OMG CHECK THE PORTAL!!!
Ha… Thanks
@chuclan21 I hope that’s true. And what about missing CSE30. Do you think it’s critical to admission?
I’m really worrying about it.
@cyan96 There’s no such statistics of GPA, but considering the last year’s thread, the average was around 3.85.
@avc118 shut up. it’s not funny
@csplzplz You should be fine without CSE30. The rep from UCSD told me that they’re not screening for CSE30, due to the fact that not many CC’s offer the equivalent of CSE30. If you have CSE8A&8B/11, that’s good enough.
On assist.org:
Highest level of introductory computer programming language course
offered at the community college. For example, CSE 3, 5A, 7, and 8A may
be used to fulfill the lower-division elective requirement;
CSE 8B or 11 fulfill other lower-division requirements.
Don’t worry.
@csplzplz You should be good, as cyan said screening for admissions only covers the highest level of introductory programming (intro java or c++) for cse. Here’s a link to some schools that offer cse 21 if you need it (http://cse.ucsd.edu/sites/cse/files/cse/assets/studentaffairs/docs/Course_Approximations_Lower_Division.pdf). This list is a bit out of date so check with an advisor, in some cases depending on where you took discrete math it may be able to wave CSE 21. However I would recommend you look into the summer academy at UCSD as you can get cse15l & cse21 over the summer. I also recommend you take cse 30 at UCSD versus a community college as less assembly programming is required and it has a larger focus on C programming (might be easier than whats offered at the community college).
I remember in this thread there was a guy who accepted earlier in CS for 3.74.
@cyan96 @ucsddyee381 Would not having 8A or 8B be an issue? I have Cse 11, 12, 30 and discrete Math(not articulated). I also have advanced Java, which is the class after the equivalent 8A course at my CC.
…
@rashomon369 CSE11 is equivalent to (8A+8B). No worries.
You should be fine as long as your gpa is good
@chuclan21 might be thinking of the UCI tread?
@csplzplz Cool, thanks. 
@Rololo Check page 39 this thread
Out of state transfer here. I am almost certain I cannot get the spot so no worries: With a 3.83 GPA and in Honors college with fabulous ECs, being from a 4 year university already stopped me from admission even though I am a Californian immigrant. Moreover, I don’t even know if they accept the courses eligible for transfer. So no pressure, but damn the UC system. So biased, so unequal.
Unequal? You do understand that this is the University of California right? California.
@ccblockngoonlun9 I think @naregian asked the right question. Why would a CA University not give priority to it’s own? Perhaps you should have stayed in CA in order to increase your chances. Best of luck.
What a lot of people fail to realize is UC’s don’t care about your honors classes in community college. They are taken on the same scale as a regular class. UNLESS your honors program has a specific agreement with that school. UCSD has no honors agreements.
It obviously makes sense not only to prioritize CA students, but to prioritize community college transfers as well. If you’re at a four year university, you already have the opportunity to complete your degree while a CC applicant doesn’t.
Not really, it makes sense to prioritize out of state students sometimes because they pay more tuition.
Why does it have to make sense to prioritize either? Applying students should be evaluated based on their performance and aptitude, not their location. I do agree, however, that community college transfers should get some advantage.
@1NMRes Umm because California residents pay taxes to fund the UC system??