<p>I'm a Bio major, and my adviser recommend I take one science class my first semester since I'm a freshmen. </p>
<p>INTRODUCTION TO CELL BIOLOGY AND GENETICS - BIO 211
Lecture: 1 - 1:50 PM MWF
Lab: 1:40 pm - 4:20 pm Tuesday</p>
<p>COLLEGE WRITING I <em>Required</em>
3:05 pm - 4:20 pm Thursday</p>
<p>THE ECONOMIC SYSTEM - ECO 101 <em>Interested in economics</em>
9:25 am - 10:40 am Tuesday</p>
<p>BRITISH LITERATURE I: SPECIAL TOPICS - ENG 210
8:00 am - 8:50 am MWF</p>
<p>BEGINNING LATIN I - LAT 101 <em>iffy on this one, always wanted to take Latin though</em>
2:00 pm - 2:50 pm MWF</p>
<p>Is it too heavy for a freshmen, or is it good? Its about 16 credits, and my roommate happens to be in my British Lit and Latin class so I have someone to study with. I checked on Rate My Professor and I have a good selection of professors.</p>
<p>I’d take a math class instead of literature or one of the other less important ones. Freshman classes are (obviously) easier than senior classes which works out well considering freshman are idiots. So it’s not like you’ll die just because you take more than 1 science class.</p>
<p>I wanted to do that, but all the math classes are closed.</p>
<p>Brit lit, ew, good luck.</p>
<p>And this is coming from an English major.</p>
<p>Bio and Econ will be the toughies. The other ones will probably have a decent amount of homework, but if you actually do all of your work it shouldn’t be a big deal.</p>
<p>You’ve made sure the professors are teachers that you’ll like. Your roomate shares 2 of your classes with you (And they look like they’ll be the 2 hardest ones for you) and you’re not taking more than 15 or 16 credits. Dude you should be fine. Language classes are always hard and i only say you might find the LIT class hard because you’re in a science major. Usually science majors don’t find LIT to be a walk in the park. And with those 2 classes you have your roomate to back you up. Honestly, having a person right off the bat with some of the same courses as you gives you a nice leg up that a lot of students don’t have.</p>