Your first semester experience at UCs

<p>I’m at UCSD and My gpa is the same as it was at CC. in fact a little higher, for now. My major is electrical engineering, so my cc experience was demanding. I find the lower division classes to be on par with CC but the upper division are a whole different story. They are a lot more intense and way more demanding…</p>

<p>I love UCSD and except for lack of mucho hotties im glad i came here. My friend went to UCLA and is hating his life(same major). he had a higher gpa at my c c and now he has a lower one and hates all his professors, and let me say some stories he told me are scary scary… so if your worried about the material at a UC don’t be if u can get into the school u should be okay… it maybe harder but u will do fine… good luck with admissions!</p>

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Could we hear some of those stories please :D</p>

<p>By the way, I’m in my second semester now and even though I’m taking more units my coursework actually seems a lot easier… maybe because I’m used to the pace of things and maybe because my classes are easier this semester. I had some semesters at community college that were definitely more challenging than my current semester here at Cal!</p>

<p>My first and second quarter experience as a biochemistry major at UCLA: </p>

<p>I’m a junior transfer to UCLA for Fall 2009 from santa monica college. My experience at UCLA has been amazing yet weird. So, I transferred to UCLA
as a biochemistry major with 3.7 GPA. After two quarters at UCLA with the completion
of majority of my upper division major classes, I have a 3.65 (first quarter 3.3-_-,
second quarter 4.0). Because I wanted to get over with the hard part of my major first
and also since I have a relatively weaker foundations, I have decided that I wouldn’t
take more than 3 classes a quarter (either 1 major class+2 Upper division GE’s or
2 Major classes+ 1 Upper division GE). </p>

<p>Difference between SMC and UCLA: Because of the semester system at SMC, you have more time to learn and digest the new stuff. Rather than learning the whole metabolic pathways and their regulations in 10 Wks, which is really demanding. Also, at a CC, you don’t have to compete with anyone for a grade since all the grades are assigned based on the straight scale. However, at UCLA, I have felt like I’m competing with people who just study as hard as I do. Although, I have no trouble beating the curve most of the time, to get an A, it takes Much, Much, and Much more effort, than getting a B, this is especially true in a challenging course such as Biochem 153 series ,Chem 110 series and Life science series. This is really different from CC because at CC, I had never felt such a huge difference between A and B. </p>

<p>My suggestions to the fellow UC Transfers: To do well at UC’s, you will need a lot of discipline and time management. 1)While at CC, you should have developed the habit of
trying you best to discipline yourself by taking hard courses such as O-chem, physics or biology during the short 6-week sessions, that was what I did at CC, it has helped me a lot later to handle the pace and difficulty at UCLA. 2) Making going to office hours one of your habits, when you are in doubt of something, you should ask this is especially true when you are taking a challenging courses where the teachers stress a lot on<br>
applications of a lot of concepts that seem new to you. 3) Have a good social life, do exercise constantly, make friends, join clubs and do research when you have time truly help to relieve your pressure.</p>

<p>Just got done reading all the posts in this thread, there is some great advice in there. Thanks for bringin it back kahn :D</p>

<p>Kahn1988 - you plan on taking 3 classes the rest of the way? is it possible to do that and graduate in a timely manner? and i was also wondering what classes transfers are required to take besides the upper div courses for our specific majors? because i mean, didnt we take care of all our GE’s at our CCs?</p>

<p>For my major you need to finish 60 or more upper division units at ucla to make up 180 units, which is the minimum number units you need to graduate. those 60 units include your upper division major classes+ upper division electives for your MAJOR (Note: these electives are different from the ones we have taken at CC in completing our igetc). </p>

<p>In my circumstance, my major contains like about 8 or 9 upper division major classes and 4 upper division electives. So, 3 classes a quarter should allow me to graduate with in two years.</p>

<p>Look on assist first the classes that they list that your school doesn’t have a match for you have to take those lower division classes. </p>

<p>I believe at UCLA theres cluster ge which is the one’s we took at C.C that we don’t have to take. </p>

<p>Also on the quarter system you have basically 3 quarter rather than 2 a year to make it easier to take those amount of classes and you can always take summer classes as well.</p>

<p>2/2/2/2 and 2/2/2/ and you can still graduate in time</p>

<p>I took a look at UCi’s graduation requirement for econ and it’s pretty simple</p>

<p><a href=“Home | Economics | UCI Social Sciences”>Home | Economics | UCI Social Sciences;

<p>Economics 20A-B. Basic Micro and Macroeconomics. --completed in C.C
Economics 15A-B. Probability and Statistics.-- need from irvine
Mathematics 2A-B and 4. Calculus and Mathematics for Economists.–completed in C.C
Economics 100A-B-C. Intermediate Micro and Macroeconomics.–needed
Economics 122A. Applied Econometrics.–needed
Six additional Economics courses, one of which may be lower-division.</p>

<p>so basically 15A-B , 100a-b-c, 122a and 6 classes which is about 12 classes</p>

<p>x 4-5 units each is about 55 units</p>

<p>We transfer with about 90-105 depending on how many units you transfer with 60-70 semester units and i believe graduation requirements is 180 units for most schools so that would leave ~ 20 units to burn</p>

<p>can several people please answer this post. Just go accepted to UCSD and wondering bout the social scene and considering Greek life. As a transfer, have any of become part of frats of any kind?</p>

<p>@ahk5289:</p>

<p>I saw some very good answers to your question here: [University</a> of California - San Diego - College Confidential](<a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/university-california-san-diego/]University”>University of California - San Diego - College Confidential Forums)</p>

