<p>A word of advice: pick freshman seminars based on the PROFESSOR, not the SUBJECT. Plenty of kids I know who took freshman seminars in subjects they were iffy about just to satisfy distribution requirements ended up proclaiming their undying love for the subject by semester's end.</p>
<p>Two classes that I can give you my 100% money back guarantee on:</p>
<p>FRS 135 - Taxes, Prof. Harvey Rosen: Don't let the dull title fool you. If Rosen's teaching it, it's going to be a blast. Not only is he extremely accomplished (he was Chair of Bush's Council of Economic Advisors for a bit), but, much more importantly, is a great teacher, both in terms of making sure you leave with a full head and with making the material enjoyable.</p>
<p>FRS 104 - What Do Your DNA and iPod Have In Common, Prof. Bernard Chazelle: Everyone I know who took this class raved about it. From everything I hear, not only is Chazelle (again, very highly regarded in his field) absolutely hilarious, but he's also got this magical ability to explain the most confusing or technical of phenomena. He had a cult following by the end of the semester.</p>
<p>Of course, I'm no authority on every seminar, and a lot of the seminars have changed since last year, and I'm sure there'll be a whole new crop of great professors.</p>
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do premed students usually take freshman seminars? i would think because of all the classes they have to squeeze in for their major and premed requirements, their schedules would not permit them to take seminars
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<p>As a pre-med, you're probably better versed in the requirements than I am, but the pre-meds I knew had no issue fitting in a freshman seminar. In fact, I would imagine that it may be strategically advantageous (from a GPA stance) to take a freshman seminar, where grading tends to be easy.</p>