<p>Applying Fall 09 to: UCLA, Cal, UCSD, UCSB</p>
<p>Major: Mathematics(UCLA,UCSD,UCSB), Mathematics/Applied Mathematics (Cal)
GPA: 4.0(Most classes were "easy" general ed classes. I'm taking harder classes in summer, fall, and spring. Expected 3.8 or higher.)
Pre-Reqs: everything by Spring 10 except Comp Sci for UCSB and UCLA
IGETC: will be completed by Fall 09
EC's: Tutor, ARC
Work: 10 hours
Extra:
-3 of the prereqs (Linear Algebra, Differential Eqs, Calc III) will be completed in the Spring. Does this matter a lot?
-siblings attend UCLA (doubt this matters much, if anything)
-white male (doubt this matters much, if anything)</p>
<p>I took more IGETC classes than prereqs the first year, mostly because I was deciding on my major. Bad move :o ?</p>
<p>I will have 35 semester units done by this Spring and expect 74 semester units completed by Spring 10</p>
<p>So, what are my chances?</p>
<p>Thanks</p>
<p>I would think your chances would be pretty good for UCLA, SD, and SB, I’m not sure about CAL.</p>
<p>The avg. admitted gpa for UCLA was a 3.56</p>
<p>I would consider TAP, or a TAG program if you are serious about going to one place over another.</p>
<p>as for your extras; the 3 pre-reqs being completed will probably help a little but i’m not sure how much, it doesn’t matter that you have siblings going to UCLA or what you are white. </p>
<p>I was a psyc major up until the fall 08 semester and had only take pre-reqs for psyc. I changed my major to poli sci finished 2 pre-reqs that fall and I am finishing the other 2 this semester.</p>
<p>Look at the admitted profiles for next FALL and previous years at each school and that will give you a better idea of how good your chances are. And look at the other threads about people getting accepted/rejected from those schools.</p>
<p>Just do the TAGs. Those things take like 20 painless minutes of talking to a counselor and can seriously reduce anxiety levels.</p>
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<p>I’m taking those three math classes now and I was accepted to all of those schools for the same majors (econ/math for ucla specifically though) and there are TONS of people doing the same.</p>
<p>i think you have a 73.67 percent chance at all of them.</p>