<p>I am an incoming freshman with my orientation date set for next week. I looked online for the Fall course schedules and signup and the classes I need to take say "Full 25/25." Does that mean I cannot take these classes? I am in honors and I am supposed to have priority registration. I have already taken the classes that do not say they are full so I'm at a loss for what to sign up for by next week when all the classes I need are already full.</p>
<p>Spaces are reserved for freshman. The classes that are “full” are those that have been taken by the students in higher grade levels.</p>
<p>Just to point it out, they reserve space in classes commonly taken by incoming frosh. If you’re looking at classes that are typically taken by other students they may really be full.</p>
<p>just about every single GE class is full haha…i wonder how things will be for orientation?</p>
<p>They have classes reserved for freshman, but for all the transfers out there you are going to have a pretty rough time.</p>
<p>There is some information you can use if you are registered in the GOLD registration system that will help you determine if they will be adding class space to a particular class. On a full class, check the enrollment history for last fall. If the class is currently full at 100 students, and the enrollment history shows 200 student in the class for last fall, there is a good chance that there are spots reserved for incoming freshmen. These spots will be distributed equally for each oreintation session. So if there are 10 orientation sessions, they will relaese 10 spots to each session. If you are getting special treatment for honors (I’m not so sure you get priority in the first quarter), I think you will surely get those classes.</p>
<p>Go to orientation with a plan by knowing which classes you want to target, and which ones should open up to freshmen. The best classes will taken quickly, and those students that ask for guidance will be delayed and get later choices.</p>
<p>Thank you, I will do that.
I have already taken many transferrable classes for my major at my local community college so I don’t need the classes that most freshman need to take. I hope there’s room for me…</p>