<p>Hey,
i am a transfer student waiting to hear back from CALS for Biology and Society. </p>
<p>One of the things (and maybe the only thing) that worries me the most about Cornell if i got in and decided to go is how much reading is needed on a daily basis to keep up with the classes. I can deal with studying class notes for hours on end, but if I needed to thoroughly read 100+ pages of a textbook every night to perform well (let's say a B range) on exams, I don't know if i could hack it since reading is my weak point.</p>
<p>For current students, any input on this?</p>
<p>thank you.</p>
<p>It sounds like you should stay wherever you are.</p>
<p>Chill out. I cant read more than 10 pages a day.</p>
<p>any CURRENT students have any input/advice?</p>
<p>You're asking if Cornell is going to make you read a lot. You sound like a complete idiot. Stay where you are. Why are you even in college. McDonald's will make you read less than any other place.</p>
<p>it is a valid question bongoboy. i don't think he is trying to be lazy. anyways mftransfer look at other threads your question has already been answered indirectly on other threads. i think it depends on your major- engineering they have a lot of problem sets to do. ilr has a lot of reading to do. etc</p>
<p>bongoboy- i didn't ask if cornell was going to make me read a lot. i basically asked if the reading required on a nightly basis was incredibly overwhelming/had to be done thoroughly all the time (vs. on occation, skimming for basic comprehension) in order to pass to my own satisfaction, a B level. no need for your snide remarks.</p>
<p>abike11- thanks for the suggestion (and for not being such an a*sshole), i will look into other threads for this.</p>