Transfer Student Resume
I'm transferring from a big state school (SEC) to a top-20 (semi-target), and I'll start as a junior at the new university this fall.
My problem is that I don't have a GPA at the new university. I only have one from the old school.
That said, I'm obviously going to have to list the better university at the top of my resume.
How should I approach this issue? Should I list the new university without a GPA and assume that someone reading the resume will understand the issue by looking at the dates? Should I report a cumulative GPA underneath both schools? I had a 3.96 at the old school, and I'm applying for SA positions at BB's, MM's and boutiques.
Thanks.
How to show school transfer on resume?
There are numerous ways to demonstrate the fact that you have transferred on your resume. It is important that you highlight:
- The name of each school and the major pursued
- Location of each school
- The dates you attended each university
- Your GPA at each university
The school that you are currently attending should be at the top of the resume.
Check out an example below.
Read More About Transferring and Resumes on WSO
- Transfer Student Resume Background Check
- Transfer GPA on resume
- Transferred from target to semi-target for social reasons, should I keep on resume?
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GPA for old school listed under old school, and of course you can not list a GPA for your new school since you do not have any
Will my potential employers think that my GPA at the new school is too low to list, even though I don't have one?
why don't you write an expected GPA and do your own calculation
I would make a notation under your current school that you are a transfer student. Then, under your old school, listed below, specify the dates of attendance as well as your old GPA. Any employer would know that you have just transferred schools and therefore cannot have a GPA at your current school.
For instance:
NEW SCHOOL Bachelor of Science Candidate, Expected June 2011; Transfer Student
OLD SCHOOL Completed Freshman & Sophmore Year Coursework, 8/2007 - 5/2009 GPA: 3.96 ....
Something to that effect
What about after graduation? If someone spent 1 year at an undergrad school, and then 3 years at a second school from where they received their degree -- how would you present it on a resume?
I would think that you would only mention the degree granting institution and put your graduation month/date instead of putting the years attended?
Also, how does it work for MBA admissions? How would you "explain" a transfer? What's the best way to do it if it was only a slight step up in prestige but more due to a better cultural/location fit?
I'm in your exact predicament, GPA and all haha.
I listed the GPA under the old school and am putting N/A for gpa, with (transfer student) in parentheses. When I start going to classes I'll put a predicted GPA, although I'm debating about that b/c it seems extremely un-legit.
I decided to list the new school at the top with its location, my degree title and my expected date of graduation. I didn't include anything like "GPA: N/A (transfer)" because I thought it looked weird.
Under the new school, I listed my old school with its location, my degree title, my dates of attendance, my GPA (just rounded it to 4.0 lol), my SAT, my honors and my relevant coursework.
I figure that someone looking at the resume would see that I attended the old school until May 2009, so I've not completed any coursework to list GPA, Honors, etc. for the new school.
Tell me whether or not you think I should indicate that I'm a transfer student somewhere, or if you think that the dates of attendance explain everything. Also (by the new school), should I say "Expected May 2011," or should I put "Aug. 2009 - May 2011"?
I think rounding a 3.96 to a 4.0 is a bit misleading. I've heard of people rounding say a 3.957 to a 3.96 but a 3.96 to a 4.0 is deceptive in my opinion.
Never round to 4.0 unless you actally have it. It is misleading.
Do transfers even have to put their old school? If you transferred after one year, why not just put your current school and put "Expected 20XX" instead of dates attended? You're not lying or anything.
Well, if he didnt put his old school, then he would have no way of conveying that he achieved a 3.96 in his first two years of college. It would be misleading to somehow put only his new school and then also put his 3.96 GPA somewhere underneath. Just my two cents, though.
See post below.
Yeah, I've definitely got to include some GPA and 3.96 or 4.0 - whatever you want to call it - is nothing to hide. I think I'm going to leave the better school with the expected graduation date alone to convey my continued pursuit of my bachelor's degree.
I'll mention the "transfer" word in the cover letter, but the only real point that I need to make in my resume is that I've attended two universities, and that I had great success at the past one.
Side note: I hear rounding a 3.55, 3.56, 3.66, etc. to 3.6, 3.6 and 3.7, respectively, isn't that bad and is considered more than commonplace.
I think you're right to include both institutions, especially since you've done so well at your prior one.
