Anonymous wrote:I actually attended community college for two years then attended UC Berkeley. I graduated with honors and went on to top 20 law school. I did it so save money, but I think I received a better education at community college rather than if I had started at UCB because the classes were smaller and actually more rigorous in the sense that I had papers due every work, more tests, etc. than my friends at UCB. Also I was actually taught by the teachers and not TAs. Perhaps it was easier to get an "A" at CC, but that works also to your advantage at CC as you won't have lower grades from the first 2 years dragging down your GPA. You graduate from university with just the gpa of the last two years at university. Hope that makes sense!
Also, two of my teachers were retired from UCB and were fantastic!! They would host parties at their homes for students and we'd get to know their families. It was a friendly "community".
I feel like Californians are FAR more comfortable with the community college to university path than DMV folk. Perhaps there is a good reason for this-- perhaps the community colleges just aren't as good as the ones in CA?
TL/DR-- I attended CC prior to university in California and have no regrets.
Hope that helps!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My nephew is doing this right now in California. He's one of the top students in his HS but didn't get into the UC he wants to go to so is taking advantage of the free CC option there. It's becoming a much more common path for high-achievers in CA who want to go to UCs since admissions has become so difficult. He's in a honors program at the CC so that keeps him with other focused students who are aiming for the transfer to a 4-year. I know NVCC offers the same thing so I'd explore that.
And, my son is going to VT and I can see that their housing options include a living-learning community just for transfer students, which seems like a great way to integrate into the campus as a transfer.
my sibling did this ... went to local c.c. then to Cal. Did this due to finances. Pretty common in CA.
Anonymous wrote:For a variety of reasons, it’s looking as if going to community college then transferring to a four-year university may be the best path for my child. If your kid has done this, could you share your experiences, tips, advice? (Please only your own family’s experiences, not what you’ve heard from or observed in others.)
Anonymous wrote:I did this round, 2 years cc & 2 years university. All credits got transfer into university but not GPA. Level 300 & 400 at university classes are harder to keep high GPA. If I have money, I would let my kids go to 4 years university to keep the grade higher. 6 out of 7 us went this round. So far, all the second generation kids go to 4 years university