SkywayBuild your transfer plan — free →
TransferSanta Rosa Junior CollegeUC Davis

History A.B. Transfer Requirements: Santa Rosa Junior CollegeUC Davis

The official course articulation for transferring into UC Davis’s History A.B. major from Santa Rosa Junior College — i.e. exactly which Santa Rosa Junior College courses satisfy each UC Davis major-preparation requirement, per ASSIST.org (2025–26).

Required courses (Santa Rosa Junior CollegeUC Davis)

HIS 007C
4 UC units
History of Latin America 1900-present
Take at Santa Rosa Junior College: HIST 8.2
HIS 006
4 UC units
Introduction to the Middle East
Take at Santa Rosa Junior College: HIST 5
HIS 017A
4 UC units
History of the United States
Take at Santa Rosa Junior College: HIST 17.1
HIS 017B
4 UC units
History of the United States
Take at Santa Rosa Junior College: HIST 17.2
HIS 018A
4 UC units
Race in America to 1865
Take at Santa Rosa Junior College: HIST 21
HIS 018B
4 UC units
Race in the United States Since 1865
Take at Santa Rosa Junior College: HIST 21
HIS 072A
4 UC units
Women & Gender in America, to 1865
Take at Santa Rosa Junior College: HIST 18.1
HIS 072B
4 UC units
Women & Gender in America, 1865-Present
Take at Santa Rosa Junior College: HIST 18.2
HIS 080W
2 UC units
The History of the United States in the Middle East
No Santa Rosa Junior College equivalent — complete after transfer.
HIS 010A
4 UC units
World History to 1350
Take at Santa Rosa Junior College: HIST 1.1
HIS 010B
4 UC units
World History, c. 1350-1850
Take at Santa Rosa Junior College: HIST 1.2
HIS 010C
4 UC units
World History III
Take at Santa Rosa Junior College: HIST 1.2

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 →

History A.B. to UC Davis 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.