UT-Austin transfer help

<p>Hi all,</p>

<p>I am going to be a freshmen at a community college this year, and have noticed a few things. For starters, the courses I need to get into the business school would take more than a few years to get.. Namely the math. I would have to do about 5 math classes before I had the required classes. Calculus I and II have about 4 classes leading up to them.. a developmental class, col alg, trig, then pre-cal. So 6 total. </p>

<p>So, if I wanted to get into UT, then be a internal transfer from lets say Liberal Arts.. Would I have to complete Cal I/II before just like business? Also, is it a good idea to enter the program as a junior? Any help and advice would be great!</p>

<p>I am kind of confused.</p>

<p>When I entered college, my first math class was Calculus I. I took all the pre-reqs for that course in high school.</p>

<p>Didn’t you take trig, advanced algebra, and pre-calculus in high school?</p>

<p>Sadly I did not… I had some medical conditions which made it to where I scraped by in high school. That’s why I am going to a community college. At the end of high school I started turning it around… but it was too late. I already have a full semester of college done (12 hours). and have a 4.0 GPA, so I’m not too ignorant… lol</p>

<p>If you didn’t take those pre-reqs in high school, you’ll need to take them in junior college. Those courses will lengthen the amount of time you’ll be there by a semester, so you should be at the comm. college for 2 1/2 years.</p>

<p>And, yes, you’ll need to take Calculus I and Calculus II before you are accepted into the business school.</p>

<p>Okay, thank you for your reply. I’ll just have to see if I can double up on some classes… 2.5 years doesn’t work out. The B-school only accepts during the fall semester, so it would really be 3 years. And I’m pretty sure they don’t take seniors.</p>

<p>If you have time during the summer, take three courses. I was an Enginering major in college at first, but switched to business after my sophomore year. I took 9 hours of credit each summer the next two summers, and I graduated in 4 years.</p>