LS students can choose to apply as a transfer to any program in the following schools:. If not admitted to their first choice, LS transfer applicants choose one of the transition school options as a backup. For example, you apply to transfer to the Stern School of Business. You will get your own Liberal Studies academic adviser. Your adviser will guide you through the curriculum and help design your class schedule each semester. LS classes are small and seminar-style. This means LS students get personalized attention from their professors.
This is the ideal environment for developing strong mentoring relationships and completing undergraduate research. The LS Core allows you to explore subjects before committing to a particular major. However, you have also always wanted to be a doctor. You can spend your final two years completing both at CAS! Small, seminar-style classes and close faculty-student interaction ensure the benefits of a liberal arts college within our large urban research university.
The Liberal Studies Core is a distinctive beginning to your NYU education and will position you for success today and in the future. What happens at the end of my sophomore year? Your LS academic advisor will guide you as you consider transition and major options.
As a junior, you will continue your studies in your baccalaureate program. Which degree-granting programs may I transition to following completion of the Liberal Studies Core curriculum? NYU is characterized by its diversity of majors and programs.
As is required of all NYU students, LS Core students who maintain good academic standing, who have completed a minimum of 64 credits, and who meet any specialized program requirements in their prospective major or school transition directly to degree programs in these NYU schools, including Global Liberal Studies:. LS Core students who meet the above requirements may also apply for internal transfer to the following colleges and degree programs at NYU.
How will I determine which degree program to select? Starting from your first semester, your LS academic advisor will address questions that are most important as you consider major options.
LS Core students generally have one free elective each semester in the first year and three free electives each semester in the sophomore year. These elective spaces are used to fill requirements in your intended transition school, to explore potential majors, to begin introductory classes in a major, or to begin a minor. Can I begin a major or a minor while at Liberal Studies?
Elective credits may be used to begin to fill requirements in your transition school, to begin introductory classes in a major, or to begin a minor. The Global Liberal Studies minor is also a great opportunity for all students across the university and, especially, for LS Core students.
Which applicants are selected? The Admissions Committee offers admission to only a select group of first-year applicants. Transfer applicants are not eligible for admission to the Liberal Studies Core; Global Liberal Studies does admit a select number of internal and external transfer students each year. Applicants must file their application by the stated deadlines in order to be given full consideration.
Sound preparation, however, should include English, with a heavy emphasis on writing; social studies; foreign language; mathematics; and laboratory sciences.
The Admissions Committee pays particular attention to the number of honors, Advanced Placement AP , and International Baccalaureate IB courses the applicant has completed in high school if offered. The students most competitive for admission will meet or exceed these minimums. An interview is not required for admission.
The Admissions Committee finds that students are best prepared for NYU if they have studied the following subjects:. NYU has one of the most flexible testing policies of any college or university. To be eligible for admission, candidates must submit one of the following:.
While NYU will consider scores received after the application deadline, the Admissions Committee cannot guarantee that it will wait for those scores to arrive before making an admission decision.
Admission will not be offered to a student unless NYU has official testing on file, and NYU does not consider results submitted by the applicant as official. If this is not possible, the applicant should have a school official submit them. For applicants who have taken the ACT more than once, the Admissions Committee will recalculate a new composite using the highest of each section, regardless of test date.
For candidates who choose to submit three 3 SAT subject test scores, 3 AP Exam Scores, or 3 IB Higher-Level predicted or final scores to fulfill the standardized testing requirement, the Admissions Committee wants to see at least one 1 score from the following academic areas:. As part of NYU's Flexible Testing Policy, the university accepts dozens of examinations and other qualifications from around the world.
The qualification must meet the following criteria:. Chicago, Dartmouth, Columbia, the Claremont Colleges etc. I recommend that rather than rant on CC, you explore transfer options and this time do your homework. To cut a long story short, my attendance was based on a lot of hard and soft factors - not what you assume and suggest it to be, a rash decision with little forethought or planning.
College Confidential has an enormous high school student population, and if some are able to realize the requirements of a college they want to go to and gauge its fit by reading this thread, then I think my rant is by all means warranted.
The more information, the better. Sorry that I have not read CC for a while and thanks for your advises. Hope things are better there than Paris. Thanks a lot for this clear analysis and frank points of view! Fortunately, my intended major is art history and I did not take many APs in high school so LSP seems a good fit for me. Sorry that I have been off CC for a while so respond so late. Here is a big late-thank- you!
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