Intro to computer science will be ridiculously easy... I don't see how anyone with an analytical and logical mind could get less than an A in that class if they even attempted to pretend to give a damn.
Calc III is so much easier than Calc II. Honestly, it is. If you can grasp the new concepts, the calculus is much easier. You may end up with triple integrals and such, but because they're triple they can't expect you to use 50 different methods of integration on them, the actual integration is easier. It's still a hard Calc class, but nothing compared to Calc II.
You may be getting through "12" classes a year instead of eight, but you'll still be there for the same number of years.
Re: Uh huhloststrangerDecember 9 2004, 14:13:17 UTC
i took intro to CS this quarter- and it really was the easiest class ever- i mean, there were a couple times where i needed davids help- but other than that i think i have like a 98 or somethin like that. So yeah- that'll be fun.
Quarter vs. Semester UnitsbennydJanuary 21 2005, 08:07:25 UTC
As an Admissions Advisor at the UCLA Undergraduate of Admissions (wow, that's empowering to say) I'd like ot inform you that semester units are indeed worth more than quarter units. In fact, if you want to figure out how many quarter units a semester class translates to, multiply the semester units by 1.5 to get the number of quarter units it counts for. Therefore, a 4 unit class at a semester school counts as 6 units at a quarter school. This is why it takes the same amount of time for someone ot graduate from a semester school as a quarter school.
Generally speaking, semester schools are assumed to cover mor edepth in each class, whereas quarter schools give more breadth and cover more different subjects.
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Intro to computer science will be ridiculously easy... I don't see how anyone with an analytical and logical mind could get less than an A in that class if they even attempted to pretend to give a damn.
Calc III is so much easier than Calc II. Honestly, it is. If you can grasp the new concepts, the calculus is much easier. You may end up with triple integrals and such, but because they're triple they can't expect you to use 50 different methods of integration on them, the actual integration is easier. It's still a hard Calc class, but nothing compared to Calc II.
You may be getting through "12" classes a year instead of eight, but you'll still be there for the same number of years.
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Generally speaking, semester schools are assumed to cover mor edepth in each class, whereas quarter schools give more breadth and cover more different subjects.
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