Best teachers for Chem1, Calc II, and Calc III

<p>Would anyone let me know who the best teachesr are for</p>

<p>Geneeal Chem 1:
Calc II :
Calc III :
?</p>

<p>I will be a freshmen this fall, but I have not received the WashU login and password and
I do mot have the access to the teacher review webpage.</p>

<p>Many thanks in advance.</p>

<p>You don’t have choices for calculus. One professor teaches all the sections.</p>

<p>Yup. And for Chem, Mabbs and Frey are both good but I think Frey is better.</p>

<p>Thank you very much.</p>

<p>How come I can’t find Chem 111 for the WebSTAC worksheet?</p>

<p>Pretty sure its 111A, or something like that. Just look it up on the course listings, which you can find just under the registration worksheet.</p>

<p>Do I have to take both chem 111A and Lab(2units) for premed?</p>

<p>^ Yes .</p>

<p>Frey hands down.</p>

<p>I’ve already searched 111A, and basically every other combination of chemistry, general chemistry, and letters and numbers. Maybe there’s something wrong with my account? Should I contact someone?</p>

<p>Wait, so you’re on the registration worksheet, right? Why don’t you post a screenshot of what you’re trying to do. It might help us figure out what’s wrong.</p>

<p>On the registration worksheet page, there should be a blue link which reads “Advanced Search” (located directly above the “Course Selection” box). If you click this, you should be taken to a “Course Search” box, with a box to type in a keyword and multiple drop-down boxes under the Advanced Search label. If you select “L07 - CHEMISTRY” from the drop down box labeled “Dept:” and then click the “Search” button, then the first 30 or so listings should be the different lecture sections and recitation subsections of Chem 111A. You can then proceed to add them as a first/second choice to your worksheet using the buttons on the left.</p>

<p>If you find that a step in this process does not work correctly, maybe a screenshot would help, like ravnzcroft says?</p>

<p>Make sure you’re using the department number Lxx. Typing chemistry won’t work.</p>

<p>yeah it wasn’t working but I called up Wash U and they just had me re-create my account so now everything’s working fine</p>

<p>another question: right now, choosing my classes basically by who the best teachers seem to be, I have 5 classes on Mondays (Calc II, chem lab, chem, physics, and intro to bme), 4 on Wednesdays (calc, chem, physics, bme), and 3 on Fridays (calc, chem, physics), but none on Tuesdays or Thursdays. Should I keep it as is or try to rearrange my schedule, possibly getting worse teachers? I am only concerned about having 5 classes on Mondays. Also if I choose to keep it as is now, would it be a bad idea to try to find a tuesday/thursday humanities elective or something to start working on pre-med requirements?</p>

<p>Don’t forget that you need to include the calc III recitation as well as the lab sections for Physics and Chem Lab. It sounds like you haven’t done that yet.</p>

<p>I would not recommend taking more than those 5 classes for your first semester because that is already a very difficult schedule. In fact, I want to say there’s a limit on the number of credits you can take your first semester, but I don’t quite remember.</p>

<p>Personally, I would rather have better professors and a bad schedule than bad professors and a good schedule. However, that’s just a personal preference; you’ll learn what yours is after a year or so here. Five classes on a given day is pretty rough but not quite unbearable.</p>

<p>Protip: Try your best to fit in a half-hour or hour-long break around noon as many days as possible and especially on those long days, if possible. It’s great to take some time off from classes to eat lunch with your friends. If you have five continuous hour of class, say from 10-3, you’re going to be pretty miserable that day.</p>

<p>Well, I have a break from 11-12, so I guess that’s good…
Anyway, I’m planning on having to take classes pretty much every summer. The summer between freshman and sophomore year, I’m planning on doing organic, so I don’t want to do anything else. But if none of the summer classes are organic or another really hard class, how many classes can a person comfortably take during a summer?</p>

<p>It usually depends on the school you take them at, though obviously taking orgo alone is smart. I’m a little curious why you’re looking to take classes every summer. As a premed BME, you’ll finish up the premed track by the end of sophomore year assuming you take both semesters of orgo over the summer, and I’ve had plenty of room for electives in that same period. I have a friend who is double majoring and double minoring, and i’m fairly certain he only has to take one class total over the summer.</p>

<p>Are you able to officially schedule yyour class or your just doing an outline.</p>

<p>I am also doing a minor in Spanish, which is why I will have to take classes during the summer. And I want to take extra humanities/social science courses in order to fulfill the requirements for other medical schools, even though Wash U’s doesn’t require as many.</p>