And though people may have done it, I think rounding to the nearest tenth decimal place is inaccurate. I think the nearest hundredth is acceptable though.
sorry to reopen an old thread but it pertained exactly to what i needed. my question is, can you leave off your old gpa in this situation if your old gpa was low (3.2)
Yeah, you can't put down a GPA from your old school and don't act cute by putting N/A or N/M. Just mention that you're a transfer.
I've seen kids from junior colleges put their junior college GPAs, which are usually pretty high if they transfer to a top-30 school. I've seen others, who after a semester at their new school do a cumulative average.
But if you have 2 distinct 4-year colleges, I'd put them both, especially if your GPA's are good in both. For every dude who thinks you're not "exclusive" enough to be a monkey for 2 years there'll be another who'll consider your path as a "rags-to-riches" story and will give you extra points.
Resume info for Transfer Student (Originally Posted: 03/21/2007)
what info should i get rid of and what should i keep on (ie school name + gpa, activities, etc..)? thanks in advance.
keep school name and gpa (esp if its high), put the old school below the new one under education
i would say keep activities if they are impressive or relevant and if you have space
would you consider 3.77 high? my gpa at my new school will probably be decently higher.
why dont u look at a resume book? these are REALLY stupid questions...
thanks for the comment, bmwhype.
Hey,
I was a transfer student as well. I had the exact same question, because my gpa from the school I transferred from was terrible. I was very fortunate to transfer into my new school.
I left my prior GPA off of my resume; however, if you have a good gpa just keep it on there.
I have friends that transferred as well and they completely left off prior school information.
I guess it doesn't really matter; do what you think will make your resume look good.
propmonkey- thanks for the info. i guess the only thing that im questioning is the fact that my original school is definitely a non-target and a majority of the banks have probably never heard of it, but my gpa was pretty good.
depends on where you transfer from, if its a CC then don't put it, if its a good school and you switched to another good school than include it
i would definitely put it. 3.77 is definitely pretty good whether you went to school in a maximum security prison. sometimes people over react to all these variables. your gpa is really a non factor after the first hurdle. its about showing them why you want whatever job your looking for and what have you done in the past shows your capable of getting the job done.
during my super day, i saw a couple transfer resumes that had even
I transferred as well, and my GPA is lower than 3.77 and I put it. Not putting your gpa can make recruiters wonder, and putting a 3.77 will definitely not hurt you.
i would put it. it cant really hurt, and if it wasn't there it might seem a little suspect.
a 3.77 is a strong gpa. strong enough to land interviews, put it.
i transferred, and didn't put my gpa from my former school. i transferred from a top 5 LAC.
none of my courses on my transcript had grades, so i didn't feel like i had any pressure to include it.
it was much lower than my current gpa (3.87).
i never once got asked about why it wasn't there.
yea...my gpa will probably be higher at my current school.
Resume question -- transferred degree? (Originally Posted: 02/26/2008)
When you transfer to another school, what are you supposed to put down for the degree that you were supposed to receive from the first school? I thought about just writing "Bachelor of Science (Incomplete) or (transferred)" but that just sounds awkward...what do most people do?
1)Only put down the degree you are going to earn since the credits you took at your prior school are transfering towards your current degree and you don't have a b.s./b.a. from the first school.
2)Or if you really want, you can just put down major/credits earns and omit the "B.S./B.A." degree for the first school because it does not really matter which it was since you never actually got it from that school.
3) If you feel uncomfortable with any of those suggestions, ask your career center. This would be your safest bet and it really wont take that long.
I listed the school that I transferred from below the school that I am currently completing my degree at.
i.e. This is how my career counselor at my school suggested that I format it:
BTW: Don't neglect the school you transferred from. The employers I talked to loved to hear about why I transferred. Unless you come across as someone who transferred just out of prestige, but instead actually had valid reasons, then it really can work to your advantage in an interview.
Just my 0.02.
I just leave it out of my resume. I needed the room to talk about experience/activities. Using 4-5 lines to talk about two semesters of freshmen courses you took doesn't really add a lot of value. I talk about if they ask though...
