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If one transferred from lets say from the University of Virginia to William and Mary University during Sophomore year, and then during one’s junior, that individual transferred to Harvard for senior year
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<p>It is very unlikely to happen as pretty much every school has a minimum residency requirement to get a bachelors degree from that school. If you have completed 3 years of college you will not be able to transfer to Harvard or probably any other similar school as a senior. It is probably going to be hard to transfer to a public school as a senior without a very compelling reason.</p>
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<p>Transfer Eligibility </p>
<p>Once a student has completed one year of full-time study at a single college or university, he or she ordinarily may apply only as a transfer student to Harvard College. Further guidelines for eligibility are as follows: </p>
<p>By the anticipated date of matriculation, applicants must have satisfactorily completed a minimum of one continuous academic year in a degree program at one college, and not more than two academic years of full-time college study. </p>
<p>A minimum of two years’ full-time enrollment at Harvard as a degree candidate is required for Harvard’s A.B. or S.B. degree. </p>
<p>**Students who have completed more than two years of college study with transferable credit, and those who have earned a bachelor’s degree, are not eligible to transfer to Harvard College. Students may not choose to relinquish academic credits, or a degree, in order to apply for transfer admission. **</p>
<p>[Harvard</a> College Admissions Office: Prospective Students](<a href=“http://www.admissions.college.harvard.edu/prospective/transfer/eligibility/index.html]Harvard ”>http://www.admissions.college.harvard.edu/prospective/transfer/eligibility/index.html )</p>
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