<p>zfzxzzza: Er…no. A theo seminar also counts as one of the two required theo classes.</p>
<p>You can only take one seminar course…that may be what the confusion is about. You can take theo or philo as a seminar and it does count as one of the two required theo and philo courses you need.</p>
<p>Thanks everyone I got my official schedule today. (I did get a Phil seminar) </p>
<p>I do have one question though. I manually sent in my AP scores earlier this month, and got a 5 on AP Calc AB. I think it gets me out of Calc I, but I don’t think they got it in time because I am in Calc I. Since there is a Calc II at the same time, is that an easy switch? And do you guys recommend testing out of classes? I am afraid I forget everything, so maybe Calc I would be better anyways I am a biochem major. </p>
<p>Thanks for any info!!</p>
<p>They must not have received the score in time. It is definitely an easy switch and I would recommend you start at Calc II. The first quarter or so of Calc II is Calc I review. As far as testing out goes I would suggest you test out of something that is not in any way associated with your major or future aspirations/grad school.</p>
<p>Good point! I’m not a math major, so I wouldn’t mind getting out of it. Glad to hear there’s some review… thanks for the advice :)</p>
<p>Its an easy switch and I think you should opt out of Calc I, then you’ll only have to take 2 semesters of math. Since biochem has a math level requirement (through the equivalent of calc III- now taken as Math Methods for chem majors) instead of a # of classes requirement, it makes sense to skip out of the lower levels.</p>