the better :)</p>
<p>Yes, you take them at the university because they are themselves major requirements.</p>
<p>Wanting the data structures class to be in a particular language seems silly as a graph is still a graph, a tree is still a tree, and a hash table is still a hash table no matter the language of implementation.</p>