I'm a sophomore at a community college in the Central Valley, and I'm starting to put together my transfer applications. I know I want to stay in California, but I'm torn between applying to UCs and CSUs. I know the basic differences (research vs. teaching, cost, etc.), but I want to hear from students who've actually been through it.
My situation: I'm a first-gen student, low-income, majoring in Sociology. I want to eventually work in social services or maybe go to grad school for social work. I have a decent GPA (3.6) and I've been involved in some clubs.
Here's what I think I know, but please correct me if I'm wrong:
UCs (like UCLA, Berkeley, Davis, etc.):
My situation: I'm a first-gen student, low-income, majoring in Sociology. I want to eventually work in social services or maybe go to grad school for social work. I have a decent GPA (3.6) and I've been involved in some clubs.
Here's what I think I know, but please correct me if I'm wrong:
UCs (like UCLA, Berkeley, Davis, etc.):
- Pros: Prestige, research opportunities, name recognition. If I want to go to grad school, a UC might look better. More resources, more famous professors. The campuses are gorgeous.
- Cons: Expensive. Even with financial aid, the cost of living in places like LA or Berkeley is insane. Larger classes, especially lower-division. I've heard it can be harder to connect with professors. The application process is more competitive and requires those personal insight questions (which are stressing me out).
- Pros: More affordable. Smaller class sizes (from what I've heard). More "hands-on" and career-focused. Seems like a smoother transition from a CC. I've heard the professors are there to teach, not just to do research. Lots of campuses all over the state.
- Cons: Less prestige. Fewer research opportunities. Might not carry the same weight for a PhD program? The campuses can be less "idyllic" and more commuter-ish (depends on which one).