The Transfer Superpower
Once you understand that "Credits transfer, but grades do not," you unlock a massive strategic advantage in college planning.
If your new state university strips away the mathematical weight of your transfer courses and only records them as "Pass/Credit," you can exploit this rule to protect your primary GPA from notoriously brutal classes.
The Summer School Strategy
Let's say you are a Business major at an elite state university, and you are required to take Calculus I.You know the Calculus professor at your university is brutal and fails half the class. If you take it at your main university, you risk getting a 'C' and destroying your 3.8 GPA.
The Hack:
The requirement is fulfilled on your degree audit, but the 'C' you got at the community college does not impact your primary university GPA. You successfully bypassed the hardest class on campus with zero damage to your transcript.
The Danger for Pre-Meds
This strategy is brilliant for Business, Marketing, and Humanities majors who just need to graduate and get a corporate job.However, if you are a Pre-Med (MD) or Pre-Law (JD) student, this strategy is extremely dangerous.
Graduate admissions systems (AMCAS and LSAC) demand transcripts from every institution. If a medical school admissions committee sees that you took all your easy classes at the elite state university, but secretly took Organic Chemistry and Physics at a local community college over the summer, they will view it as extreme academic cowardice.
They will assume you couldn't handle the rigor of university science, and they will likely reject your application.
Simulate Your Transfer Strategy
Calculate how taking organic chemistry at a community college will affect your overall transcript.
Simulate Transfer Strategy