But don't expect that gen eds will be universal -- look at the university/universities you're considering and carefully read their catalogs to be sure beforehand.
I've done undergrad work at four different universities: one required physical education while none of the others did, one required a philosophy class none of the others did, my English class didn't transfer from one university to another because the first university used a non-standard numbering for that class (I finally got the credit to transfer but it took a lot of bureaucracy, red tape, physical and emotional exhaustion, and tears. Probably would have been easier to just re-take the class in retrospect.) Math requirements were different at different universities. One university wouldn't accept *ANY* of the credits from another university that was in the same town because they belonged to different university systems that didn't recognize each other . . . but when I went on to a third university, it recognized all credits from both previous universities.
The safest route is to not assume that anything will be transferrable, either before or after graduation. Look at some university catalogs. Phone some universities and ask questions. Forewarned is forearmed.
Sparrow
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"In the end, we decide if we're remembered for what happened to us or for what we did with it."
-- Randy K. Milholland
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