Transfer on Resume (Originally Posted: 01/18/2010)
I had to transfer schools during college. It was not due to a need to avoid academic sanction or any other disciplinary punishment. I had the opportunity to become part owner of a business and, after a year off, the need to protect my investment lead to the decision. The school I left was top 20, and a target. I have left it off my resume for my SA application, but have also excluded it from my GPA calculation and not used any of my ECs from this school. My question is should I mention it in my interview, which I must add was next to impossible to obtain given I am now at a non-target. A further reason I excluded it was at my previous school I did not do any real relevant coursework, major was neuroscience, and it was only after I began pursuing business courses that I realized ultimately I wanted to do investment banking. I was also concerned about being viewed as deceptive during the interview process if I completely left it off. I do not need to submit transcripts before my interview, most likely only afterwards, should I obtain a position. At that point listing all schools would only be checked against my school submitted transcripts and not my resume. Should I put on the old school or mention it, do you think it would hurt me or help me? Also do you think they would ask for my old GPA? It is not as high as my current one, but also is based on completely irrelevant coursework.
Yes.
Looks like you have a solid reason, so you should tell that story in your interview. Better yet put that school name on your resume.
Resume with transfer (Originally Posted: 03/30/2010)
I have a question about my gpa on my resume. I transferred after 2 years at a University to a new University for personal reasons. Neither of these schools being a target, but my first a little bit more of a target. I have begun building a network and have a summer gig lined up for summer. On my transcripts, it only shows my current university's gpa, but on my resume I have both schools because of EC.'s from both school and to expand my networking possibilities. Is it okay to calculate my cumulative gpa and put that under both schools listed on my resume? How will this look as diff. to my transcript.?
anyone?
Not okay- You cannot combine GPA's from two different schools. I transferred as well and decided to put my old school and GPA on a different line in my education section. These are two separate animals.
Resume - Nontarget, West Coast transfer student (Originally Posted: 10/19/2010)
I know this isn't close to the caliber of most resumes posted here. I'm a somewhat older transfer student (27) which is why the work experience is so random. I'd like to work in trading at some point in the future but I know that recruitment is pretty much already over and I'd be a very long shot for any formal program anyway. I'm going to apply for firms that are still recruiting anyway though, mostly overseas positions. The one thing I have going for me is that I'm good in interviews and am somewhat knowledgeable about fixed income and credit markets despite having little experience. I'm working at UBS financial services and have an inside referral so maybe I'll get lucky and land an interview and go from there.
http://www.razume.com/doc/3/0e1a6baa-52ba-4565-8f15-c82fc55e09d6-1
Since I won't able to land anything good, I figure I'll move to Chicago or NYC and angle for a trading operations gig or something, take the GMAT and get into an MBA program.
You're trying to get into trading, why is your Amazon job twice the size of your UBS?
Remove the cc as well.
Good point. I'll work on expanding it.
Resume Help - Transferred to a target (Originally Posted: 01/04/2011)
Hi,
I transferred to a target and am having trouble figuring out how I should structure this under the education section, since I don't have a GPA for my new school as of now.
I did it something like this and I was wondering if it was okay.
Target School City, State Bachelor of Science in Economics, Transfer Student May 2013
Old School City, State Economics Major, Completed Freshman & Sophomore Coursework Aug. 2009-Dec. 2010 GPA: 3.8 Honors: School Scholarship, Economics Honor Society, etc.
Thanks for the help.
Please any help or input would be appreciated.
Pretty sure this has been discussed before. In addition to searching here, check out razume.com
Couple Questions re: Transfer Info on Resume (Originally Posted: 06/26/2011)
I am transferring to a semi-target from a non-target this fall and I am wondering how to list my education experience on my resume.
I have a decent amount of honors/scholarships from my old school, and a good GPA (3.8+). I know the new school should come first, but what do I do in terms of listing my GPA/honors and stuff like that?
Thanks for the help.
List your old GPA under your old school, but make sure it is clearly separate from your GPA at your new school.
So something like:
SCHOOL B---City,State GPA: 3.XX/4.0---------Expected May 2013 SCHOOL A---City, State GPA: 3.XX/4.0---------August 2009 - May 2011
?
Obviously everything will line up correctly, just can't do it on WSO.
I am wondering the same thing, i transferred from one semi-target to another semi-target. i have a very similar gpa at both schools (slightly better at my new school). should i list them individually (not currently doing that because it uses up an extra line on my resume) or should i combine them under my new school (called 'combined cumulative gpa')?? or i could only list my new gpa, but my gpa at my old school was very strong (3.89) for a semi-target and i dont want recruiters to think that poor grades was the reason for my transferring. thanks
If your GPA was strong at both schools list them both, if not, only list your current one. SECfinance has the right setup.
interesting
Columbia Transfer Resume Help (Originally Posted: 07/22/2011)
So I'm transferring as a 3rd year to Columbia. This fall I'll be trying to recruit for summer positions.
