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Course Load and Hints for Course
Planning
In order to graduate in four years, you
must carry an average of 15 credits for each of your eight terms
unless you have Advanced Placement or other credits before your
arrival here, or you plan to enroll for a Spring or Summer term(s).
You always have to carry at least 12 credits during a Fall or
Winter term. Special permission is required to elect fewer than
12 or more than 18 credits. Because of the new demands of college
life, some first-year students would do well to enroll in 12 credits,
at least for the first term. Typical first-year schedules usually
include three or four courses, sometimes five courses, but rarely
six.
If you plan to transfer
to another undergraduate school of the University (e.g.,
Business Administration, Engineering, Architecture and Urban
Planning, Education), you should check to see what courses are
recommended for the first year in your particular program. Helpful
information can be found on page 15, and in Chapter
V of the LS&A Bulletin.
Start early on the language
and distribution
requirements as they apply to you. We also recommend that one
or more of your subjects be new to you and not merely a continuation
of those taken in high school. The first year of college is a
good time to explore completely new areas of interest, and you
should seize this opportunity to stretch yourself. The Fall Term
First-Year Course Guide provides a view of how broad
are the horizons of the College.
Early in your college
career it is probably unwise to take courses that require the
same study habits or patterns. For example, it might be a bad
idea to choose four courses that each require 200 pages of reading
a week. Take a variety of courses so that you can try lab courses
and discussions, lectures and heavy reading courses; language,
music, and theatre and drama all require different styles of learning
and studying. A mixture of learning styles will probably make
your first year more enjoyable.
We also urge you
not to undertake too much in your first term. Most students find
that college work requires considerably more effort and time than
do high school courses. You will probably need a term or two to
become accustomed to this new and demanding academic environment.
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