What the size of your largest class?

<p>So I looked at my class sizes and one of my classes has 200 students. Thats crazy. Then I have 2 classes with 40 students and one with 20. Is this normal? How big are your classes? Oh yea and another one with 280</p>

<p>i think my biggest had around 450</p>

<p>8 inches...oh wait</p>

<p>COMP116 - 100 students
MATH233 - 35 students
ANTH101 - 35 students
ENGL102I - 18 students
WMST101 - 285 students</p>

<p>Holy bajeezus. Classes GET that big?</p>

<p>My biggest last quarter was probably my English class which was full to capacity at 27. My smallest was my Jazz Improv class with seven or eight.</p>

<p>Some classes can afford to be big, some can't. Music classes really can't, English classes can't either. Large state schools will tend to have large intro classes.</p>

<p>Try taking an introductory economics class at a large state school (like University of Minnesota)... easily 500 people in the class.</p>

<p>I would say my intro to philosophy class was about 400+.</p>

<p>lol i just talked to my adviser and ended up switching to a class of 20 from 280 cuz there was one opening. I still have my intro to econ which has 200, but whatever its fine.</p>

<p>Think my biggest was around 100 people. My smallest class last year was probably 20 students (actual class, not discussion section) and the average was probably around 30.</p>

<p>600.</p>

<p>s</p>

<p>My biggest class is a freshman engineering orientation class that they only offer 3 times, and that class is 18 away from being full at 220 students.</p>

<p>Smallest class being English Comp 1 which they top out at 19 students.</p>

<p>I had some classes freshman year that were pretty big. They were between 150 and 400 probably. I had intro to psychology in this ridiculously huge lecture room that easily seats at LEAST 300, probably more. Math was probably about 175. History was about 200 for world history 1 (smaller room), 300 for world history 2 (same room as intro to psych). Chemistry 1 and 2 were both huge, too- probably about 250 each (in the same room). None of my english classes have been over 30, usually about 20. All of my French classes have been between 15 and 20. My anthropology classes have been between 25 and 40, although I took the intro during the summer; during the year, it is normally about 100 in the intro.</p>

<p>My second-semester freshman chemistry lecture class appears to be set at 356 students right now. Eek. It's not that surprising, though, because that's the ONLY time that particular class is being offered this semester. On the other hand, my other classes are capped at 25 students (Chinese 1001), 20 students (Honors Classical Mythology), 32 (Honors Integral Calculus), and a whopping ten kids for my intro to Honors seminar. So that should be all right.</p>

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<p>Most of my classes had 15-20 students.</p>

<p>My largest is 85.</p>

<p>My smallest had 6 students (nobody signed up and I ended up dropping it).</p>

<p>i had two classes last semester of 350, both biology and chemistry.</p>

<p>it really just depends on the size of the university and the type of material being taught. if its a class that is a prerequisite for many students, expect big classes. if its a class that teaches material that is better taught through discussion or interpretation (english, some psych and math) then expect them to be small, etc.</p>

<p>The college I'm going to is a pretty small one. When I was touring it, they told us that the classes were designed to hold up to 80 students, but none of them had ever had a class with more than 30.</p>

<p>I'd much rather have a small class than a class of 200; less impersonal.</p>

<p>My Econ class has about 400 students.</p>

<p>wel my bros was about 44 he said</p>