I was very interested in applying to the UC Berkeley Extension Post-Bacc program, but after reading mixed reviews on this forum, I was a bit hesitant about going through with it.
I spoke with Patrick Brown (Program Director) via e-mail a few times about the program, and he was always very helpful in answering my questions. He told me that this admissions cycle, they have had students accepted to "Harvard, Yale, UCSF and the other UC schools, Washington U at St. Louis, Minnesota, Colorado, OhioState, UVA, Cincinnati, Tulane, Northwestern, etc."
Is there anyone currently on this forum that can tell me more about this program? Does it still have a fairly negative reputation like it did a few years ago when it was first starting out, or have things changed?
Thanks for any info!
Pro's:
1) The program directors are very nice and helpful.
2) You have the option to do the program *OR* take classes a la carte.
3) Did I mention all their courses are $810? Try taking a summer course at UCB - you're looking at $1100+. At my home institution? $3000.
4) You can still have a full time job; almost all the courses are from 630-930PM on either MW or TTh, with the exception of the scary-sounding (at least to me) 5-hour Saturday Only courses.
5) You get access to advising.
6) Classes are held
all over the Bay: SF, Redwood, on UC Berkeley, Oakland.
Con's
Who are you? Are you a) the "major repair" dude, b) the "wants to retake a class, floating an application cycle" girl, or the c) working adult career-changer man? Keep this in mind when you read the following:
1) The program is really designed for
working adults. All of the classes are from 6:30-9:30pm weekdays so you can only reasonably take 2 courses a semester.
2) If you need to retake one or two courses, this could be ideal for you. Their certificate is 24ish credits. If you take 2 classes per semester (6 credits), it'll only take you a year and a half to do. That's not bad at all. But what if you need
all the pre-requisites? What if you need major GPA therapy? That's a bit more daunting of a time commitment, and perhaps you might want to look at doing a really intensive, formal post-bac. But that's a personal choice. Like I said, you could be a career-changing working adult have a completely different set of constraints than the rest of us (family, financial [loans are scary]).
3) This isn't so much a negative as much as it is annoying - Occasionally you have to go to different areas of the Bay to get the courses you want. I wanted to take Cell Biology and Biochemistry. I also wanted to take BART. Biochemistry was offered in SF (Market Street) but Cell Biology was only offered in Redwood. The stars didn't align for me.
Admittedly, I dropped my courses after getting into Drexel IMS - I went to the first day of classes and enjoyed it. I was really serious about taking some classes there. I didn't see any negatives for my situation, but everyone is different. Good luck.