Metadata
Title
UC Davis
Category
undergraduate
UUID
43f59c52be304beb826a72ad67859018
Source URL
https://www.ucdavis.edu/admissions/undergraduate/freshman/application-tips
Parent URL
https://www.ucdavis.edu/admissions/undergraduate/international
Crawl Time
2026-03-18T03:49:02+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

UC Davis

Source: https://www.ucdavis.edu/admissions/undergraduate/freshman/application-tips Parent: https://www.ucdavis.edu/admissions/undergraduate/international

First-year application tips

Learn best practices to fill out the UC application.

How to report coursework and grades

Your academic record is the core of your application. It’s important to report all your UC-approved college preparatory coursework — whether taken at a high school or college — completely and accurately. Include courses you enrolled in, regardless of grades, transferability, withdrawal or if they were repeated.

Honors courses

The honors box on the UC application form is used to designate a course for which an extra grade point is awarded for a letter grade of C or better. There are four different types of honors courses:

If you attend a California public high school, see your high school’s UC-approved course list for more information about honors courses. Only UC-approved courses that are listed as honors are eligible to receive an extra grade point.

Nonresident applicants should check the honors box (AP, IB, CL)  for AP, IB and UC-transferable college courses as appropriate for all of the above.

Reporting international education

Non-letter grades

Domestic applicants whose school uses a non-letter grade system, need to take some additional steps to complete the application. Check with your high school counseling office to see if there is a conversion scale to the A-B-C-D-F letter grade system. Do not attempt to translate your grades yourself, if a conversion scale does not exist. List the grades exactly as they appear on your transcript, and check the box that indicates your school uses a grading system other than A-B-C-D-F. Your application is reviewed by a UC advisor who will translate these marks accordingly.

College courses taken while in high school

Add the college information after the high school information, if any college or university-level courses were completed while in high school.

If UC-transferable courses were taken at a California community college, known as CCC, a course list will appear:

If non-UC-transferable or non-CCC courses were taken while in high school, students must manually input course information:

Explain any gaps in your educational chronology in the Additional Information section of the UC application; only a brief description of what you were doing during these breaks in your education is necessary. 

Letters of recommendation and other materials

Do not include letters of recommendation, copies of awards, transcripts or samples of your academic or creative work with your application. We will not review them, nor will we return them to you.

[### Choosing a major

Apply to a major that interests you, rather than to one in which you think you have the best chance of admission. We also suggest that you include an alternate major in case you are not admitted in your first choice.](https://www.ucdavis.edu/academics/majors)

How your application is reviewed

UC Davis conducts a comprehensive review of every first-year application to ensure each applicant is assessed thoroughly and fairly.

We evaluate every application using 13 criteria that all UC campuses adhere to. We consider a broad range of factors, from traditional academics to extracurricular achievement and response to life challenges, but we look beyond the numbers to find out who you really are!

[### How to check your status

In December, you should receive a confirmation email from UC Davis Undergraduate Admissions that contains your UC Davis student ID number. Use your student ID number to set up your MyAdmissions account.](http://myadmissions.ucdavis.edu/)

Apply to UC Davis

Reporting military coursework and training

If you are a military veteran or service member who did not enroll in any college courses following high school graduation, you may be eligible to apply as a first-year applicant. Contact Undergraduate Admissions to discuss your situation.