<p>What's an easy natural science credit for non-majors that I can take in the spring? I've already taken baby bio...</p>
<p>GLY1000: Dynamic Earth,
GLY1102 Dinosaurs & Disasters,
MET1010 Intro to the Atmosphere,
OCE1001 Elementary Oceanography</p>
<p>I just sorta went down the Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences listings, so if those aren’t your thing my bad :).</p>
<p>thanks but I was kind of hoping for personal opinions on classes people have take because I hear mixed reviews about all of these classes except for dynamic earth but that one doesn’t work with my schedule.</p>
<p>I’ve taken two of those four classes (MET1010 and OCE1001), and have also taken essentially the same classes for the other two (GLY2010 and GLY2100, instead of 1000 and 1102). </p>
<p>It’s going to depend on what you are most interested in. Let’s say of those four classes, are you most interested in learning about the atmosphere and how it works, the oceans and how they work, or how the earth has changed over the last 550 million years (give or take a couple million years there)? </p>
<p>I enjoyed MET1010 the most of those, but the one I took was with Professor Ruescher, who focuses much more on climate change than the other professors. I also took OCE1001, which I did enjoy, although I had a severe dislike for the fact that when I took it, there were 3 different professors (each taught 5 week segments of the class), and each had drastically different teaching styles. I do not know however if they are still doing that.</p>
<p>Aside from those courses, I do not know what else qualifies for the Natural Science requirements.</p>
<p>I’m taking MET1010 right now. It’s a fairly interesting class and it’s very relevant to what’s happening everyday. I have Dr. Ahlquist, but I believe that he isn’t teaching it next semester.</p>
<p>For natural science I took earth science ESC1000 with the lab ESC1000L. It was very easy.</p>
<p>thanks everyone!</p>