"first two years explore" <---no!!!!

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<p>yea... for the anal-retentive. :rolleyes:</p>

<p>you should try it sometime! do a track for EVERY possible major.</p>

<p>hahah...i was gonna say the same thing emmeline :rolleyes:</p>

<p>haha you guys are funny,</p>

<p>I don't know anything anymore. I thought I knew, but boy I was wrong.</p>

<p>is there a list of majors that fall under letters and science?</p>

<p>yeah we are vega :p</p>

<p>and don't you love how, in less than 30 minutes, there's almost 30 replies to your topic...granted not all of them were relevant :D</p>

<p>yea I know, record breaking response time..</p>

<p>it's funnnnny how we are up late at night browsing a college forum...hahaha!!</p>

<p>it's funny how there's a bunch of kids randomly refreshing the UCLA forum and posting rapidly... gez more so since im listening to iron maiden with my headphones and staring at the screen with strained eyes</p>

<p>as a freshmen, which chem classes are options? 14 and 20?</p>

<p>haha, yes, I'm one of those kids. Freshmen can take either chem class.</p>

<p>I'd rather take 20 than 14 now after reading bruinwalk reviews of lavelle. hahah.</p>

<p>20 is harder but if you're good at science doesnt matter much</p>

<p>lavelles 14b final made me cry...his 14a final made me laugh...in bad way.....though now that i look back on the 14a final...it wasnt that bad...but 14b was definitely killer</p>

<p>so that means I should switch to 20? you guys are scaring me already.</p>

<p>well chem is hard subject for most people no matter what. Just study hard and you'll get a decent grade if not a good one :) ..my advice..get tutoring!! covel tutoring was great!</p>

<p>stop being scared</p>

<p>
[quote]
heres what you should do if you are undecided. pick tracks and make a 4 year plan for each of them. then go individually each quarter and pick what type of classes u want to take

[/quote]
I think this is great advice ... when I started school I kept my options open on 5 majors (across 3 colleges within a University) by making sure my "electives" and optional in-school courses kept my options open. Then each semester/year as I explored my options I could drop options as I learned what I was truely interested in ... and, ultimately, by the end of my sophomore year I picked a major I had never even heard of when I started college!</p>

<p>which major is that 3togo?</p>

<p>Within the school of engineering I majored in Operations Research and Industiral Engineering ... with my focus on the OR stuff about which I knew nothing when I started college. I was interested in Engineering, Math, Computer Science, Phyiscs, and Architecture. I had to give up on the Architecture thing pretty fast but juggled the other 4 for awhile and eventually bumped into Operations Research which is essentially an applied math discipline.</p>

<p>Which university are you attending, 3togo? :rolleyes:</p>

<p>it smells a bit like columbia, but i may be wrong :P</p>