Freshman schedule

<p>UGBA 10
Econ 2
Philosophy 6
PS 209A</p>

<p>Seminars
History 24, Sec. 2
Political Science 39B, Sec. 1</p>

<p>Would such a schedule be feasible and manageable?</p>

<p>Make sure you have 15-17 units.</p>

<p>There are "recommendations" around and about that 13 units is good for freshman year, but from what I have seen it turns people into weaksauce.</p>

<p>Are you sure you mean Political Science 209A? That is a graduate class and would definitely not be recommended for a freshman in addition to the fact you probably won't get in the class if you don't know the professor.</p>

<p>I am pretty sure right now i have 19 units, which may be a little overwhelming</p>

<p>really? well the poli sci site just has a list of classes without any indication based on grade level.
edit: it seems that the site is divided between undergrad and grad. But how hard will it be to take an upper division class as a freshman? the lower division classes look too general for me</p>

<p>Upper division political science classes are restricted by major for Phase I, so you can't enroll into them until Phase II with one exception which is PS C135. Econ 2 is not offered in the fall, only Econ 1 is. If you really want to take Econ 2 you'll have to wait for the spring.</p>

<p>If you're going to apply to Haas, I would not take 19 units. I believe 16 Letter Grade units is good. If the seminars are P/F only then it would be okay.</p>

<p>would most classes fill up by the end of phase I? And also, would classes that don't say "Enrollment limited to juniors and seniors" mean that freshman can take them as well? </p>

<p>thanks for your help!</p>

<p>note that the 200+ series classes are for grad students, and the 100+ classes are upper-division (still for undergrad). not sure if that was clear before, but if it was, then ... well i guess i just told you stuff you already knew. :)</p>