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How many courses at first year?

edited August 2009 in General
Well... Im going to sfu in this fall
and I wonder how many courses would be suitable for the first term at my first year
I enrolled math 157, Eng101w, Econ 103 and am still thinking whether to take
cmpt 120 or not.
I just want to know how many courses did you guys take at your first year

Any opinions??

Comments

  • edited August 2009
    I took four and I increased to five in the semester following. I would suggest four in your first semester, three is definitely not enough.
  • edited August 2009
    Take 3 to get a feel of it if you're new.

    Which is enough BTW. If you want a complete a Bachelor in 4 years, you need about 10 courses a year so 3-4 courses a semester is enough.

    A lot of new students get screwed over in the first semester cause they're new and can't handle the workload so they end up failing. You should try with 3 first to get the hang of the new environment if you're coming from High School.
  • edited August 2009
    Makall;59701 said:
    Take 3 to get a feel of it if you're new.

    Which is enough BTW. If you want a complete a Bachelor in 4 years, you need about 10 courses a year so 3-4 courses a semester is enough.

    A lot of new students get screwed over in the first semester cause they're new and can't handle the workload so they end up failing. You should try with 3 first to get the hang of the new environment if you're coming from High School.
    i heard that from so many people and it was NOT the case for me ( i later asked a few friends form my high school and they said the same thing)
    i started with 4 classes first semester, kept up with all my readings, went to labs, studied 2days before exams and ended up with better grades then in high school for a whole lot less effort...
  • edited August 2009
    I think that if you are working PT or even FT makes more difference than the absolute number of courses.

    If you work, then I wouldn't take anything more than 3. Without work, I've seen some people take 6 and even up to 8 (with Dean's permission) and still come out with 3.0 or higher GPAs.

    I've personally not taken any more than 5 UD courses myself and still managed OK without working.
  • edited August 2009
    I took four in my first semester and it was fine for me.
  • edited August 2009
    I took 3 courses in my first semester and ended up with a 2.1 gpa. After getting used to the course load, I haven't had a term gpa lower than 3.5. Of course it's different for everyone. If you're used to working hard (if you tried in high school), you'll do fine with 4 courses. If you slacked off in high school, you should try 3 courses first.
  • edited August 2009
    Four is probably a reasonable sweet spot. Five is realistically your upper limit if you want to keep your sanity intact.
  • edited August 2009
    I took four courses in both fall and spring semesters during my first year at SFU which was just enough as I learned that you really needed to study your butt off as opposed to highschool. Since then, I have increased to five as I felt that I could handle and challenge myself more.
  • edited August 2009
    xxk1nky;59725 said:
    I took four courses in both fall and spring semesters during my first year at SFU which was just enough as I learned that you really needed to study your butt off as opposed to highschool. Since then, I have increased to five as I felt that I could handle and challenge myself more.
    Is it hard trying to finish 5 term papers a semester?
  • edited August 2009
    icerider;59726 said:
    Is it hard trying to finish 5 term papers a semester?
    I didn't find it difficult since I dedicated enough time to work on each term paper. Two of my papers involved writing parts of your paper every two weeks which lightened my workload a bit. The only time I panicked was when my laptop died the week before all my papers were due though. It's definitely manageable if you plan your time well.
  • edited August 2009
    I say go with three to test the water and to see how you do. If you do well you can always up it to 5 the next semester to have your program done in the same 3-4 year span.

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