The major with least MATH

<p>I need to figuere out a good major for me without the math or the least of it. I am a Computer engineering student and all my 1st year classes are A and B but math I actually got an F. I dont know how i did it. math is just somthing i am not good in and classes like calculus are beyond me</p>

<p>As a student in HS who was a C student in writing and a A in science and everything else and a B in math. i got a A in elglish which was a writing</p>

<p>I like animals, computers, I am extremly good in life sciences such as biology. I am also very good in remembering things in life sciences. so being a doctor is a 100% possibility</p>

<p>1) It's never good to misspell English, especially after stating you got an A in it. =P</p>

<p>2) Math is a fundamental parth of many of your interests. So my advice is to buy books, get tutors, live, eat, breat, sleep, poop math. Make it your friend, because you will need it to pursue a major in the areas of which you have interest.</p>

<p>3) If you are interested in being a doctor, math is not usually a pre-req to apply, but it is to get into most physics programs. So, if you apply to a college, apply to one with physics series (1 year) that only requires trig and not calc. But then you cna only apply to med schools with no higher level math requirement...although you may still need to take pre-calc or stats. But Stats is easy.</p>

<p>Exilio makes some good points. But you should also be aware that most top medical schools require that you take at the very least one full year of Calculus. But of course there are some universities that don't really have any strict requirements for admission into their medical program. For example, Northwestern University states that a Bachelor's degree isn't even required to get into its medical school, although it's obviously preferred. Plus, Northwestern University only provides a list of recommended but not required courses.</p>

<p>leisure studies</p>

<p>Harri,</p>

<p>Actually, and I did lots of research on this, only 25% of the medical schools have a math requirement of some kind, and of those, only a handful had a year of calc as a requirement...I don't have my research papers in front of me, but it is not very many, I remember that.</p>

<p>But still, sometimes applying to med schools is a numbers game, so being able to not restrict yourself when applying to med school would be ideal.</p>

<p>Just take the class over... don't pass up computer engineering!</p>