<p>Hi:) I'm going to be a full-time dual enrollment student.</p>
<p>14 credits total.</p>
<p>Biology 8:00-8:50am Mon, Wed, Fri
Biology Lab 3:00-5:50 Mon
Calculus 1 11:00-12:50 Mon, Wed, Fri
Writing and Rhetoric 12:30-1:45 Tues, Thurs
American Government 5:00-6:15 Tues, Thurs</p>
<p>Other things I do: volunteer nearly every weekend, and possibly once a week at a hospital for 3 hours (haven't chosen the day yet), have a boyfriend and family who I'd like to spend time with lol, cross country on Wednesdays and Fridays from 2:30-4.</p>
<p>Do you think I could handle this? I did pretty well in high school, and these classes all interest me (except for Calculus, but I have to take it :p).</p>
<p>If not, any suggestions? These are the best times w/ the best professors. Thank you!!!</p>
<p>Are you sure you typed the right times for Calc? 3 times a week for 110 minutes (1 hr and 50 minutes) each time?</p>
<p>Yes, that looks like a very sensible schedule. I assume you are only taking college classes, not college classes on top of a full high school schedule?</p>
<p>How hard does that sound?</p>
<p>To STEM majors, not hard at all.</p>
<p>To everyone else, average I guess.</p>
<p>Looks about average. You said you’re a ‘full time dual enrollment student.’ How are you going to have the time to do a full load of high school courses on top of this (if that is, in fact, what you meant)?</p>
<p>Full-time DE means she is only going to take DE classes, not HS courses. That’s what my friend did. He still graduated with his senior class.</p>
<p>I am not taking any high school courses, they just call it that because I’m dual enrolled in my high school + a university. and yes,the calc time is correct.</p>
<p>thank you everyone:) i don’t want to have too much the first semester so average is good.</p>
<p>Is it your first year doing DE, and is it a state school, private school, or community college? If it’s your first year, it might be a bit of a challenge, just because it is a big jump from hs to college. Also, the difficulty will be very different depending on what kind of school it is. Community college classes generally are easier, with private college courses being more difficult (but possibly with more grade inflation). This probably isn’t true for all schools, but it is consistent with what I’ve experienced.</p>
<p>it is Florida International University, and from what I’ve heard from others who go there, the classes aren’t extremely challenging.</p>
<p>Make sure these classes transfer</p>
<p>Yea don’t worry I have :)</p>