question for SBUadmissions

<p>I am accepted into the undergrade program at suny stony brook, i decided that i am interested in taking out school loans and getting an apartment very close to campus if not on campus can you send me any information i neeed thanks</p>

<p>Two things… one, talk to the Financial Aid office. They’re your source for student loans. The phone number is 631-632-6840.</p>

<p>Two, check the off-campus housing site (<a href=“http://och.vpsa.sunysb.edu%5B/url%5D”>http://och.vpsa.sunysb.edu</a>) for apartments. Click on the icon to enter, then click the “online services” image in the top left corner of the page to access the housing search. You can search by cost, location, and style. Good luck!</p>

<p>-Chris</p>

<p>if i am an undergrade at SBU what are my chances to get accepted into the PA program if my grades are high?</p>

<p>Hard for me to say; there’s a lot more involved in admission to the PA program than just grades. Admission goes through CASPA (<a href=“http://www.caspaonline.org)%5B/url%5D”>www.caspaonline.org)</a>, which is the Central Application Service for Physician Assistants programs. You’d want to contact the program (<a href=“http://inf-web.informatics.sunysb.edu/shtm/pa/index.cfm[/url]”>http://inf-web.informatics.sunysb.edu/shtm/pa/index.cfm&lt;/a&gt;) if you want more detailed info.</p>

<p>-Chris</p>

<p>I have been reading quite a few of posts, from various HS students, that it is very difficult for HS students to gain acceptance in to SBU. Now for me i am a non traditional student. I went to Nassau Community College for a year and stopped attending to work full time. Now i am back at nassau community college with very high grades, with that being said my old transcript of 26 credits was only a 3.08 GPA. I was wondering how i got into SBU was it because i applied early? or is it just easier for transfers to get in thanks</p>

<p>“Easier” is all relative. The process is simpler for transfers; if you’ve shown us you can do college-level work (at least 24 credits with at least a 3.0, generally), then you’re admissible. First-year admission is somewhat more detailed.</p>

<p>-Chris</p>