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How to Choose College Courses

Contributor
By eHow Contributing Writer
(11 Ratings)

So many classes, so little time. How will you know which classes best suit your interests and needs?

From Quick Guide: Survive College
Difficulty: Moderately challenging
Instructions

Things You'll Need:

  1. Step 1

    Find out the specific unit requirements of your college. It's important to know how many classes are requirements and how many are electives.

  2. Step 2

    Thumb through the course catalog and make a list of courses that interest you. Divide them into 3 categories: major, core and elective.

  3. Step 3

    Choose core classes and classes for your major first, as these offer the least flexibility. Consider meeting with your advisor to find out which core classes you must take for the major or majors that interest you.

  4. Step 4

    Choose electives once you know how many elective units you can take and once you've chosen core and major classes.

  5. Step 5

    Ask older students or your advisor about the professors who will be teaching the courses you're considering. Even the most fascinating-looking material can put you to sleep if the professor can't teach.

  6. Step 6

    Sit in on more classes than you'll end up taking, for at least the first few days of the term. This way you can see what you like before committing for an entire term.

  7. Step 7

    Drop the classes you don't like or need, and continue attending each class you find interesting, even if you are not yet enrolled. Persistence can pay off.

Tips & Warnings
  • If you are interested in a class but it is already full, place yourself on the waiting list or "crash" the course. This means you attend it without being registered and attempt to get in when others drop the course.
  • Try to find courses that not only interest you but can also count for more than one requirement; a class that counts both toward your major and the core curriculum can buy you an extra elective. Also, find out how long you can remain undeclared. You don't have to choose a major right away.
  • If a lousy professor is teaching an interesting class, find out when it will next be offered and who will be teaching it. It may be worth the wait.
  • Don't be put off by a demanding syllabus; high-workload courses are often the best learning opportunities.
  • Try not to overload yourself with too many units, especially during freshman year. Avoid taking more than two reading-intensive or problem-solving courses in one semester or quarter, and give yourself room to try out extracurriculars and develop a social life.
  • Avoid taking too many electives early in your college career. This will limit you down the line, when your interests may change.

Comments  

cluex said

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on 2/22/2009 College courses can definetly throw you off, and you always gotta focus towards transfer at a jc IF you are going to, and the counselors provide great services at unlimited disposal for everyone.

Anonymous

Anonymous said

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on 11/22/2005 Take the time to read the course description, and if possible, find other people who have taken the class and see if it is what you are expecting. Take the time to learn which professors are the best for a particular course. For some of my classes, the professor made an extremely hard, potentially boring class a lot of fun. Try to have at least one fun class every semester. These can still satisfy graduation requirements, so they will not be completely useless. Even if you absolutely love the subject you are majoring in, during those crunch times it will be very refreshing to read about something completely different.

Anonymous

Anonymous said

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on 11/22/2005 Go to the college bookstore and find the section for the course. Are the books readable and interesting? Are they above your reading level? Get the syllabus and see if the chapters and reading assignments make sense for you that semester.

Anonymous

Anonymous said

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on 11/22/2005 Find out which classes you can skip using AP test scores or other credit from before college. This can make life much easier.

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