<p>schedule yourself one semester at a time. based on the first semester it seems you're not even in college yet. you may not like your major classes or a class may not be offered or you may be locked out of a class. take it one semester at a time. just make a list of all the classes you have to as requirements to graduate and check them off as you finish those classes.</p>
<p>I have already taken some college, but this fall will be the first time I'm a full time college student. I just am trying to make sure I don't end up taking 4 sciences at once.</p>
<p>i took college classes when i was a junior and senior in high school. as in i had to go to the college campus and was being taught by a college professor. i accumulated 15 credits like that (1 class every semester). however that was very different from going into my university full time as i am now. i don't think 1 or two years ahead in terms of my schedule. i only think about the next semester. if you don't want to take a subject more than once a semester then don't. just take one (or 2, 3, etc. whatever you're comfortable with) class in that subject you're trying to avoid per semester. like i said, look at you're requirements and see what you have left and what you need to do.</p>
<p>for example, generally at my school everyone starts their major requirements jr yr. however b/c i hate the liberal arts core requirement and since I'm almost done with them i decided to start taking my major requirements now. this way when i register for the liberal arts core requirement i'll have an advantage over the freshmen and sophomores who are registering for those easy professors. (the more credits you have the earlier you register).</p>
<p>it really depends on your background... for some people that would be WAY too much, but for others, your load would be fairly typical.
Are you pre-med and hoping to do an MD/MBA or something? (based on your courseload)</p>
<p>Your schedule looks kind of scattered (not systematic) to me.
If you're going to plan it ahead of time like this, you should make sure you take into account when classes are most likely to be offered as well as difficulty levels, pre-reqs, etc.
Also, will you be taking trig-based physics or calc-based physics?
Calc is harder but looks better for med schools and such. However, I would suggest doing a full year of calc if you're going to apply to med school (or pharm, etc.) and also doing that before taking physics would be helpful.
One thing you might want to avoid is taking micro and o-chem together.
If you want to get a good head start, you might consider taking gen chem 2 this summer and then start fresh with Bio I/II and Applied Calc I/II Fall/Spring followed by O-Chem I/II soph yr and so forth...</p>
<p>BP, I will have 25-30 credits from doing concurrent enrollment by the time I go.</p>
<p>apumic, I'm going to school to be a pharmacist (your pretty good at guessing!).<br>
I don't really know for sure what the physics is based from.<br>
I think that the calc I'm taking is geared toward medical careers. Calc 1 and 2 wouldn't be accepted for that credit.
I'm actually considering taking microbiology over the summer.
I would take chem 2 asap, but the university i'm attending highly recommends that I take the rest of my science with them, so thats out of the question.</p>
<p>The main reason why I showed my whole plan is so that someone could say "hey switch this class with that one". I know that sometimes the classes aren't offered or they get full, so I won't be devastated if my schedule doen't work out.</p>
<p>Your schedule looks good. You might have an advantage being able to take Chem II from the start, because you won't have to worry about the class filling up and you could end up avoiding a tough Chem I professor. At least that would have helped many people at my university.</p>