First a bit of background:
So I’m currently a junior in HS taking college math classes, and by the end of this year the math I’ll have taken thus far will be AP Calc BC (5), Calculus III, ODE’s, PDE’s, and a class entitled ‘intro to higher mathematics.’ Since I have completed most other graduation requirements, I’m free to take several more math courses next year as well - I am planning on having finished Linear Algebra, Geometry, Number Theory, Real Variables I, Real Variables II, and Complex Variables by the end of my senior year, so I’ll have a substantial chunk of undergrad math out of the way before going to college. I’m planning on getting a B.S. in mathematics, and then, eventually, a PhD as well.
As such, I want to take a (fairly) large amount of graduate math courses before I graduate from college. So my question is, do most universities allow undergrads to enroll in graduate level courses, provided all prereqs have been filled? Or is it something that varies widely with each university? In case it helps, I am most likely going to attend either U of Cincinnati or U of KY.
They usually will, as many students will want to get some beginning grad-level courses out of the way. But it can also depend on how full the class is.
I took graduate courses to substitute for a variety of undergraduate requirements, in 5 or 6 subjects, as part of an honors curriculum. It’s better than being bored in UG courses.
I’ll have most gen eds out of the way, too, from AP credit, so I’ll probably focus on courses in my major from the start, meaning I’d finish most undergrad offerings by the end of freshman year and start graduate level courses as a sophomore. I was just making sure there weren’t restrictions on when you’d be allowed to take them