<p>I went over my LS1 notes like every freaking day and defined all the "Terms to Know" that Hespenheide gave out on the course website and went over those before the final. I also had just finished AP Bio so I guess that was a boon. Aced it. I guess it depends on the prof. But I don't think you can just get by reading the book and reading the notes, you'll want to make flashcards and like, rewrite your notes and stuff. Like, people who said it was all memorization weren't exaggerating. Like, they were underexaggerating. Or whatever. </p>
<p>Chem 14B is killing me. It's not fun to cram for, because I'm being an idiot and putting homework off. I wish I were the type to allot an hour for chem homework every day. Because then I could probably pwn. Material's not hard, just tedious and there's so much of it. God, I'm so sick of chem. I heave everytime I look at my chem book/notes.</p>
<p>So to answer your question, yes, it will hurt. I hope you're really good at stats.</p>
<p>Only ended up with one class that I had originally planned on taking, haha. Oh well, it all worked out:</p>
<p>GE Cluster 60CW
History 8C (Latin American Social History)
History 100 (History and Historians) <--- kinda scared for that one because I'm a first year and I've only taken lower div history so far
Art History C103A (on museums... yeah. it's for my minor)</p>
<p>Pretty nice schedule... Thursdays are kinda hellish, but I get Fridays off and only one class on Mondays and Wednesdays (both are 3 hour classes though)... taking four classes for the first time, so we'll see how that goes...</p>
<p>Hey Raychul. I was scared to take my first UD history course freshman year. It was fine and I left unscathed. As long as you choose a pretty good professor and keep up with a similar work ethic, you should do well if you're motivated enough. The UD courses are, naturally, more specific and lack discussion sections (yay!).</p>