<p>I am filling out my UC application online and it asks for UCSD to put a list of 6 colleges in order of preference. Can anybody tell me what institution would be best for Sociology majors? It is a backup school so I don't know too much about it. Thanks.</p>
<p>It really does not matter too much, especially since your going to be a transfer and can't live on campus. It has nothing to do with academics, its just really a social thing. I would recommend Sixth. It seems to be the cool and hip one since it is the newest.</p>
<p>very cool, thank you.</p>
<p>Don't quote me on this</p>
<p>But from what I've read each UCSD campus has a few slight different GE requirements to graduate. Now I'm not 100% sure on this, since I haven't done much research on UCSD. But I swear I read that somewhere on CC.</p>
<p>Anyone with some Insight on this?</p>
<p>Found it</p>
<p>Prospective</a> Students: Core Curricula and General Education Requirements</p>
<p>Check the requirements for each college it has a section under each of them for transfer students.</p>
<p>i heard that if you don't put muir on top, you will probably not get into muir cuz it's one of the most wanted among those six colleges. so when i applied last year, i put muir on first and got in.</p>
<p>Muir, Warren, Marshall, ERC, Sixth, Revelle is how i would do it.</p>
<p>if you've completed IGETC then erc and revelle should be last as they're the only colleges that don't accept IGETC as full completion of lower-div classes</p>
<p>for sociology: muir, marshall, 6th, warren, erc, revellle</p>
<p>why 6th over warrren? what's the dif?</p>
<p>warrens prereqs are designed for engineering/physical/life science majors</p>
<p>why muir is that popular?</p>
<p>I am an econ major, so where should I go? I am thinking about Warren and Marshall.</p>
<p>muir is the easiest and very social.</p>
<p>Muir is the best. They require a whole lost less of you once you get here.</p>
<p>This is why it's so popluar, and thus a pretty decent achievement to get into.</p>
<p><--- @ muir</p>
<p>Yeah so to the person who said it doesn't matter, it really does. Choosing the wrong college could set you back a couple of quarters.</p>