<p>Would it be a bad idea to take all of these in one semester or should i wait until summer to take physics 1?</p>
<p>Depends on how you are as a student and how prepared you are for the courses.</p>
<p>Did you take those courses as a high school (regular, honors, or AP) and did you struggle or excel in them? Are you pretty quick at catching on to science classes? Have you had a semester of college to base how much you can handle at one time? What does your school recommend?</p>
<p>At my school, the general course progression is to take bio and chem their first year and then to take physics your second year, but it all depends on the student and their background.</p>
<p>Yeah it depends on how you do in the fall semester. A lot of people can handle it. Last spring I took bio 2, organic chem 2, and physics 2, but that was because I worked my way up in the fall before spring. Make your fall semester pretty challenging to see how you handle the pressure.</p>
<p>As the others have said, it all depends on how you are as a student. This coming fall I’m taking calculus 1, general physics 1, general chemistry 1, intro to anthropology, and beginning spanish 1. None of those are really “easy” classes by any means. Anthro will probably be the easiest of the 5, and that’s probably not going to be all that easy.</p>
<p>I’m a good student though, and I spend basically all of my time during the week studying. I study a lot over the weekends too usually. My social life becomes almost non-existent when school’s in. </p>
<p>Are you taking any other classes along with those? It would certainly be a busy semester, but it’s not unreasonable.</p>
<p>Do these all have labs? If so, I would check myself and find a way to take one or more of these at another time.</p>
<p>I have known people to take 2 science classes at once and do fine. 3 might be very challenging though.</p>