<p>are they really going to change the GE’s at muir?</p>
<p>Please tell: in 2013, is every one at UCSD able to get their classes when they need them to be able to graduate in four years?</p>
<p>@corneliausuie, you may get more answers if you start a new thread (this is a 4 year old thread on a different topic for UCSD).</p>
<p>I can offer you graduation statistics from the book “The Best Value Colleges, 2013 Edition by The Princeton Review.” This book says that 56% of UC San Diego’s students graduate within 4 years and that 85% graduate within 6 years.</p>
<p>haha someone actually dig this tread up:</p>
<p>Revelle: closest to your science classes, new apartment building</p>
<p>John Muir: closest to center of the campus, 2 dining halls, good if you are vegetarian (since 1 of the dining hall is vegan), best GEs, 1 new apartment building</p>
<p>Thurgood Marshall: close to library, has a burrito place, close to RIMAC Gym, 2nd best GEs (only 1 less course required for GEs compared to Muir’s)</p>
<p>Earl Warren: quiet, canyon view, nice GEs for engineering (good for having a minor), swimming pools</p>
<p>Eleanor Roosevelt: nicest dormitory, apt (but the wall is really thin)</p>
<p>Sixth College: fresh pizza, milkshakes, quiet</p>
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<p>Please tell: in 2013, is every one at UCSD able to get their classes when they need them to be able to graduate in four years?</p>
<p>You should be able to graduate in 4 yrs unless you are Bioengineering or maybe other engineering (it’s doable though) or unless you are double majoring
If you come in with less AP credits compared to your class, then you’ll pretty much always be in the back of the line. You won’t always get all the classes you want 100% but there’re plenty of alternatives if you plan ahead.</p>