<p>Hi everyone,</p>
<p>I'm a junior and just recently switched to Computer Science from English. I'm behind on my math so I'm taking Trigonometry online at the community college this Spring, while taking on a full load at the university. These are the classes I am signed up for so far:</p>
<p>-Program Fundamentals II (since I is only in the Fall and the dean let me take II first)
-Computer Organization and Machine Language</p>
<p>I need two more courses. So these are my options, but I don't really know if these are classes that will help me as a future programmer or not. I'd like to learn how to code, and I know that Program Fund II will be going over Java:</p>
<p>Advanced Computer and Technology: Advanced applications for students preparing to enter careers in training or education that utilize computer-based technologies. Includes integration of software packages in a project-oriented, real-world environment. Introduction to Web-based client/server systems, databases, distributed computing, application development with object-based programming, mark-up languages such as HTML, and scripting languages. Creation of graphical, animated, multi-media-based, audio-intensive, database-intensive, network-based products.</p>
<p>Fundamentals of SAS Programming: SAS and SAS Programming. Focuses on the use of Base SAS and internal procedures to generate queries and reports, to access local data sources, to create user-defined data formats, to generate descriptive statistics and tabular reports. Reviews elementary programming techniques to solve problems related to data analysis, list reports, t-test, ANOVA, regression analysis, data clustering, and data mining. Prerequisite: MATH 1713 or equivalent. Three lecture hours a week. Credit: Three hours. </p>
<p>That's basically it, since I haven't taken calculus. They only offer certain classes in the Spring vs. the Fall, so the web design, computer graphics, data structure, software engineering courses are not offered this term. Do these seem like good CS courses to be taking for a junior level?</p>