My GPA at the institution I transferred from was pretty good (3.75+), as well as the extra cirics I participated in.
On my resume, should I, under education, list both schools I attended with my GPA listed at the institution that I established that at, and list Columbia on top with no GPA (I'll begin recruiting in the fall before I've established an official GPA at Columbia)? Should I just get my average GPA thus far and put it aside my Columbia degree and expected graduation on my resume?
I realize I have about 5 seconds to catch someones attention, and want to format this perfectly as to improve my chances of being looked at twice by an analyst.
Thanks!
List both GPAs at the respective schools that you got them at. It will be understood if you don't have a Columbia GPA yet.
transfer student, resume question (Originally Posted: 07/31/2011)
im a rising senior at a target; i transferred here from a community college. i do not want to list a CC in the education section on my resume, but i had a great leadership experience there that i'm inclined to keep listed in the work & leadership experience section.
would it be weird if i did so? i'm not sure how bad having a CC on a resume could be; maybe it is wise to have no traces of it at all? thank you all in advance.
Dude if you're at a target and doing well, leave whatever on your resume that makes things look clear. If that's listing very briefly in your current school section a line that says "Transfer student from x Community College" you're not going to immediately get dinged.
Believe it or not, people look highly on candidates with a chip on their shoulder and that don't come from the most normal of backgrounds.
Completely agree, leave the CC on there because it does show that you were willing to take a leadership role regardless of the institution you were at.
I transferred schools. Put old school on Linkedin profile and resume? (Originally Posted: 12/05/2011)
Hey guys, my situation is that after 2 years at one state school (non target) I transferred to another state school (non target). I left my old school with a crappy 2.9 GPA but am about to graduate with a 3.9 GPA at the new school. My question is, can I, or more importantly, should I put my old school that I attended for 2 years on my Linkedin profile, as well as my resume? The old school is actually slightly more "prestigious" than the new one, so its not like its some po-dunk school, it actually has a decent alumni network and name. Thanks for your help!!!
If you're already about to graduate for sure take it off the resume. I'm planning to remove my old school after a single quarter at transfer.
This guy is doing it right. ^ only put whatever you're graduating from.
Yeah I figured that for the resume. But for the Linkedin profile, should I just list _____ University, 2010-2012? Won't it look weird I only went there for 2 years? Plus, wouldn't adding my old school from 2008-2010 provide the slightest chance of an alumni network benefit even if I didn't graduate from there?
Just say..." Expected 2012" or something like that.
Ok thanks, but what about for the Linkedin profile? Is it fine to put two schools at two years each, or should I put only my degree granting school at 2 years only? Again, I'm not ashamed or anything of the first school, it was actually a more selective school.
Not really relevant, but why did you transfer to a school that might be of lower quality? Lose bad GPA?
Also, one of the MDs in my office was pretty ticked about a kid that came in for interviews not mentioning time at another school. Not necessarily saying it has to be on your resume, but don't try to cover it up.
Yes, to lose the bad GPA and be closer to home. So does anyone have any opinions on whether to include both 2 year stints at the schools on my Linkedin, or only the last school with 2 years? (which would imply either I took 30 hours a semester or transferred...)
I'm a transfer myself from a non-target state to a target state. I leave the first school on the resume on just one line, and above that I put my graduating school with the full degree title and GPA. In my opinion, leave the first school on so you can explain what you did for two years (you can't get a bachelor's with only two years at your graduating school)
Transferred to Target - Leave Old School on Resume? (Originally Posted: 12/29/2011)
-Transferred to target from non-target fall 2011 -Established a 3.8 - 3.9 GPA at target (over one semester) -Had a 3.8 - 3.9 GPA at non-target (over two semesters)
Should I leave my old school on my resume, or still mention I'm a transfer student?
Previous resume for reference: http://www.razume.com/documents/22996
Not sure if there is an actual protocol here, but I would just put your new school on there since that is where you will be graduating from. If it comes up in conversation, you can mention that you transferred from wherever, but I don't necessarily think it has to be on your resume for any reason
GPAs are the same, leave the old school off.
