<p>Out of curiosity, does anyone know/have an opinion on this:</p>
<p>I am attending a technical school, and first semester took Physics, Calculus, Computer Science, and Economics, and am currently taking another Math class, Physics, Chemistry, and Economics (a different class). Would the fact that I have taken a curriculum almost completely focused on math/science (as is relatively normal at my school) hurt my chances at a liberal arts college?</p>
<p>(NOTE: I do have AP credit for US Hist and Lit and Comp as well as a few more math/sciences and a humanities/philosophy course at another college that I took in high school that may or may not count, if this helps or changes the situation)</p>
<p>No it would not. Especially if you are majoring in the sciences, many of the courses you have completed or are in duration of completing satisfy some of the core requirements needed to satisfy a degree in sciences at a liberal arts college...if that is yor intention.</p>
<p>Nope! Especially if thats your major, and they offer it, don't sweat it! I'm trying to do the same, im transferring from a purely technical school (they have some liberal arts degrees, but im restricted from a lot of them due to engineering) and i needed a writing course, but the school just said that i could make the writing classes up during a free elective. I would include in your essays of "why transfer" why you want to go to a more liberal arts school. It might help explain your courses too, if you say "my school offers very few LA classes, when i want an education with LA classes, which is my reason to transfer"</p>
<p>Well, to be honest, the liberal arts classes aren't all that important to me. It's more a situation where "I'd like to transfer if it's possible, and the school just happens to be a liberal arts college," but I'm guessing it probably wouldn't necessarily be a good idea to mention that . . .</p>