Do you have to take math in college?

<p>Retake whatever math you took in HS? Colleges with distribution requirements usually have a vast amount of courses that fulfill the requirements so like...the math behind music or something, who knows? They definitely have math courses for non-math people.</p>

<p>Thanks! Hopefully they'll have a 'Math for English Majors' class. ;)</p>

<p>lol! That would be awesome...you could read books where they mention pythagorean on a page or something.</p>

<p>I know! Yes, that would be the life. :) Yeah, I've just always been slower in math, as opposed to English. But I work with what I can do. I'll definitely be praying for the "Math for English Majors" class. lol</p>

<p>Or you go to a school with no requirements. Ta-da, your math-for-english-majors class just became an English class :p</p>

<p>Unfortunately, I doubt UC Davis or UC Berkeley has no requirements! ;)</p>

<p>I don't know if you are considering Brown, but they don't have any core requirements</p>

<p>Math-for-English-Majors = word problems with no "right" answers?</p>

<p>Smith doesn't require any class except a freshman writing seminar (and some of those are just kick-ass fun...) unless you're going for Latin honors.</p>

<p>To get a Bachelor of Arts at Stanford, you need to take three classes in that are certified as "General Requirements" courses in a group labeled "Natural Sciences, Applied Science & Technology, and Math. You can take no more than two of the courses in one sub-group. Taking two computer sciences courses and one natural science course, for example, would spare you from having to take a math class.</p>

<p>You can check the graduation requirements for most schools on-line.</p>