<p>I am about to graduate high school in about a month and I am going to have 105 credits. I am currently at a local community college but have been accepted into University of Washington and into my major (the more difficult part imho). I have signed up for my summer quarter classes which will be four out of the 8 business core classes that I need to take (16 credits). I have a total of 16 4-credit classes needed to complete my bachelors degree in business with a finance option. I am planning on taking four of these classes each quarter which leaves me having completed all of them by the end ofnext spring quarter leaving the summer for a few b.s. classes to get up to the 180 credits required for a bachelors degree. I am wondering if this will be possible and not too entirely difficult, four classes that are only two days a week seems managable enough for me to handle since that is what I have been doing since I started college back in 11th grade. How many classes do people typically enroll in per a quarter on a quarter based system at a university? I want to graduate early so that I can try to get straight into law school (which would mean taking the LSATS during this upcoming year and hopefully getting above a 70). Do grad-level admissions typically look down upon people who rushed through their undergrad? I don't really see a point in spending the next two years of my life in undergrad if I can just condense it into one year without that much difficulty. Any suggestions?</p>
<p>I highly recommend against it, unless you are in a dire financial need to do so. College experience is not about just getting the degree and being prepared for the job market. you'll soon realize it once you get to the campus and take a few core courses at your school. Unlike in high school, you'll learn how to think analytically (and formulate an idea of your own) in your college courses. Don't become a finance/pre-med/engineering/ pre-law/pre-dental machine in your freshman year. Obtaining technical knowledge can wait a year or two.</p>
<p>Besides from the educational perspective, it's quite a life experience that you do not want to miss out. you'll see.</p>