<p>Yeah, have fun with that course. I’ll be taking it at my local community college this summer :)</p>
<p>sorry to interrupt (lol) but just wondering, what classes are best taken in the summer?</p>
<p>Either
A) Classes in the University Core Curriculum (this will just lighten your load each semester) and can be accomplished by summer classes or AP/IB/Dual credit.
B) Classes people consider weed out such as PHYS 208 (this one is a personal decision where you can make your semester easier) A lot of my friends are taking the community
college route for this, but not I because I am slightly masochistic and feel I have something to prove to myself after a rough bout with high school physics. So far Mechanics is down and E&M to go!</p>
<p>thanks aggieengineer, best of luck with E&M. Are there any other weedouts i would be best served by taking in the summer?</p>
<p>Probably just depends on you, but there are none as notorious as PHYS 208.</p>
<p>so can you take just phys 208 at blinn or community college while being fully enrolled at TAMU?</p>
<p>I believe you could if you really wanted to for the spring semester but I don’t think you can be enrolled in another college without special permission from the dean of your college. So if you really wanted to and went through whatever process is necessary I’m sure you could, but it’s easier and less restrictions over the summer.</p>
<p>You can take 208 at Blinn or another comm. college over the summer, I have no idea if you can take it over at Blinn during the school year or not. PHYS 208 is all anyone should even be worried about. Again, it will make life easier, but this will probably be the only chance you will ever get to make your engineering curriculum any easier. It is truly up to the individual as TXAggie said.</p>