<p>Yes, I am on, </p>
<p>Transfer</a> Admission Requirements</p>
<p>& not seeing it mentioned if I must have IGETC completed as a standard transfer requirement. If so, I may potentially have a chance.</p>
<p>Any insight please? Much obliged. :)</p>
<p>Depends on your major. It says on assist.org if it’s required or not.</p>
<p>From ucsd.edu</p>
<p>"If you plan to follow the IGETC, consider:</p>
<p>This curriculum is a series of courses that meet GE requirements at UCSD’s Muir, Marshall, Sixth, and Warren colleges.</p>
<p>Students who follow IGETC are also welcome at Eleanor Roosevelt and Revelle Colleges, but additional coursework may be required to fulfill GE requirements.</p>
<p>Partial IGETC is another possibility, allowing you to clear some of the GE requirements-if you are choosing a major that requires some lower-division coursework once you get to UC San Diego, this may be a good option for you. Partial IGETC certification may be completed after transferring to UC San Diego."</p>
<p>Hope that helps!</p>
<p>Hey. It’s not mandatory to complete igetc. It’s RECOMMENDED. BUT if you want to apply for TAG, then you have to have completed your igetc. Good luck</p>
<p>I was accepted into UCSD as a computer science major without completing IGETC. In my case, I was only missing one pre-req (second semester of Physics for Engineers), and had 115 transferable quarter units.</p>
<p>However, UCSD is one of the only universities that recommends most students complete IGETC, even engineering students on assist.org (click on ‘Explore Majors’ on the sidebar, then select your major, and it will say whether UCSD recommends that you complete IGETC). I’d recommend doing it because it will knock out your GE requirements for most colleges, with the exception of ERC and Revelle.</p>
<p>haha thank you for resurrecting this thread. UCSD has been finalized to be one of my 4 UC’s i will apply to. however i read the campus is boring…?</p>
<p>I read the same thing too. But it’s honestly what you make of it. Some people just decide to sit home and sulk in their own “boredness”. There are plenty of on campus clubs and groups.</p>