Articulation

<p>I am currently filling out my Transfer Admission Planner so I can apply for TAG but I am experiencing a problem.
In high school, I took anatomy & physiology my senior year. If you received a B or better both semesters, you could file some paperwork and “articulate” (I think this was the word) the course and it would transfer as college credit to a community college. I attended a Middle College High School so I already was taking college courses and receiving credit for them. Here’s my dilemma: I currently attend Norco College, which is apart of the Riverside Community College District which includes the Norco, Riverside, and Moreno Valley campuses. When anatomy got articulated, it appeared on my transcript as AMY-10: Survey of Human Anatomy and Physiology. The course was posted on my transcript under the Riverside campus. I did some research and found that for 2013-2014 and 2014-2015 school years that AMY-10 does not count under Area UC-S: Physical and Behavioral Sciences for the Riverside campus. However, under the Norco Campus, AMY-10 does count under Area UC-S. This seemed weird to me since we are all in the same district. Now here is my question, on my TAG application, do I say I attended the Riverside campus for only one semester? Anatomy is the only “class” I’ve taken at that location and I don’t plan on taking anymore there since Norco is my home college and the most convenient for me… </p>

<p>Sorry if this seems a little confusing!</p>

<p>lol heyyy JFK huh?</p>

<p>hmm back to topic… I would contact Norco and try to change the location of Amy-10 if possible…
I’m in RCC right now lol…</p>

<p>Work with Riverside’s transfer articulation counselor to get the UC-S designation for that course on Assist.org, ASAP before the November app cycle. Let them know it is designated that way on Norco’s and Moreno Valley’s and looks like it was overlooked on Riverside’s.</p>

<p>On your TAP for TAG, you must list Riverside with the course. Everything you enter must match the transcripts that you will eventually send. </p>