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Taking more than 4 courses?
Is anyone here currently taking (or have taken) more than 4 courses? I'm currently considering to take 5 courses next semester, but everyone I know is telling me that it's going to be hard in terms of workload and balancing time.
Is it possible to take 5 courses and still do well?
Is it possible to take 5 courses and still do well?
Comments
I've heard of people taking 5 courses, working, volunteering, going out, and still doing extracurricular activities on the side and their idea of doing well is a B- or greater.
Personally, I take 4 courses, go out, and do some extracurricular activities, but not work or volunteer, and I expect A- or greater.
If you're thinking about taking 5 courses, not working, volunteering, but still doing a few extracurricular acitivites (e.g. gym) and going out every other weekend, I think you should be able to get a B+ or higher, depending on if its lower/upper div and what not.
All in all, it depends.
In my opinion, it's all about selecting the right courses with the right professors that will help boost your GPA. At the end of the day, workload just isn't the biggest factor in whether you will do well, it has more to do with who the professor is, and what your relationship is with them. I've had semesters where I only took 2 courses, busted my ass, and still only got a B and a B-.
Some instructors teach the course completely differently from each other. CMPT 363 this term has no programming at all while I heard from others that took it earlier, that there was some programming involved.
Most universities have their students complete their degree in 4 years, with 2 semesters per year. That means on a 120 credit degree, it is 30 credits per year or 15 per semester (assuming you are not taking summer). 15 credits = roughly 5 courses for most 1st and 2nd year classes. I don't understand why the advisors and profs tell students not to do this as millions of other students around the world do the exact same.
Is it because SFU students are more lazy or something? I am not sure.
Twas tough but I pulled decent grades. :)
@BryanL: the main problem is that some departments are notorious for playing games with student eligibility criteria for certain courses and this causes considerable resentment since it delays their graduation by a year. So the advice in those cases is to carefully structure courses taken to avoid going way over the 120 credit requirement.