Bio majors and pre-meds: Post your sample schedules here!

<p>Yes, your faculty advisor. If you have declared yourself a biological science major, you will have a student advisor as well, who is more than willing to help. During orientation you (pre-med, pre-dental) will have a huge event about setting up your first year schedules.</p>

<p>fresh fall</p>

<p>chem 207 (e)
bioee 278 (m)
fws (m)
chin 109 (m)</p>

<p>fresh spring</p>

<p>chem 208
eng 206
psych 326 (evolution of human behavior)
stats 171
mandarin 110</p>

<p>Fresh fall</p>

<p>Honors BMZ (Botany, Microbiology, Zoology) w/lab (very h)
Chem w/lab (e)
Honors English (e)
Music (Hist. + Theory) for music minor (e)</p>

<p>Fresh spring</p>

<p>BMZ w/lab
Chem w/lab
Spanish
Honors Psych</p>

<p>lol im kind of lost, by HBHC do you mean HBHS? that is my major. and as long as walcott gives similar exams as bio 101 teacher.. i dont know his name lol.. think it started with a C. then all should be well =D</p>

<p>I had Walcott for intro bio. I don't know if he still teaches intro bio anymore though.</p>

<p>just had him for teh first time today, based on today i have to say i like the previous teacher better. this guy writes notes and projects it. previous teacher just have slides which is also online.</p>

<p>What can I say? The man's old school.</p>

<p>lol haha. oh and just a question for those who had Walcott. Are any of his questions for tests taken from his lecture notes that aren't in the textbook? So basically is going to his lecture necessary.</p>

<p>how is it taking bioBM332 before bioBM331? My advisor told me i'd be fine, but is there any disadvantage to doing it this way?</p>

<p>How hard are the auto-tutorial bio classes? Do you know norcalguy?</p>

<p>Are there other courses that are also auto-tutorial?</p>

<p>Taking BioBM332 before BioBM331 is perfectly fine. There's no overlap between the two classes.</p>

<p>The only two autotutorial courses I know are intro bio and physics. Given the choice, I'd rather take the traditional (ie non-autotutorial) versions. The greatest advantage of autotutorial courses is the flexibility. There are no lectures so you can learn the material on your own time. However, you have to be extremely motivated and self-directed, which most freshmen are not. There's no difference in difficulty. The difference b/w Bio101-104 and Bio105-106 (autotutorial) is just the structure or lack thereof.</p>