<p>Hello,</p>
<p>I attended Indiana University last year and got a 3.7 gpa. I’m currently in the at the tail end of a year off traveling Europe. I ultimately want to transfer to Berkeley. </p>
<p>Next Fall I’m going to attend CCSF. If I take classes this Spring quarter at another community college nearby (De Anza) then attend CCSF in the Fall, will this complicate the transfer from CCSF to Berkeley, or hurt my chances? </p>
<p>Also, will I still be able to participate in TAP and TAG programs for other UC’s if I have this mess of transfers?</p>
<p>I really just want to complete the IEGTC requirements as fast as possible so I want to utilize this spring instead of waiting for CCSF to start their semester.</p>
<p>Any answers to these questions would be extremely helpful.
Thanks,
omacisback</p>
<p>Just a quick note: I know that many of the colleges have a unit cap on how much coursework they will take from a four year institution for the TAG agreement, so you may want to check into that. I’m not participating in TAP, but I would imagine they have similar guidelines. I would definitely talk to the counselor at your CC, or a Berkley rep if possible.</p>
<p>As far as I know, you can have coursework from 50 different CCC’s and it wouldn’t matter, so long as your abide by the guidelines the college has set for you and complete X courses with X grades.</p>
<p>Berkeley has a limit of 80 transferable semester units for transfer applicants who have units from a four year school:
<a href=“https://students.berkeley.edu/myberkeley/myberkeleyapp.asp?todo=cms&id=89#6[/url]”>https://students.berkeley.edu/myberkeley/myberkeleyapp.asp?todo=cms&id=89#6</a></p>
<p>De Anza is on the quarter system; CCSF and Berkeley are on the semester system. If you are taking sequenced courses like math, be careful about taking them so that the “boundaries” line up and you won’t have to partially repeat courses.</p>
<p>A quarter unit is 2/3 of a semester unit.</p>
<p>See [Welcome</a> to ASSIST](<a href=“http://www.assist.org%5DWelcome”>http://www.assist.org) for course articulation between community colleges and UCs and CSUs.</p>