<p>Agree with many of the posters - It's a very light schedule actually. Don't worry. Do you have some background in Japanese? You will probably also have a phys. ed class.</p>
<p>One more thing, you will learn to do homework in between classes!</p>
<p>Drop Japanese. Your schedule would be great without it. Take another liberal studies course that meets MWF or TR only (there are plenty of them).</p>
<p>Yeah, but if he drops Japanese (6 credits) and takes a 4-credit liberal studies course, he will only have 12 credits.</p>
<p>Yup..plus I really want Japanese. </p>
<p>lol, c'mon guys. Is it an okay load or a too hard one?</p>
<p>
[quote]
Btw, find a work study job such as working in the library where you can study during your shift
[/quote]
</p>
<p>They cracked down on that this year....no studying during your shift (especially for those students who sat at the Uris security desk). Unless you have reading assignments or notes online...then you can be sneaky about it.</p>
<p>How many hours of studying per night?</p>
<p>Any idea when they usually post up the names of professors for those currently listed as staff on jtf?</p>
<p>That's not really a heavy course load, actually. Last year I had classes 9:00am to 3:00 or 4:30pm every day, a job, a couple clubs, time to study at least three hours every night, and thankfully, a social life. As for your job, the only problem you might run into is that some positions require four or five-hour shifts, which could be difficult to fit into your schedule without working weekends. If you find that you don't have enough study time during the week, you will always have weekends to study all you want.</p>
<p>just cuz it looks like there might be some confusion, who chooses courses and when varies by school (and major) so don't get worried if you're not choosing yet...</p>
<p>now my question is whether anyone else is choosing classes using DUST...and having the classes disappear from the colorful grid below. I'll explain more if there's anyone who's in this situation.</p>