What schools can you transfer to with more than 2 years of college under your belt?

<p>I know some colleges say you have to complete at least 2 years at that school, which is fine. </p>

<p>I want to know which schools would let me transfer with more than 2 years.</p>

<p>Say I don't get into my dream school, but get into another school. Attend the other school, and then try to transfer somewhere else.</p>

<p>I'm doing a dual major anyways, so I'll be in college 5 years. What are the top schools that allow this?</p>

<p>what?????
I am dual major at my college right now. I am also enrolled in the Honours concentration. I started in June of 2006 and will have 120 credits by July of 2008 ..... why would it take u 5 years for a dual major???</p>

<p>sorry to say....but if it takes u 5 years to complete a college ... i would recommend you to apply to SUNY schools....they will take anyone in...</p>

<p>SUNY? Excuse me but I'm speaking about top 30 schools here...</p>

<p>It will take me 5 years because I'm dualing in 2 specific majors, econ and finance. both are 4 year programs...</p>

<p>I'm also doing a minor and a concentration, so please don't give me this crap.</p>

<p>I too am in an honors college at a top 50 school at that. </p>

<p>Your post was pretty useless...</p>

<p>perhaps....its true..that britishers really forgot to teach americans the difference between a college and university</p>

<p>please correct your terminology and elaborate your post</p>

<p>Excuse me? Your post makes no sense, what terminology? Where did I ever mention university? I'm an undergrad... The title university just means that the school has a graduate program, but that has nothing to do with this post. </p>

<p>My post is pretty easy to understand.
I'm at college A, will be here for 2 years, want to know which schools will let me matriculate with more than 2 years of college completed.</p>

<p>And for the record your "go to a SUNY, they will take anyone" comment was as disrespectful as your posts are incoherent.</p>

<p>actually...that's a popular saying in Europe abt American universities ... </p>

<p>are you at a 4-year college or community college</p>

<p>If you are at a 4-year school then your chances are nill... </p>

<p>If you are at a community-college... it makes no difference no matter how many you have ...</p>

<p>You r doomed! if ur at a 4-year school</p>

<p>Literally.......its true........SUNY schools will take up anyone... I am not sure abt SUNY Binghamton & Buffalo.....</p>

<p>Again. Your posts are getting more worthless and incoherent as you add on...</p>

<p>Pakiboy,</p>

<p>You are on an American website, so you should realize that it is normal that Yury should use the American terminology (where "universities" and "colleges are used interchangeably") rather than the British usage where there is a specific differential between the terms "university" and "college".</p>

<p>Rather than asking him to "correct" his terminology, how about we speak in American English here--and you respond to him using the terminology we use here? (And since you are going to school in New York, you really should know the difference)</p>

<p>What he is asking is simple--do you know of any schools where one can transfer when one has more than two years of college?</p>

<p>Yury,</p>

<p>Many schools will allow you to transfer after two years, but not as many allow you to transfer more than 60 to 64 units--particularly at those schools in the top echelon (top 30). In fact, only at the UCs am I particularly aware that you can take less than the full two years in residence. Here's a website that gives some info on this:</p>

<p><a href="http://eap.ucop.edu/ai/resources/Academic%20Residence%20Requirements.pdf%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://eap.ucop.edu/ai/resources/Academic%20Residence%20Requirements.pdf&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>I'm not too sure about the University of Chicago--they may also not require more than one year in residence.</p>

<p>As far as transferring after having taken extra units (like taking 80 units and then attempting to transfer 64) and coming in as a junior, I think all the colleges except for the Ivies allow you to do this. (Obviously, you have to have the grades, though--so this may preclude some schools from doing so). Your best bet is probably the public schools--like University of California at Berkeley, University of Michigan, University of North Carolina and the University of Virginia. I also believe USC allows this.</p>

<p>Good luck.</p>

<p>Most schools let you transfer with a maximum number of units (70 semester units for UC's, for instance), but the units after that can satisfy course requirements without giving you credits toward your degree.</p>

<p>@pakiboy: You are annoying. ****. Kthx.</p>

<p>I appreciate these last 2 responses. Definitely helpful. And no need to explain anything to him calcruzer, not only did I not even mention the word university, but he seems to have some sort of vendetta for absolutely no reason. </p>

<p>kevin, I spoke with an admissions officer at Harvard and they said that I couldn't with more than 2 years, is it just that specific school? </p>

<p>I suppose I should call all the schools, but I have been given 2 opposite pieces of info from the same school before. </p>

<p>Thanks again to both, you cleared up a lot. Sadly, most of the schools I'm looking at are Ivies so this (currently a soph) will apparently be my one and only shot.</p>

<p>pakiboy is a troll, don't pay too much attention to him</p>

<p>I wish I'd have realized it earlier.</p>

<p>Anybody know any specific guidelines for any of the top 40 schools? Mainly Ivies, with stanford and such as well. Also looking at the top 15 LAC's if anyone has knowledge on those.</p>

<p>umm...just logon to USnews and check the details ..you can get the score range on fastweb</p>

<p>^where would I check the details? I've looked around and see nothing.
And what do you mean score range?</p>