<p>I'm currently spreading out my math subjects per term and I found out that I have to take two math classes in one term in order to satisfy prereqs.</p>
<p>For the engineering majors out there, do you think taking Math 24 and Math 26 at the same time would be feasible? I'll be taking Phys 4B during that term too.</p>
<p>Math 24 - elem. differential equations
Math 26 - intro to linear alg
Phys 4B - intro to classical electromagnetism</p>
<p>Depends on what else you are taking... These are pretty hard classes so I wouldn't take more than 16-18 units that semester.</p>
<p>I took Linear Algebra, Differential Equations, Electricity & Magnetism, Thermodynamics, some GE History, and CS during one semester while I was working 20h/week and everything went well. It's definitely doable. </p>
<p>I would be worried about the physics, not the math, The physics will take most of your time.</p>
<p>i just finished a 23 unit semester with multivariable calculus and linear algebra and got a 4.0 . I found linear algebra to be very easy to pick up and very straightforward. For our class, we use the book by Lay, which is the same one used in the Math 54 class at UC Berkeley. Differential Equations is not too bad and as an engineering student you need to be used to heavy semesters full of technical courses.</p>
<p>definitely doable. differential is pretty easy and the only hard thing about linear algebra is the emphasis on proofs. have you taken any other upper division math classes before, such as mult calc or discrete math; if youre familiar with proofs, it should be fairly doable.</p>