Unusual circumstance

<p>both haha.</p>

<p>As far as gpa, I said:
[quote]
My UC gpa was based only on the 2 years I spent there, but I don't know whether or not that varies by school

[/quote]
</p>

<p>As far as CC, the info is from the CA, so it would be good for any college that uses the CA for transfer students.</p>

<p>sorry for the dumb question, but does CA refer to common application?
and would you happen to know the answer to my question about how latin honors are calculated for transfers? thank you very much</p>

<p>Yes, CA=Common Application.</p>

<p>Sorry, I don't know about the latin honors gpa calculation.</p>

<p>Glad that entomom could provide some info and opinion. I've been without Internet for a few days (bad wireless modem). I think her info would be relevant beyond UCs, based on my observation and experience. </p>

<p>I also don't know re latin honors eligibility. I think it might vary by school? I can tell you that I transferred and my end school (Wellesley) conferred honors that you qualified for, regardless of whether you were a transfer or not. I graduated in the top 5 students in my class and received High Honors (Wellesley didn't have cum, magna cum..., summa cum...), just Honors and High Honors. This was a million years ago, and I had transferred in as a sophomore.</p>

<p>I think on that one, you might have to find out the answer school by school. When you have your acceptances in hand, if this is a concern of yours, I would find it out post-acceptance from the Registrar's or Academic Dean's office.</p>

<p>"i took the classes over the summer so that i wouldn't have to take the AP classes during the school year and could instead have credit so I could take some fun electives. They are not on my HS transcript because you had to request the CC to send the transcript so I didnt do that since I had F's."</p>

<p>You are going to have to look into whether or not the college/university you are applying to will need the transcript just for recordkeeping purposes. NORMALLY, accredited colleges and universities in the US will require you to supply official transcripts from all other accredited colleges and universities that you have ever attended. I've had to track down 30+ year old transcripts for courses that I took for fun that are not remotely related to my current graduate studies in order to appease the registrar's office. I was told that this has to do with them following regulations related to maintaining their accreditation.</p>

<p>The rules may be different since you took these courses while you were still in HS and you didn't use them toward your HS graduation. But you should definitely check it out and not trust our advice too much!</p>

<p>Good luck!</p>

<p>well i followed up on entomom's advice and found that the Common Application does explicitly say that you should list all college courses taken, beginning with freshmen year.
So it must be different for transfer than it is for high school applicants.
I am planning on not mentioning them at all, and in this case, that does not seem to be unethical. Thank entomom! :)</p>

<p>You're welcome! I learned something new too!</p>