SkywayBuild your transfer plan — free →
TransferSanta Barbara City CollegeUC Santa Cruz

Technology and Information Management Minor Transfer Requirements: Santa Barbara City CollegeUC Santa Cruz

The official course articulation for transferring into UC Santa Cruz’s Technology and Information Management Minor major from Santa Barbara City College — i.e. exactly which Santa Barbara City College courses satisfy each UC Santa Cruz major-preparation requirement, per ASSIST.org (2025–26).

Required courses (Santa Barbara City CollegeUC Santa Cruz)

AM 11A
5 UC units
Mathematical Methods for Economists I
Take at Santa Barbara City College: MATH 130
MATH 11A
5 UC units
Calculus with Applications
Take at Santa Barbara City College: MATH 150
MATH 19A
5 UC units
Calculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics
Take at Santa Barbara City College: MATH 150
MATH 19B
5 UC units
Calculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics
Take at Santa Barbara City College: MATH 160
AM 11B
5 UC units
Mathematical Methods for Economists II
Take at Santa Barbara City College: MATH 131
MATH 11B
5 UC units
Calculus with Applications
Take at Santa Barbara City College: MATH 160
CSE 20
5 UC units
Beginning Programming in Python
Take at Santa Barbara City College: CS 104
CSE 30
7 UC units
Programming Abstractions: Python
Take at Santa Barbara City College: CS 114 or CS 137 or CS 106
TIM 50
5 UC units
Business Information Systems
Take at Santa Barbara City College: CIS 101
TIM 58
5 UC units
Systems Analysis and Design
Take at Santa Barbara City College: CIS 243

View the official agreement on ASSIST.org ↗

Don’t plan this alone.

Skyway builds your full term-by-term plan from these exact requirements + IGETC, checks your gaps, models your GPA, and an AI counselor answers anything — free.

Start my free plan →

Technology and Information Management Minor to UC Santa Cruz from other colleges

Data sourced from ASSIST.org (official CCC→UC articulation) and the UC Information Center (transfer admit data), 2025–26. Skyway is an independent transfer-planning tool and is not affiliated with the University of California or ASSIST.