What is the one class you would never take--no matter what?

<p>I would never take a Christian religion class. I know I would get an F. It would be like inviting Richard Dawkins to bible study.</p>

<p>Richard Dawkins would ace that class and get an F because the professor didn’t like his attitude.</p>

<p>That is so immature.</p>

<p>Any class movie based class, I would fall asleep every class, and end with a low grade. I can’t learn from movies lol too boring.</p>

<p>I’m an atheist and I’ve taken plenty of religion classes- including 9 years of Catholic school. I survived and thrived even ;)</p>

<p>I would never take a botany class. Plants bore me.</p>

<p>The required creationism class at Liberty University. Guess that means I can never go to Liberty. Darn. </p>

<p>At my own school, I would never enroll in either optics or organic chemistry.</p>

<p>Any physics beyond what I’ve already taken or anatomy.</p>

<p>Religion classes in most departments are taught from a philosophical and academic standpoint, not a religions/belief-based one.</p>

<p>LAT 202: Intermediate Latin: Poetry.</p>

<p>Organic Chemistry, unless it was pass or fail.</p>

<p>I’m an atheist, and one of the most fascinating classes I’ve ever taken was a world religions class. Those types of classes are not about preaching the views of a religion in the sense of them being ‘correct.’ It’s an academic, philosophical perspective on the developments of religion. I’d hazard a guess that Dawkins took a few classes about religion in his time.</p>

<p>You wouldn’t have to argue about the religion being ‘wrong,’ because they wouldn’t be teaching it in a way that portrayed it as being ‘right.’ Most atheists would likely enjoy comparative religion type classes quite a bit.</p>

<p>Personally, I would never want to take a psychology class. I find a lot of psychological theory to be interesting, but it can also be an incredibly tedious and drawn out subject.</p>

<p>Probably this class called Machine Design that a friend of mine was telling me about and has been complaining to me for the last 8 or so weeks. Sure, they build interesting stuff, but I went through the book for about 10 minutes and it was probably the most boring piece of literature I could find on this planet. </p>

<p>I’d probably avoid any kind of business class. I would probably find them thoroughly mind-numbing. Especially after all the business models I made for 20 weeks of my life and all the business problems I solved for Operations Research.</p>

<p>Probably an college level art class. I’m too impatient to create anything besides stick figures.</p>

<p>Probably any sort of “studies” class. Asian American Studies, African American Studies, Women’s Studies. It would just bore me to death.</p>

<p>Oh, and any of those watered-down math/physics courses. The physics series for biology majors at my school is a running joke with everyone, including people who teach the class. It’s essentially 8th grade math taught through 5 hours of “lab” where you solve algebra problems. Literally everyone I know who has taken it says they know less about physics after taking it.</p>

<p>I’ve actually found the calculus for business course to be harder than the normal Calc courses. Way too many word problems. I’ll take proofs any day.</p>

<p>I’ve never taken calculus for business, but I have several friends that have. From what I’ve always heard at my school, business calc is one of the hardest classes at my school. It has a very high drop rate/fail rate. I work in my schools tutoring lab, and there are almost always study groups in there for that class.</p>

<p>A lot of people view it as being “fake calculus” because it’s more applied and leaves out a lot of the theoretical aspects that we get in a regular calculus sequence. That makes it more difficult in many respects though. It ties in ideas from all over the entire calc sequence into one semester, and it’s full of word problems. They’re doing stuff right now that you don’t see until the third semester of a regular calculus sequence. They might not get the rigorous treatment of the theory, but the class isn’t necessarily easier because of that fact.</p>

<p>Really? At my school our business calculus course is ions easier than a regular calculus course. People frequently refer to it as a “blow off” class. I wonder what that says about my school. :-(</p>

<p>Business calculus is weak sauce. I’m a math major.</p>

<p>Also, the reason I wrote that I would never take religion is because it bores me to death. It’s not necessarily that I think the departments are biased or something.</p>

<p>I know I might get some hostile reactions, but I will further that and say a business major in general is for the weak-minded.</p>

<p>So there are no weak-minded math majors? You seem pretty insecure. LOL!
Nice trolling.</p>