Leave the old school off
My transcript has 5 schools but I list my current school and current school GPA
If you had a 2.5 at non target and a 3.9 at the target then it might be a lil sketch but you'll be fine
Shoot it in the head and bury that shit deep where no one will find it.
How to handle transferring colleges on a resume? (Originally Posted: 02/24/2012)
I graduated from college in May 2011 from a target, I went there for my sophomore through senior years, my freshman year was at a pretty good school (especially for science/engineering, but not so much for business) before transferring. I'm wondering if I should still list the freshman year school on my resume, right now I have the school I graduated from on top and then the 2nd school under it. I would take it off, but what's holding me back is the fact that my GPA was slightly higher at the first 3.63 v a 3.6 at the second one, and at the first school, I also had some pretty good sounding scholarships and made Dean's List at the first school (although I did graduate with Latin honors at the second). So what would you do? Leave both schools on, or only include the school from which I graduated?
Thanks!
I was a transfer myself. I went from a 4th Tier State University to an Ivy. Ever since my Junior year, I've only put the latter on the resume. I was in a very similar situation as yourself - I had a few impressive scholarships from the State University, but graduated summa from the Ivy.
Bottom line: Only include the school you graduated from, and forget about the first University.
Your second school GPA is not substantially higher than your target GPA. Since you've graduated, I think it's okay to leave your first school off your resume now. Dean's List isn't going to be a deciding factor on whether or not you get interviews now.
Thanks so much for the help guys!
Formatting a transfer resume. (Originally Posted: 05/02/2012)
I just transferred from a small lac to a target school where I will be starting in the fall. Unfortunately, I'm kind of stumped on how I should format the education section of my resume right now since I don't have any information from my new school. If anyone wants to offer any insight/suggestions I would appreciate it. Feel free to point out anything else that may jump out at you as well.
I'm gearing it toward landing a job at a physical shop once I finally graduate.
http://www.razume.com/documents/25498
EDIT: http://www.razume.com/documents/25500
LOL. You may want to cover up that last part "AEM," because everyone on this forum knows that school.
put both schools with current school gpa as n/a until you receive a gpa from your new school (And hopefully it will be good). then u can remove your old institutions
NEW SCHOOL----------------------- City, ST - Transfer Student----------------------- Expected May 2014
OLD SCHOOL----------------------- Town, ST - GPA: 3.76/4.00----------------------- September 2010 - May 2012
- etc - etc
Is how it should look until you get a new GPA.
I'll tackle the actual content later.
I honestly wouldn't/didn't take the time to read it. Way too cluttered. It feels like I'm reading an essay. Try to consolidate and provide more white space
Not to concerned about people knowing where I'm going to school. Thanks for the formatting suggestions I threw a new version up there. Content suggestions are welcome as well. Anacott_CEO isn't white space bad?
Resume when Transferring Schools (Originally Posted: 05/18/2012)
I have a question about how to list my education on my resume when I am going to be transferring to a different school for the upcoming year - I am just about finishing my freshmen year at my current school, but I am going to be transferring to a different school for next year. Obviously I haven't completed any courses/etc at the new school, so I'm not sure what to put down about it on my resume. But I'm thinking I should list it, as education would obviously come up in an interview and it would be awkward otherwise...what do you guys think?
bump will also, but i have 2 internships under my belt
Use the search function.
Until you get your new GPA:
NEW UNIVERSITY-------------------------------------------------------------------------City, ST Bachelor of Science in Underwater Basket Weaving--------------------------------Expected May 2015 - Transfer Student
OLD COLLEGE-----------------------------------------------------------------------------Town, ST Completed Coursework in Underwater Basket Weaving---------------------------August 2011 - May 2012 - GPA: 3.X/4.0 - Honors: Dean's List, etc.
Transfer Student Resume Problem (Originally Posted: 08/03/2012)
I'm transferring into a target school from a non-target.
Do I list my old school on my resume even though it has a bad or non-existent 'brand'?
I won't have a GPA at my new school until after my first semester here. I understand that this should not be a problem for summer internship recruiting but a contact wants my resume now for a fall internship position. Will having no GPA listed at all look very bad or is it understandable given the situation?
