Chem I + Physics I + Calculus I in the same semester?

<p>Bio is a huge amount of memorization. It's good to become close friends with Campbell.</p>

<p>
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Calculus I, Chem I, and Bio I

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Done that, it's not too bad. Depends on your school and your abilities of course.</p>

<p>The OP's schedule, however, especially based on his background, does not seem like a good idea.</p>

<p>Yes, go for it!!! This semster I took CHEM 1, CALC 1, PHYSICS 1, and a gym class, and I am acing all of them with no problems. Dont get me wrong, this is no mickey mouse schedule, so you should only do it if you are sure that you can really bust your tail to earn the grades. If you have good study skills and the material interests you, then you should have no problems, because the same was true for me and I would bet my life savings on a “straight A” semester.</p>

<p>I took Physics, Chem II, and Calc II in the same semester. It was my worst semester ever (meaning the most work) but now this semester is. Anyway, it was doable. Got A’s in Calc and Chem and a B in Physics. I didn’t put the effort into physics I should have so. I also never took physics before college. I don’t see why its not possible.</p>

<p>Considering this thread is almost a year old…chances are the OP has solved his/her dilemma.</p>

<p>Haha, I didn’t even look at the date.</p>

<p>Sounds doable. engineers often have harder schedules</p>

<p>How would doing physics 1 and Organic chemistry in the same semester alongside Spanish be.
I’m pretty strong in calculus and relatively good in science but my advisor keeps advising against it?</p>

<p>You might want to start a new thread for your question. This thread is 4 years old.</p>

<p>That said, it really depends on you.</p>

<p>Would you only be taking those three classes or would you have other ones on top of that?</p>

<p>I currently have Physics I, Chemistry I, Calculus I, Spanish I and Intro to Anthropology. It’s been a rough semester, but I’ve managed fairly well. I’ve got A’s in everything, plus I’m doing honors projects in physics and calculus. It’s certainly possible, but it does take a good amount of dedication.</p>

<p>I am taking Organic 1, Physics 1, Calculus, Public speaking, and an easy online class with labs in ochem and physics. Looking like I will get all A’s with an A- in Calculus (dont like math haha). Time management is key.</p>

<p>How did you do in gen chem? If u did well it shouldn’t be too bad, 2 sciences a semester is normal. Although, Ochem is a lot harder than gen chem its not possible. Ochem is just time consuming, if ochem, physics and Spanish is all your taking your schedule is fine. Also, Physics 1 if NOT calc based isn’t that hard.</p>

<p>I remember taking college-level chemistry and physics AND calc 2 in high school. Not fun. Even my advisor at my current college DOES NOT SUGGEST THIS. It’s horrible on stress levels, and you may end up with average grades. Have more well-rounded classes and not just science/math-based classes. My advisor likes to say “give your brain a break from the technical stuff.” Spread it out into sequences rather than clumping them in one quarter. For example, this year I’m doing calc and chem sequence, next year I’m doing Physics and computer science sequence, so on…
This is coming from someone that’s majoring in Electrical Engineering :)</p>

<p>I don’t view taking chemistry, physics, and calculus at the same time as “uncommon” or even “unwise”. Every engineering discipline at my university is set up that way.</p>