So this university sucks balls and after 3.5 years, next semester I only have two classes left to take to graduate. But in order to get scholarship monies, I need to have 12 hours.
So what I am looking for are suggestions of classes that I can get into (so almost basically intro classes) that involve as little work as possible. That means no attendance taking, least amt of hmwk as possible, no paper writing, and tests that are a joke. Yeah, that sounds like the perfect recipe of Class A laziness......
And, I won't take history of baseball or art 80....
Joined: Sat 10-18-2003 10:26PM Posts: 2955 Location: Stone's throw from Garden of the Gods, Colorado Springs
Source: Off Campus
Math 325 Anything with Dr. Insall Anything with Prof. MacSithigh
Ok seriously now... Go crazy and take IDE 10/Psych 10/Geo 10/every other 1-hour seminar on campus; also look into Chemistry and Math upper-level seminars, most of the time they're pizza and Coke affairs with a little light discussion of intercellular hypomechanical craziness. Show up and you'll get an hour of credit. You could do the pre-MBA classes, they're designed to be finished in two weeks each and add up to 12 hours, and you can take only as many as you need. They'll also give you all the stuff you would be expected to remember from an undergrad business degree, with barely one semester of work. ME 153, perhaps, if you don't have the credit for it already (it's a basic manufacturing course) Poli Sci 90 with Prof. Meagher--he doesn't show up half the time himself.
Joined: Sun 08-20-2006 5:50PM Posts: 711 Location: the darkest pits of hell
Source: Somewhere On Campus
If you want to feel good about yourself, you can take math 305 (Modern Alg 1) or 307 (combinatorics). For 300-level classes these aren't terrible. Math 1 is the one-hour intro course and is really simple.
Stats is pretty basic... 211, 213 especially. If you haven't already.
Phil 5, Phil 15. Had Finke for both, were pretty simple (and gasp, interesting at times) and the guy is cool.
Micro and Macro econ are designed to be easy. If you can find out which ones are being taught in the lecture halls (aka huge class) you can skip it half the time and make out with a B.
_________________ "In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. But, in practice, there is."
Well I don't know why you wouldn't take Art 80 because if you can get Leo that fits your requirements to the "t".
Unless anything's changed in the past year or so, Leo's the only one who teaches it.
And I concur with Meagher's Poly Sci 90. There's a little bit of work involved, but it's not hard, and a pretty easy A. And we always had some good discussions in class too.
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