Can Someone Help Me With My Scheldule?

<p>Actually regarding the Physics 6 series, as mentioned before, you HAVE to take 6A first, but you can take 6B or 6C in any order.</p>

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Actually regarding the Physics 6 series, as mentioned before, you HAVE to take 6A first, but you can take 6B or 6C in any order.

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<p>Umm.... no, not so much
<a href="http://www.registrar.ucla.edu/schedule/subdet.asp?srs=318038210&term=06F%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.registrar.ucla.edu/schedule/subdet.asp?srs=318038210&term=06F&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Notice how there is an enforced requisite for "course 6B" - you must take the physics series IN ORDER.</p>

<p>Then they must have changed it recently. I was told this by a physics professor last quarter...</p>

<p>Well that physics professor is wrong. Its pretty easy to check - just go back to the course description for Winter '06.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.registrar.ucla.edu/schedule/subdet.asp?srs=318038200&term=06W%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.registrar.ucla.edu/schedule/subdet.asp?srs=318038200&term=06W&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Still has 6B as an enforced requisite. Its been that way as long as I can remember (so basically 3 years haha)</p>

<p>for chem...are there any recommendations on whether to take it at 10 am or at 2pm?</p>

<p>Doesn't matter - its the same professor, so it'll be the exact same lecture three times each day. You can even sign up for one class and then go to another one (this happens a lot, and the earlier classes are packed beyond belief and the later ones are empty). Only difference will be the curves on the tests, but thats not something you can control anyway.</p>

<p>What GE would you recommend with Chem14A and Math 3B. Im a life science major so does tht mean i shouldnt take any science GE's? I want a fairly simple GE to get the 1st quarter off to a good start.</p>

<p>As an LS major, you'll have to take the Life Sciences Core Curriculum, which will take care of all of your science GE's. So take a GE in another area that interests you.</p>

<p>since there are so many science requirements for a LS major, do most students have to do a fifth year? and would we have to take more than one science a quarter to finish up the requirements? </p>

<p>is it suggested that we should finish our science requirements since there are so many at a community college?</p>

<p>i think most LS students SHOULD get done in the standard four years...as you progress though, I believe you have to, at some point, take more than one science class per quarter, e.g., LS and chem or chem and physics...</p>

<p>i see. thanks by the way! </p>

<p>now i have another question. i couldn't find a thread in this forum about the physics series. do life science majors take the Phyiscs 6A series, or do they take the Physics 1A series?</p>

<p>6A, unless you love physics. =P</p>

<p>Hmmmm a random question.</p>

<p>Would taking Chem14A in the Fall quarter be different than taking it in the Winter quarter taught by the same professor, or in this case Professor Lavelle? (# of neurotic pre-meds or the level of competition. Sorry if I offended anyone, just an example.) My schedule is packed and I can't fit Chem14A in for Fall quarter.</p>

<p>I was thinking that taking it in an "off" quarter would move the pre-meds over to 14B/BL, thus eliminating the high level of competition and tension in the class. </p>

<p>Yeah, my logic is pretty dumb. Everytime I think of something like this, I get pwned in the rear. -_- Just wanted to get some different views. Thanks</p>

<p>taking 14A winter quarter with lavelle will be no different than taking it in spring. you're gonna encounter pretty much the same level of competition because not everyone goes into UCLA as premed. Others take LS1 first quarter and then 14A winter quarter. Anyways, if you can't fit it in, then you don't really need to worry anyways.</p>