I mean, you got into the new school, so as long as you make that clear, you should be fine. I'm certainly no expert though, so maybe someone else can help you more.
Also you're in the wrong forum
Sophomore Transfer, Resume Review (Originally Posted: 03/06/2013)
I will be transferring to a top public school (Berkeley or UCLA) in CA in the fall but I have not been accepted as of yet. I put that on my resume so they will know where I am planning on going.
I do have a question about gpa. I put my cumulative gpa (3.9) on there but my major gpa is 4.0, so would it be better to put that on instead?
Any and all feedback will be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
Haven't been accepted yet, but you put it on your resume? Might as well just put Harvard.. But seriously, when will you know if you're accepted?
About the GPAs, since your cumulative is high there's really no need to put major also, but you can put it on if you want.
You can't put down a college you don't go to.
Got it. I've already taken it off. Other than that any constructive criticism?
Including the 4-year school is pushing it. That's the sort of thing that could be mentioned in a cover letter or an interview (the fact that you're in the process of transferring I mean), but until you have the acceptance letter in hand it's really not right to include it on your resume. There's nothing wrong with including your 4.0 major GPA on there in some way, though, especially since econ and math are both pretty intensive majors (even the intro classes).
Is this resume for a specific internship of some sort?
Semper Fi
I've already taken off the 4 year school. But on the low my transfer counselor says I'm a shoe in for my top pick (military plus high gpa). I'm hoping to do some serious cold calling and networking to land an internship at a broker-dealer in the Bay Area this summer. My problem is that I won't know for certain what school I'm transferring to until late April but I need to start contacting firms now.
Resume format for a transfer student? (Originally Posted: 06/13/2013)
And also, I have never used the M&I format in the past, and I always see people posting about it. Is this format really worth using, or should I avoid considering mostly everyone already has some form of this resume? Thanks
Just keep it on there until you're finished with your first semester. That is what I'm doing. I earned an associate's degree while I was in the military, so I could potentially leave it on there forever. I won't however, as I'll need the space. No one cares about an associates degree anyway. Come December, you'll be good to go.
just write.... "Completed First and Second Year Curriculum at University of XYZ" as a bullet point under your current school.
Should I put the college I transferred out of on my resume? (Originally Posted: 10/29/2013)
I transferred from a unknown public liberal arts college to a top 20 semi target.
Pros: -good story during interview -helps explain my low GPA at current institution
Con: -takes up space -negative stigma associated with my old school (unknown shit school)
If it's truly unknown, maybe put it. If there is actually a negative stigma associated with it, don't put it.
How does it help explain your low current GPA?
Cons:
Not putting it is unethical.
Not necessarily. Just add a little note in the "additional information" section to explain the situation. Done and done.
You should put it on, helps your story. Find a little skace
College Transfer Resume Question (Originally Posted: 03/01/2014)
I'm currently a sophomore at a target school; however, I transferred here from a non-target after my freshman year. My cumulative GPA at the target school is markedly better than my GPA was at the non-target, so I'm unsure of whether to keep my GPA from the other school on the resume. The way I look at it, on the one hand, whoever reads the resume can assume that my GPA was good enough that I was able to transfer to an Ivy. Alternatively, I don't want to look sketchy by not having it. I'm interested to hear what other people think.
Just put the GPA at your target...as long as the GPA you list is under the proper Uni, you should be fine.
Thank you!
Resume question as a transfer (Originally Posted: 08/03/2014)
I have searched on here but I'd like to see if there is any recent experience.
Since I am a transfer from a junior college, and I haven't started at my school yet, what do I do about listing GPA and my junior college? The general consensus is to leave it off once I start and get my first grades, but I am trying to apply from some stuff through my school related to IB that requires a resume during the fall quarter. What should I do? I can either forgo the opportunities and just wait until next year (I'll be a senior, so I'll be behind in that sense). I have some experience but I haven't really pursued anything serious like SA yet because of this issue. I know application periods tend to end in December, so I think I am screwed for a year. I was given the advice to stay an extra year or quarter to recruit as a junior when I am actually a senior (in my 4th year).
Your junior college is irrelevant. Use your current university and whatever your GPA is toward your degree. All of your credits that transferred have fulfilled your university's requirements and are therefore calculated into your GPA.
My school doesn't take over my community college GPA, so that is why I am confused. I will have no GPA from my current university until the end of December.
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