<p>Graduate with that 4.0 and criticize the academic infrastructure at your speech. It’d be pretty enlightening.</p>
<p>^^^ second this.</p>
<p>but don’t be a ■■■■■, op.</p>
<p>AND… you probably wont be challenged academically in higher division classes. Okay, maybe in the amount of work, but there is not much to process here either. History CAN be thought-provoking, but most of the UCLA history professors fail at that task. Boo. Read 1776 for something fun. Then try philosophy for your major. You might like it better. </p>
<p>OH, and I took an honors course with a Professor Sabl who usually teaches Public Policy to graduate students. He does teach some poli. sci. classes and may teach another honors course next fall. Take him if you want to be challenged. He’s a tough professor.</p>
<p>Research 10char</p>
<p>Cool story, bro.</p>
<p>To OP:</p>
<p>Even with your 4.0 GPA, I would never hire you for a job. Good luck - I hope you mature through college.</p>
<p>"All individuals inherently gravitate towards a particular subject matter/major/vocational choice. Try googling Holland Codes and see how they relate to academic subject areas. Mine is EIC, which (not coincidentally) corresponds with my majors. The fact that I’m studying these “easy” fields doesn’t mean I’m dumber or lazier than south campus majors; it just means that I don’t have the attitudinal predisposition that’s needed to study mathematics and the life/physical sciences. It’s the same reason why south campus majors as an aggregate can’t write for ***** You’re not predisposed towards being good writers.</p>
<p>You can’t quantify intelligence from one’s choice of major, and it’s ridiculous that south campus majors continue to trump up the difficulty of their classes. The only reason south campus has a reputation for being “hard” is because of the huge number of students taking south campus classes who don’t belong there in the first place. In other words, they have Holland Codes suitable for north campus majors, but they’re flunking OChem and Calc because they’re desperate to make the big bucks that surgeons and engineers make, or because their parents are forcing them to."</p>
<p>That second paragraph was B.S. The reason south campus majors complain about their classes being harder is because THEIR CLASSES ARE HARDER. There’s just no way to debate this without sounding foolish. In order to succeed in a south campus major, you spend about 5x as much time studying and learning than you do in a north campus major. There are curves. The material is harder to grasp. Etc.</p>
<p>I’m someone who’s always been good at English and math. I set out on the trail of humanities, but found it didn’t challenge me enough so I switched to computer science. Maybe it’s not my absolute strong point, but I have no doubt that it’s stretching my brain and helping me become a smarter person (my college goal).</p>