<p>Well, you can do that sort of thing with an advisor. In my experience, college is extremely different from high school in that here, while you do have some requirements, there are so many options. It's not like you have to take 1 semester of government; you have to take a humanities course, but there are MANY humanities courses you can choose from (look for DB-Hum, I think, in the Bulletin). </p>
<p>If you have a particular career path in mind, like being pre-med, it will be especially helpful to create a tentative 4-year-plan just to lay out when you'll be taking your chem, math, physics, and all that good stuff.</p>
<p>Other than that, you probably don't have to plan things down to the level of "Which EC-Gender class am I going to take and when?" You especially don't have to do that ASAP. Maybe if you hit junior year and still have a handful of GERs to take care of, you should start planning approximately when to take those classes and which ones sound interesting to you.</p>
<p>Look through the Bulletin and see what looks interesting to you. Take some neat classes. When you're about to settle on a major, then I think it is a very good time to set out a tentative 4-year plan to make sure that you can graduate on time. You can see if you have time for another major, or a minor, or time to go abroad, or just time to take random fun classes.</p>
<p>Bottom line: You can't plan college in any great detail, especially at your stage, but advisors will be there to help you along the way :)</p>