In reply to the previous quote, don't do COMP1927, but do 4 relevant subjects.
i have a few programs in mind.
Commerce/Science
Commerce/ science (adv math)
Economics/adv math
B Actuary (i wanted to see if this degree was available but it isn't)
B Actuary/ adv math
and Advanced math
Ok, it may be all right, as in, you won't have wasted a semester.
For Commerce/Science, there are actually some Science Elective Courses which you need to do since you require 96 UOC for the Science component but most majors are around 84 UOC or less. Depending on your major, that means the subjects you are doing now can all count towards your program, meaning you won't have wasted a semester.
For Economics or Commerce/Science (Adv Math), depending on your major (i.e. applied or pure or quant etc.), there may be 6 UOC of Science Elective courses which you will need to do, which means you will have possibly wasted 1 subject since MATH1141 and COMP1917 will count towards a Maths major, and 1 other course will count as an elective.
I'm not sure if they just haven't updated the IPT list of programs or that the Bachelor of Actuarial Studies isn't a program you can transfer into. If you can transfer into it, 12 UOC can go towards General Electives and so the other 12 UOC won't be counted. For Bachelor of Actuarial Studies / Bachelor of Science (Advanced Maths), only 6 UOC will count as Science Electives, and the rest won't count.
For Advanced Maths, all subjects will count as either from the major or as a free elective.
So basically, you will need to decide which program you want to transfer into. But you should definitely choose subjects which count towards your desired major or you'll be wasting more time and money on courses that won't count. I'm not sure why you have chosen MATH1041 because that won't count towards any major unless it's just Advanced Maths or Science. If you do a maths major in a combined degree, don't do PSYC1011 because that won't count.
Don't do COMP1927 next semester, but do subjects which count towards your desired program and major. Do 24 UOC so you don't fall behind. More importantly, do well so you have the marks to transfer.