What classes are u guys taking next semester?

<p>Incoming freshman at NYU CAS,</p>

<p>Bio.
Chem.
Calc.
And two required seminars, one of which counts for 0.0 credits.</p>

<p>Oh, and six day a week classes. :(</p>

<p>in posts, when people say to the OP, whats the OP??</p>

<p>original poster</p>

<p>another question, if I have taken 4 years of foreign language in high school, do I still have to take foreign language in college?</p>

<p>u should see if ur college requires it for graduation, but most likely not.
my university doesnt require me to take foreign languages, unless your major is smth like international business or those type</p>

<p>hey guys do u think those university seminar classes are any useful at all?
i've already picked 5 classes so i get 15 credits..
the university seminar is 1 credit only.. its not required but its only like 1 hour 1 day per week so its not that bad.. worth taking?</p>

<p>and how come nobody is taking those sports classes at all? bball? surfing?</p>

<p>All filled here at UMD. Taken by the upper classmen except for one 8 AM intermediate basketball class (yeah right!). I am planning on taking bowling next semester and then various others in subsequent semesters.</p>

<p>I'm not taking any elective-type things because my schedule's pretty much set...I'm pretty sure for the first two years.</p>

<p>As for those University Seminar classes, my brother said it was dumb, but he says everything is dumb. At my school (I don't know about others) they do a lot with organization, study habits, and time management. I'm sure it'll be helpful, though...as in it'll be an easy A. I'm looking for as many of those as possible with my major...shoot.</p>

<p>I already compulsively write down everything I need to do, though. It's pretty sad...I have a planner I carry around so I can put stuff in it as I hear about it, a calender that I write everything down on a second time, and a white board on my wall that I write everything on for a third time so I can just glance at it to see what's coming up. That and I like crossing things off...it's a false sense of accomplishment or something, I guess?</p>

<ul>
<li> PHYS 162L. Advanced Principles of Physics II

<ul>
<li>CSCI 303. Design and Analysis of Algorithms</li>
<li>ENGR 100B. Engineering Honors Colloquium</li>
<li>MATH 445. Mathematics of Physics and Engineering II</li>
<li>MATH 458. Numerical Methods</li>
<li>MATH 430. Theory of Numbers</li>
</ul></li>
</ul>

<p>I'm probably going to drop numerical methods, just too much otherwise. </p>

<p>The kinda-generic sounding "math of physics & engineering 2" is mostly vector field theory, Stoke's Theorem, and lotsa partial differential equations. :)</p>

<p>the ENGR 100B is a seminar class. It's 1 unit, graded credit/no credit, once per week. If you show up at least 12 weeks out of 15, you pass. Otherwise, you don't. Plus one of those weeks is a free lunch :)</p>

<p>Math 408D- Honors Calculus
PSY 301- Intro to Psychology
PHL 301- Intro to Philosophy
GOV 310L- American Government
ANT 302- Cultural Antropology </p>

<p>Trying to switch ANT 302 with MIS 301 (mangement information systems), but I'm still on the waitlist. </p>

<p>This is at UT Austin btw as a freshman.</p>

<p>freshman @ Howard University</p>

<p>Freshman Seminar
Calc 1
Intro to Political Science
Literature of Love
Spanish 3
Freshman Composition 002</p>

<p>Introductory Astronomy w/ Lab
Freshman Writing Seminar
Quantitative Reasoning/Math Skills
Intro to Philosophy
Philosophy and Society w/ Recitation</p>

<p>Organic Chemistry I w/o lab - 4 cr.
Physiological Psychology - 3 cr.
Health Psychology - 3 cr.
Quantitative Methods for Psychology - 4 cr.</p>

<p>And either Physics I w/lab 4 cr. or Cognition 3 cr.</p>

<p>Not an easy schedule but very doable.</p>

<p>Calc II, 4 credits
General Chemistry for Engineers, 3 credits
Honors Colloquium, 1 credit
Intro to Poetry, 3 credits
Honors Seminar: Novels and Who We Are, 3 credits
Intro to Engineering Design, 3 credits</p>

<p>17 in all. I should manage.</p>

<p>(quarter system)</p>

<p>Math 3A: Calculus for Life Science Students</p>

<p>Chem 14A: Atomic and Molecular Structure, Equilibria, Acids, and Bases</p>

<p>NEUROSC 10: Brain Made Simple: Neuroscience for the 21st Century</p>

<p>...and one more class that I have yet to choose...</p>

<p>Freshman engineer at Purdue</p>

<p>Calculus 1 - 5 credits
General Chemistry 1 - 4 credits
Intro Physics - 3 credits
Engineering Problem Solving and Computer Tools - 3 credits
Freshman Engineering Lecture - 1 credit</p>

<p>Total - 16 credits, taking it easy I think :)</p>

<p>My classes are really spaced out every day lol. Which means my Polyphasic sleep schedule will work :)</p>

<p>Sophomore Comp Sci at Cornell
Signed up for:
CHIN 101: Introduction to Mandarin
COMS 211: Computers and Programming
COMS 212: Java Practicum
COMS 280: Discrete Structures
ORIE 350: Financial Accounting
PSYCH 101: Introduction to Psychology
MATH 332: Algebra and Number Theory</p>

<p>24 credits (12 required for full time students, average is ~16)</p>

<p>Gonna drop something once the semester starts, however.</p>

<p>freshman theatre performance major at Oklahoma City University</p>

<p>Theatre 1403. Acting 1
Applied Music 1371. Applied Music: Voice
Religion 1003. Intro to Bib Lit
Theatre 1113. Script Analysis
History 1003. United States History To 1876
Kinesiology and Exercise Studies 1302. Wellness</p>

<p>And if I can't CLEP test out of it, English 1113. Composition 1. I hope I can though, or that class is going to cost me over $1000. It's 18 hrs with, 15 w/o.</p>

<p>Why does it seem like 95% of the posters here are going to major in science/engineering?</p>

<p>Wow, why is everyone taking like fifteen classes in one semester?</p>

<p>I'm taking:
Principles of Economics
German
French
The Portrait (history of potraits in the Mediterranean)</p>

<p>My concentration is probably going to b International Relations, Linguistics, history... I don't know.</p>

<p>As you can see, I'm opting for the non-suicidal method of education.</p>

<p>Freshman at Chapman University, Psychology Major</p>

<p>Freshman Foundation Course:War and Human Nature in Literature and Film
English 104 Writing about Literature
Intro to Film Aesthetics
Elementary Japanese I
Psychology Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences</p>

<p>All classes in the afternoon so NO morning classes, thank god.</p>