<p>is there a sort of subjective rank of difficulty of the life science classes at ucla?</p>
<p>does it go like..
biochem
physci
neurosci
mimg
mcdb
psychobio</p>
<p>missing some others...
correct me please</p>
<p>where can i find the avg gpa of those majors?</p>
<p>it doesn’t matter. they’re probably all about the same difficulty. One might be a bit harder than the other but whatever. Just pick the major you would enjoy the most and go with it.</p>
<p>biochem is not a life science.</p>
<p>as for the others, it depends what you like and what you are good at.</p>
<p>LOL it would be a travesty if you pick your major this way…</p>
<p>I suggest you read the UCLA catalog descriptions of each department. [UCLA</a> Registrar’s Office: General Catalog 2008-2009 Curricula and Courses](<a href=“http://www.registrar.ucla.edu/catalog/catalog-curricul.htm]UCLA ”>http://www.registrar.ucla.edu/catalog/catalog-curricul.htm )</p>
<p>Then follow up on the ones that seem the most interesting by going to the department websites.</p>
<p>For example:
Chemistry and Biochemistry Scope and Objectives </p>
<p>Chemistry is concerned with the composition, structure, and properties of substances, the transformations of these substances into others by reactions, and the kinds of energy changes that accompany these reactions. The department is organized in four interrelated and overlapping subdisciplines that deal primarily with the chemistry of inorganic substances (inorganic chemistry), the chemistry of carbon compounds (organic chemistry), the chemistry of living systems (biochemistry), and the physical behavior of substances in relation to their structures and chemical properties (physical chemistry).</p>
<p>[UCLA</a> Chemistry and Biochemistry](<a href=“http://www.chem.ucla.edu/]UCLA ”>http://www.chem.ucla.edu/ )
</p>
<p>biochem is NOT a LS course</p>
<p>and </p>
<p>mimg and mcdb are actually the most difficult
phys sci + neuroscience are easier</p>