ASSIST.org is the official, state-designated repository for course articulation between California community colleges and the UC and CSU systems. If you are transferring, it is the source of truth for which of your courses count, but it only answers part of the question.
What “articulation” actually means
Articulation is the formal agreement that a specific course at your community college is equivalent to a specific course (or requirement) at a university. ASSIST shows these agreements so you can take the right course at your college and have it count after you transfer.
How to read an ASSIST agreement
- Set the academic year, your community college (the “from” institution), and your target university (the “to” institution).
- Choose “major” agreements to see the courses that satisfy a specific major’s lower-division preparation.
- Read each line as “this course (or sequence) at my college satisfies this requirement at the university.” Some requirements need a sequence, and some have no equivalent and must be taken after transfer.
- Always match the academic year to the catalog year you plan to transfer under.
Where ASSIST stops being enough
ASSIST tells you what articulates. It does not build you a plan. It will not sequence prerequisite chains, balance your units across semesters, fit GE around major prep, or tell you the fastest realistic order. That sequencing is exactly where most transfer students lose a semester, and it is exactly the gap Pipeline fills. Pipeline’s intelligent transfer engine goes far beyond a course lookup, weighing major requirements, prerequisite chains, GE patterns, GPA targets, and UC admissions data to build the actual term-by-term plan.
Related: Get a term-by-term plan from Pipeline’s transfer engine · IGETC & Cal-GETC requirements explained · How to transfer from a CC to a UC