<p>ya i understand. But I’m asking transfers in general. So have any transfers joined the greek life? And if so, was it worth it?</p>

<p>I was happy to see so many posts on this thread about Cal. I am working my ass off currently at CC to get into Cal, which has and will be my goal for another year at CC. I’m basically as of right now living for the coming day when I get that Cal acceptance and my screams of joy and elation that will come with it. I know that the acceptance is really only the beginning, but take everything in steps right? All the insight about Cal academic and social life were enjoyable to read ^^</p>

<p>And thank you guys so much for sharing your stories. Especially the long ones that obviously had a lot of thought put in them and took a lot of time to write. Those are the ones that helped me the most. There were varying opinions, but there are for everything. </p>

<p>I did poorly in high school (graduated with 2.6) and managed to excel at CC (4.0, honors, a bunch of ECs and awards) but have gotten bored with the slow-paced, dummed down stuff. Because a 90% and 100+% look the same on a transcript, I would stop trying less than half way through the semester because I would be in the safe A zone. This was one of the reasons I didn’t like high school, and eventually stopped showing up completely. This is the reason I’m getting bored with CC…I’m so ready to transfer. And I really feel that I can, not only handle the new challenges and experiences that will come with my transfer to Cal, but I feel that it will finally let me spread my wings a little bit.</p>

<p>^^_____________________________________________________^^
Well, looks like you’re certainly living up to your screen name :wink: </p>

<hr>

<p>As for this whole transfer question, I’m looking to transfer for electrical engineering. Does anybody here have any insight about the EE (or other engineering) program at Cal or UCLA?
I’d be very interested to see what you all have to say!</p>

<p>I am currently a first year college student at a CC, I know your post is very old, but I just want to thank you even in 2010 this has shed a lot of light in me.</p>

<p>this is to zeemok</p>

<p>I’m currently attending UCSD as a transfer student. My major is Mechanical Engineering and I’m in ERC. I live in the transfer housing, which I believe is really great!</p>

<p>Cons of being at UCSD:

  1. My building is really quiet so I haven’t met anyone except my roommates.
  2. The classes are not going to be easy! They are nothing like your community college classes (some of them). It’s not the material that is hard but the fact that there’s no time to say “I’m just going to do this later.”</p>

<p>I only have two complaints so far!</p>

<p>My tips for transfer students:

  1. BE ON TOP OF THINGS!
    I made sure to read as much as I could before lecture. It’s really valuable to do it because I felt that the lectures were easier to understand and more informative.
  2. If you have any small desire to go greek then do it!
    I kind of wanted to pledge this quarter but I just decided not to, which was a big mistake! Unless you are interested in a multi-cultural sorority, you won’t have a problem, but most panhellenic sororities only recruit in the fall! So remember to explore your options!</p>

<p>Mkay here goes. I’m currently attending ucla, transferred from jc in 2. Although I hated jc at first, I’m extremely glad I was forced to take that route. I was rejected by most schools out of high school. My cum gpa in hs was 2.9 uw, 3.4 w. Even merced denied me, and I was applying to their third class ever I think. I had been involved in baseball and working on my car in hs, but never REALLY cared. in short, I was not prepared for a four year although I didn’t know or accept it at the time. cc was a lesson in growing up for me. Now at ucla I see the differences between myself and other ‘first years.’ Most of my freshman friends have no idea about fiscal responsibility or actual time management. between 2 jobs and having my car stolen at cc, I learned how to prioritize what’s important. I feel cc prepared me well for my uc experience, and I have never felt ‘bethind.’ despite housing/internet problems and tons of slacking, I survived my first quarter with a 3.4 gpa. I’m scheduled to graduate a quarter early. cc wasn’t a ‘fun’ time, but it prepped me well. I’m considering becoming a transfer counselor after school to give back to the program. Many, if not all cc counselors don’t know what the hell they’re talking about, and I am stuck taking a few classes again, which is irritating at best. Check your class descriptions. They won’t always count like you think they will. furthermore, ucla hasn’t been super intimidating. While LS majors require tons of reading, slacking off is rampant and finals pushes are inevitable. It’s not as if you need to study non stop in order to do well. There is room for social life. My best advice (although it may be late) is to take a major that’s interesting to you, unless you have your entire life planned out. My major has allowed me to choose history of fairy tales or russian sci fi as a major req, and I’m not even a lit or film major. Do your best, but have fun. Hope this helped.</p>

<p>Im at uc riverside…yeah boo hoo, crappy school, whatever…
classes arent a load but my biggest obstacle right now is not being able to actually get the college experience since im commuting…im not able to make quality friends and study groups become unrealistic…psychologically it affects you and it does affect your performance in your classes…im dying from not being able to be socially active, my social circle has diminished and its taking a toll on me…</p>

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<p>This is one of the single best things I have ever read on CC. It was posted on page two of this thread over three years ago, so many of you might have missed it. So I’m passing it along. </p>

<p>Wherever you are zemookmook <em>thumbs ups</em> buddy.</p>

<p>^I <3 love this post by zemookmook.</p>

<p>I hope one day I can post my experience at a UC…
I do have to admit though that this user is right on the build of a person’s character at a CC.When you’re here at CC,your education all depends on you.I guess that’s why some people in HS don’t do well;it’s not because they’re lazy but rather they don’t an independent mind or (like myself) didn’t know exactly how to approach UC admission, since in my case I am first generation college student coming out of Mexican immigrant family who had no one to look up to when it came to college.</p>