<p>GPA gurantees everything ? + a moderately good rec???</p>
<p>are you at U Toronto right now?</p>
<p>I am at U Toronto right now, what’s EE? you mean ECE? electrical engineering and computer science?</p>
<p>Most likily very difficult, because ECE classes are giant, it’ll be difficult for you to compile parts of your app together. I.e your teacher’s rec will most likely be mediocre, even if you perform well, and you must realize, U of T has many brilliant students, so you might not be #1 here. But if you do perform well here, it’ll be easy to transfer
good luck</p>
<p>ucla and berk doesn’t look at letters of rec.</p>
<p>For that major, UCLA wants 3.8 gpa and gives priority to community college and other uc students.</p>
<p>I’d say ur chances are not very good simply b/c these schools tend to not even take students outside of the two systems i listed, let alone from other countries.</p>
<p>try some other schools.</p>
<p>then an ivy transfer is impossible…lol…</p>
<p>i don’t know much about ivy, but UC are structured in a weird way. California gov has a mission to give a each qualified CA HS student a spot at UC, which is why UC don’t have space to offer people outside of that spots.</p>
<p>Remember UC’s are public california universities.</p>
<p>Try something private, u might have more success.</p>
<p>USC would like to take you if you get a 3.6+ GPA with 2 English courses done before you transfers.</p>
<p>How is U of T anyway? (I was admitted there as a transfer, so I’m obviously curious)</p>
<p>UofT ECE is incredibly hard. There is big grade deflation. They slaughter you in the finals. For a midterm in communication systems the class average was 38 with only 3 students getting above 80!!!</p>
<p>^^^ Well it looks like I made the right decision, then!</p>
<p>I just looked over my transcript, they mention course averages on the side.</p>
<p>Out of the 20 courses in the first two years, only 4 have an average of B- or better(where B- is 70%-72%). 3 are B- and one is a B(73%-76%), which was a first year English writing course. And out of those 4 courses, only one was an engineering course, the rest three were technical writing and communication courses.</p>