<p>it’s no sign at this point, it can show up this week or it may not and then you should be worried.</p>
<p>actually, i can login to ursa now and it shows my summary but my file is incomplete. no idea why.</p>
<p>it seems that almost everybody can see their summaries now… makes me doubt.</p>
<p>i don’t think i was doing the sign up properly before… there was one more click i had to do to complete the creating of a login name and i didn’t do it till today. duh…</p>
<p>oh no, not everybody!
4.0
communication
igetc done</p>
<p>i can’t still.</p>
<p>i’ve got a 3.4 (but would be higher without a D in a music class from 14 years ago). i’m an anthropology major and i think my essays were pretty strong.</p>
<p>i have a 4.0 in my major and 10 years of sales experience. </p>
<p>i didn’t do igetc, but i meet the L&S requirements (good thing because i’m dropping english 5 and will take it this summer).</p>
<p>think we need to have a post for all those who cannot see FA summary</p>
<p>there you go, loop, that would be wise.</p>
<p>ilivefree what do you mean by L&S requirements?</p>
<p>most students use IGETC to get into the UC’s, but according to Assist.org, you can also just meet the general education/breadth requirements for Letters & Sciences.</p>
<p>on assist.org, it lists out what courses you have to take, and of that, it says 2 english/composition courses. i’ve taken 1A and 1B, so davis says i’m fine and thus, i assume cal and ucla will be fine with it too.</p>
<p>anyway, i’m taking english 5 this semester. i am dropping it now because i had a conflict with the professor and i did report her to the dean. i have record of that and record that i was getting an A by mid-term.</p>
<p>i believe thats only for berkeley L&S</p>
<p>does anyone else have an expected contribution of $99,999.00?</p>
<p>jet force, no. it’s a UC system wide ge breadth, according to assist.org</p>
<p>[ASSIST</a> Report: BERKELEY 08-09 UC Transfer Admissions Eligibility Course List](<a href=“Welcome to ASSIST”>Welcome to ASSIST)</p>
<p>where it says:</p>
<p>A transfer applicant, according to the University of California, is a student
who has graduated from high school and enrolled in a regular session at another
college or university. A student who meets this definition cannot disregard his
or her college record and apply as a freshman. Transfer students should give top
priority to completing a pattern of courses that satisfies the transfer
admission requirements listed below. Completion of this pattern is the minimum
requirement for admission eligibility; it does not guarantee admission nor does
it guarantee that a student will be prepared and competitive for admission to a
specific UC campus or major.</p>
<p>A. Complete 60 semester (90 quarter) units of UC transferable college credit<br>
with a GPA of at least 2.4 (no more than 14 semester/21 quarter units may<br>
be taken Pass/Not Pass), and; </p>
<p>B. Complete the following course pattern requirement, earning a grade of C or
better in each course: </p>
<pre><code> 1. Two transferable college courses (3 semester or 4-5 quarter units each)
in English composition (Area UC-E), and;
-
One transferable college course (3 semester or 4-5 quarter units)
in mathematical concepts and quantitative reasoning (Area UC-M), and; -
Four transferable college courses (3 semester or 4-5 quarter units each)
chosen from at least two of the following subject areas: the arts and
humanities (Area UC-H), the social and behavioral sciences (Area UC-B),
and the physical and biological sciences (Area UC-S).
</code></pre>
<p>These are eligibility requirements not GE requirements. Notice how it says: UC Transfer Admissions Eligibility Course List
Nowhere on that site does it mention the fulfillment of general education or breadth requirements. The courses you posted are described here as merely the minimum courses to even be eligible to the UC system: <a href=“Understanding UC transfer | UC Admissions”>http://uctransfer.universityofcalifornia.edu/min_elig_reqs2.html</a></p>
<p>well, i guess i am mistaken. all i know is that davis said it was fine. and i have record of my reporting the teacher, so i will fight if any school has issue with it.</p>
<p>Here’s the deal people. Everyone who can see their finaid is 100% in and I will tell you why. Today I called the financial aid office and this is what I asked them: “DO REJECTED STUDENTS GET TO SEE THEIR FINAID OR ONLY ACCEPTED STUDENTS?” and this is what he told me, “the admissions office processes all of the ADMITTED students financial aid summaries directly to us” and I even asked him ONE MORE TIME “but if in case I do get rejected can I still see my award amount”, and he responded “No you don’t, how can you be able to see any financial aid award summary if your rejected”. and he kept on saying, "let me give you an example, suppose your coming to school for an expense of $26,000 why would the financial aid office give this amount to a rejected student, this is only given to an accepted student so to answer your question, ONLY ACCEPTED STUDENTS CAN SEE THEIR FINANCIAL AID ONLINE. I hope this answers many concerns there are. I don’t see why the one’s who are lucky enough to see this summary right now would even be doubting only because “the majority can see it”. This call I made should answer that this finaid theory is 100%. and ok for those who can’t see their finaiad no worries. The guy told me that they update decisions on a rolling basis until next week. If in case anybody has any doubts on what I am saying, please call the office tomorrow and you’ll find out for yourself what I am saying. Good luck!</p>
<p>I can see my aid and I am almost 100% certain I’m rejected. I applied to math/econ and wrote my essays on engineering.</p>
<p>what are your stats?</p>
<p>sstory dont worry about it. You’ll be in. your not going to be the first person in history to get rejected while seeing the finaid summary. Nobody will. and if you can’t see it it doesn’t mean your rejected. and add one more thing, math/econ is not impacted too. econ and bus econ are</p>