<p>if you apply to McCombs and get rejected, but accepted in the school, then is there any way you can transfer to McCombs later on, and if so what are the requirements, courses you take, and if you sucessfully trasfer later on into McCombs would intership places and such ever know that you were gsp'd or wutever or will they only see McCombs. by the way i'm a junior and haven't applied yet</p>
<p>it is possible to transfer from the liberal arts college (what they put you in if you dont get into your first two choices) to mccombs later. my sister was put into the liberal arts college her first year and then transfered to the school of communications her sophomore year which is pretty competitive but no so much compared to mccombs. im sure if you show that you are determined by getting good grades and everything, there is a chance you can transfer later..</p>
<p>I know a young lady who was in liberal arts (didn't get into McCombs out of hs) and transferred, not only into McCombs, but into the business honors program after her freshman year. Of course, she made all A's and got very involved on campus which gave her some leadership opportunities. She basically did everything right, and it worked out for her. </p>
<p>So, yes, it can happen!</p>
<p>how hard is it to get an a in all your classes at ut, do they do it based on the people there with curves or based on percentage you got right, and what kind of leadership positions did she have, and wouldn't it be hard have leadership positions since she is only a freshman, what does mccoms look for in internal transfer, wut range of gpa do they accept if you are texas resident internal transfer. thank you</p>
<p>Your grades depend greatly on your professors. What professor you choose at registration could very well be the diference between an A or a C. but overall If your majoring in liberal arts, getting a 4.0 is very reasonable.</p>
<p>You better be pretty confident; there are tons of horror stories of people trying forever to get into mccombs, and taking like 6 years to graduate because they spent so long in liberal arts.</p>