<p>Any suggestions or ideas how I can figure out if my classes are accepted as transferable while I am applying and how I can figure out which classes are also accepted after I have been accepted as a transfer at a certain UC? I cannot use assist.org because I'm not at a CCC.</p>
<p>After your accepted they will do the course evaluation. Before you are accepted all you can do is compare course descriptions I believe</p>
<p>If you go to assist.org, you can select your CCC and any UC, then your major, you can see what classes at your school satisfy the UC’s pre-reqs for your major. As far as the IGETC classes, you can see your CCC counselor and they can tell you which classes transfer over. Or you can check your CCC’s catalog and see if it tells you which classes are transferrable.</p>
<p>@Sumbum - you should read the post before answering.</p>
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<p>@Dline7024 I was rejected by UCSB because they said that one of my courses do not transfer thus putting me below 60 semester units or 90 quarter units. Therefore I had no way to knowing that the course would transfer or not. This is very arbitrary because I can not know if my classes transfer over or not before I am applying. And for example in my case, I am rejected and I have other classes I did not include which I could and would completely alter my decision.</p>
<p>@UCBhopeful16 thank you very much. As I said I am not in a CCC.</p>
<p>You omitted classes you took from your application?</p>
<p>@bgioan You have to include every single class you’ve taken on your application. Omitting classes is never a sound idea, and raises red flags at the institutions you have applied to. I would call admissions and tell them that you “forgot” to include some classes. Hopefully, they will be forgiving.</p>
<p>No I didn’t omit them I apologize that it sounds like that. The classes are second session of this semester and I was planning to register but did not. I still have a week to register and if it matters I will. If it doesn’t change anything I won’t.</p>
<p>In a sense I did forget.</p>
<p>@UCBhopeful16 my apologies, I missed the last sentence.
In any case, @bgioan talk to your counselor. You can try talking to admissions at ucsb, as well.</p>