- Sep 10, 2004
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Right now I'm enrolled in a high school program that gives both college and high school credit (for those that don't know). It also means I get free tuition by the state. Right now I'm faced with scheduling dilemmas due to the fact that I have 1 senior class that takes up 2 hours. The other dilemma is that I take classes at two community colleges to make it up, but both start at different times (one starts at :30, other starts at :00). At this point I'm going for my AS in computer science and transferring that over to my college of choice.
The required classes for me to finish my AS at this point are
Differential Equations
Linear Algebra
Java II
Engineering physics II and III.
The problems I have
- Linear algebra overlaps with Java II (java is 11:00, linear algebra is 11:30)
- Linear algebra can be taken by an alternative teacher in the evening who is known to be hard(6:30 - 8:30 p.m.) (Do I want to risk a low grade again?)
- Differential equations is not taught during winter quarter
- Due to me taking engineering physics at a different community college, it overlaps two time slots at the other college (9:30 - 10:20, 1:45 - 4:35)
- My high school takes up 3 time slots ( 12 - 3 )
- I also have an online course which is due during winter quarter = 5 classes over fall including HS
The required classes for me to finish the prequirements for computer engineering @ the university I want to attend are:
-Engineering physics II
-Java II
Problems I have
-Because of my ignorance of taking a calculus III class with an incomprehensible teacher with students retaking the course from other universities, I have a 2.1 for calculus III
-Department requires 3.0 cumulative for all math and science classes = retake calculus III
So how should I spread this out?
-I could take the whole physics series in winter
-I can take linear alegebra in winter
-Can hope for differential equations in spring as well as java II
-Can retake calculus III all alone for summer and hope I make it up
I want to transfer over to my university of choice in fall, so I don't know what is the right thing to do. I would like to utilize as much free tuition as possible because money doesn't grow on trees, and free $1,500 tuitions is great. I also want to spread out how much I can complete to different departments in case I don't get in computer engineering.
If any of you need clarifications do so, my mind is sort of skewed at the moment (just finished my java assignment).
The required classes for me to finish my AS at this point are
Differential Equations
Linear Algebra
Java II
Engineering physics II and III.
The problems I have
- Linear algebra overlaps with Java II (java is 11:00, linear algebra is 11:30)
- Linear algebra can be taken by an alternative teacher in the evening who is known to be hard(6:30 - 8:30 p.m.) (Do I want to risk a low grade again?)
- Differential equations is not taught during winter quarter
- Due to me taking engineering physics at a different community college, it overlaps two time slots at the other college (9:30 - 10:20, 1:45 - 4:35)
- My high school takes up 3 time slots ( 12 - 3 )
- I also have an online course which is due during winter quarter = 5 classes over fall including HS
The required classes for me to finish the prequirements for computer engineering @ the university I want to attend are:
-Engineering physics II
-Java II
Problems I have
-Because of my ignorance of taking a calculus III class with an incomprehensible teacher with students retaking the course from other universities, I have a 2.1 for calculus III
-Department requires 3.0 cumulative for all math and science classes = retake calculus III
So how should I spread this out?
-I could take the whole physics series in winter
-I can take linear alegebra in winter
-Can hope for differential equations in spring as well as java II
-Can retake calculus III all alone for summer and hope I make it up
I want to transfer over to my university of choice in fall, so I don't know what is the right thing to do. I would like to utilize as much free tuition as possible because money doesn't grow on trees, and free $1,500 tuitions is great. I also want to spread out how much I can complete to different departments in case I don't get in computer engineering.
If any of you need clarifications do so, my mind is sort of skewed at the moment (just finished my java assignment).