<p>Ok here's the deal. I'm taking pre-calc this summer at a community college (cc) in virginia. When I go to UT, I plan to tranfer to Cockrell for my second year. To do so, I would need to complete calc 1 and calc 2 before I apply for an internal transfer.</p>
<p>I know that calc at UT sucks.</p>
<p>I was thinking I could do other required courses for my first year while doing calc courses at CC at the same time (dual enrollment). </p>
<p>Would this be too much of a courseload for me? I'm willing to work hard but I want to know how tough it would be to pull off.</p>
<p>Note that I also plan to hold a job down during the week and participate in extracurriculars while finding time to study and stuff.</p>
<p>Opinions/suggestions?</p>
<p>Sorry about making so many threads. I'm an OOS student who needs to get everything together for the ride :)</p>
<p>idk much about calc, but i would think you might need to know some of what was covered in calc I for calc II.</p>
<p>i would not think taking them at the same time would usually be advisable.</p>
<p>For engineering I think its for your own good if you take it at UT (Most engineers take the M 408C and M 408D classes).</p>
<p>Mike I wasn’t talking about taking them both at once. I was talking about taking one class the first semester and the other class the second semester.</p>
<p>Aali, ok that makes sense but I heard that the teachers don’t really teach and that it would be better to take it at cc.</p>
<p>Calc I and II at CC will transfer as M408K and M408L. Those are the first two of a 3 part series, ending with M408M. They combine those 3 semesters into two to create M408C and M408D. (I think) On the engineering course requirements, they list 408C and 408D. You might want to check to make sure that if you take the KLM route instead, that it will work for engineering.</p>
<p>Calc I, II, III at ACC is the equivalent of UT’s calc sequence.</p>
<p>@ WastedxYear</p>
<p>Personally, from what I’ve heard is that the professors who teach the C and D courses are a little bit better. ACC would be a good idea but just make sure what credit you get (you might get credit for K and L which means you would have to take M or its equivalent if offered)</p>
<p>Talk to an engineering advisor because Calc I and II will help you in other classes such as Differential Equations, iirc. It will come in handy for physics (which you might want to take at ACC because the professors at UT suck)</p>