<p>What colleges have no particular course requirements?</p>
<p>*If anybody can move this thread to 'college search and selection' forum, please do so. I made a mistake.</p>
<p>What colleges have no particular course requirements?</p>
<p>*If anybody can move this thread to 'college search and selection' forum, please do so. I made a mistake.</p>
<p>You mean like open curriculum, no distribution requirements?</p>
<p>Brown University!!!</p>
<p>brown!!!!!</p>
<p>wow, we posted at like the same time...</p>
<p>yeah, that was a little wierd</p>
<p>grinnell college has an open curriculum.</p>
<p>university of rochester and vassar</p>
<p>Smith, apart from a very easy to fulfill writing intensive requirement.</p>
<p>Hamilton (3 writing intensive classes required, but can be any subject even math)</p>
<p>evergreen state college</p>
<p>University of ROchester! :) Whohoo..</p>
<p>Amherst. Is Caltech like that too? I don't remember...</p>
<p>Echols program of University of Virginia. =P</p>
<p>I don't think caltech has that, every student there has to take minimum 5 semesters of physics I think.</p>
<p>But then again I don't go to caltech so I dunno.</p>
<p>hampshire college</p>
<p>
[quote]
I don't think caltech has that, every student there has to take minimum 5 semesters of physics I think.
[/quote]
It's 5 quarters of physics, but yeah, Caltech doesn't belong on this list.</p>
<p>Michigan has ta few categories and you have to pick a course from each. Yeah, it has a core, but it's pretty small compared to others. Plus, you can fulfill them anytime and they can count for your major.</p>
<p>caltech has more requirements than that too</p>
<p>brown and grinnell</p>