<p>Cousin busted his ass in EE126 Probability and Random Processes. Said it's the most challenging class he's ever taken. I'm intrigued.</p>
<p>bump</p>
<p>Any other suggestions?</p>
<p>Take any class with professor Gregor in Political Science. The greatest professor that ever lived.</p>
<p>One of the most interesting classes I've taken is Theater 60 on stagecraft which is what I'm taking now. As someone with absolutely no experience in theater, I find it very interesting to learn about all the parts and processes that go into producing a production. Plus, what you learn is very practical and useful in the future. And you also get to be a part of making things for shows or be a part of a run crew (people who work live behind-the-scenes during the show) as part of the class.</p>
<p>Math 55/CS 70. As enjoyable as puzzle-solving can ever get!</p>
<p>MCB c100a and Chem 135</p>
<p>As an MCB major, these were my two favorite classes and probably the only mcb upper divs I really learned anything in. Excellent courses worthy of their units.</p>
<p>Soc 3AC with Smith</p>
<p>Took this my freshman year and I still remember the readings. I liked the fact that the reader was chock-full of statistical studies and not ******** feel-good rhetoric. Professor Smith was an objective lady with a good sense of reason. </p>
<p>Looking forward to Math 55, 127, Chem 108, 115, Stat 133 - if you have insight, holla.</p>
<p>No one mentioned Astronomy C10 with Alex Filippenko!? Seriously?! He even has a Wikipedia entry about him! Well so do other professors at Berkeley but still..</p>
<p>He is brilliant...really made Astronomy interesting for me. Prior to the class, I had no interest whatsoever. I didn't even know what the hell a light-year was (honestly). He's hilarious and an amazing speaker. Makes complicated topics easy to understand. I wish I could articulate as well as him. </p>
<p>Not the easiest class in the world if you're into humanities. A bunch of people I know who are majoring in math/science think this class is the easiest in the world...but people like me who suck at math and science have to struggle a bit. There's actually a good amount of work...it's not a class you can just breeze by. Homework due almost every week...labs that are actually really easy but everyone procrastinates on them and ends up throwing something together 10 minutes before it's due (at least that's what I did)...GO TO LECTURE AND ONLY USE THE WEBCASTS IF YOU ABSOLUTELY NEED TO.</p>
<p>Econ 182 (international monetary economics) with professor gourrinchas. Teaches you about how money works in the global economy, and you have to read 4 Economist articles every week. He applies it to the real world very well, and once you get out you'll know everything that's going on in the global economy.</p>