<p>I will either be following the biomaterials or biomech. concentration. Which of these classes should I choose and could someone recommend the best/easiest teacher for each?</p>
<p>Chem 1A or 4A (General Chem)
BioE 24 or 25 Seminars
E 10, Engineering Design and Analysis or BioE 10</p>
<p>I'm planning to apply to business school afterwards so GPA is very important to me. I'd like to get a recommendation for the easiest class choice and most lenient teacher.</p>
<p>All the Chem 1A profs are the same, and all the Chem 4A profs are also the same. Lately, Chem 4A (which is curved) has been stingier with the A's than in past years. Chem 1A is usually uncurved though, and easy to do well in if you've had AP Chem.</p>
<p>Chem 4A is supposedly more intense than 1A. Something to consider: would you ever need super-in depth gchem as a business school graduate? I would go with Chem 1A if you are dead-set on business school.</p>
<p>Thanks very much for the responses everyone!</p>
<p>So it looks like I will be taking Chem 1A, E10, BioE 24, Math 53, and a Reading and Composition course.</p>
<p>Is there only one teacher for E10 and BioE24?</p>
<p>Could anyone recommend an easy Reading and Composition course? A suggestion for a lenient teacher would be great as well. I'm great at math and science but terrible at English.
Would it be a better idea to take the Reading and Composition requirement over the summer at a CC to pad my GPA? Or is there any way to waive the Reading and Composition requirement with AP/SAT scores?</p>
<p>Lastly, which courses should I sign up for at CalSO? I believe I can only sign up for 10.5 units at CalSO and need to sign up for the most popular/hardest to get into, classes first. I'm not sure what the most popular/hardest to get into classes are though.</p>