<p>Hi everyone, i would appreciate any advice for the summer courseload</p>
<p>As a transfer, I am behind my schedule for graduating on time (at this rate i might even have to take 5+ semester to graduate... and idk if they will even let me do that)</p>
<p>anyways, so for summer I am thinking three or four possible scenarios</p>
<ol>
<li>only take cs61bl..</li>
<li>take econ100a, econ100b concurrently</li>
<li>take only one of the upper econ</li>
<li>take one upper econ and cs61bl...</li>
</ol>
<p>I am leaning toward first or second option...</p>
<p>Am a eecs major, not so much back ground on java..
and for econ, have taken lower div econ in my cc a while ago.. so kinda worries me if i can even recall econ stuff... (but can take as P/NP)</p>
<p>are my options okay? I would like to hear some experiences on how those summer classes felt like...</p>
<p>Thank you in advance!</p>
<p>Definitely sign up for 4 or 2. If I were you I would probably do option 4, just so you can really start upper div cs asap. That or option 1, but I think you’ll find yourself thinking that you’d be able to handle more if you just took one course.</p>
<p>Best would be to take as soon as possible any lower division prerequisites for your major that you have not taken already – CS 61A/B/C, CS 70, EE 40, EE 20N.</p>
<p>Also, with respect to Economics, you may want to consider 101A/B instead of 100A/B if you like math and are good at it.</p>
<p>I agree with what ucbalumnus said. It would make it easier for you to complete upper div stuff if you get 61B and EE20N or EE40 (or CS 70) done over the summer. An added plus is that you can use econ as one of your easier non-technical courses (if you take 100 as opposed to 101).</p>
<p>finished ee20n, ee40, cs61a,c
and not sure if i want to go ee or cs… I am very interested in both…</p>
<p>i was wondering if anyone took 61bl over summer
I asked someone who took it and he strongly opposes taking it over summer
pace too fast and you dont really learn alot over shuch a short time</p>
<p>any other inputs?</p>