<p>
[quote]
1)How big is the classroom?
2)How do you do the labs for science classes?
3)How many hours do you study and How many days do you take classes per week?
4)Are the quizzes and tests are harder than high school?
5)How are the community bathrooms?
6)What are the best ways to get good grades?
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Georgia State University</p>
<p>1) That depends. Most comprehensive Intro classes and survey courses (like Intro to Anthropology, Art History surveys, Intro to Political Science) are pretty big; they're your standard lecture halls with 70-150 students. Then again, some classes like English 101 and Spanish 101 are pretty small...around 20-25 students. It just depends.</p>
<p>2) Labs tend to be conducted by a grad student and the department (Biology, Geography, Chemistry) comes up with the tests based on the lab manual. They might be later in the day as the main lecture class, or they could be on a different day. There's usually a small group of students...enough to have a lab partner.</p>
<p>3) I don't study much (I just show up to class, pay attention, and take notes...but you can't coast like that in every course) and it depends on which type of class you take and how many. You don't have to have class everyd day, you don't have the SAME class every day, and you don't have class all day (unless you make your schedule out that way). Currently, I have class Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. I had a Tuesday and Thursday course, but I dropped it.</p>
<p>4) Eh...once again, that depends on the class, the teacher, and your study habits. They're about the same, honestly. Some teachers give you long tests, but not as many. Some teachers give you shorter tests, but you have a couple of them. Some professors cover a lot of stuff between tests which sucks. A lot of students lament a lot of assignments in classes, but teachers who give you a lot of quizzes, a couple tests, maybe a paper or two, and an optional semester-long extra credit project...are harder to fail. But if you only have three tests...you can't mess up. But the tests aren't necessarily harder nor easier...</p>
<p>5) Huh?</p>
<p>6) Hmm. Show up to class, maybe join a listserv and meet up with some people to study (its not as hard as it sounds), don't procrastinate (because it's easy to do), and take easy teachers and easy courses. Don't try to challenge yourself with core courses. Trust me. Like, if you have a science requirement and you aren't a science major, don't go for Astronomy or Chemistry. Go for one of the Geosciences and save yourself the headache.</p>