Try not to wear yourself out in high school. Taking couple of community college courses during summer vacations will be fine. During the school year, try to focus your energy on your high school classes and extracurricular activities.
Depending on your major you may end up in different colleges on the UC campus (majors like architecture, engineering, or forestry are in different colleges than majors like English, math, or philosophy). Each college, even within the UC campus, will have different required courses. Altho taking very generic community college courses like intro sociology, intro philosophy, intro linguistics, intro biology, intro chemistry, or intro physics, you are bound to satisfy some of the required courses.
2007-12-05 05:35:26
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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That is actually not a very good idea. If you take a lot of classes at a community college while you are in high school, you will be left only with classes in your major. Since those are usually sequenced so that you can't take more than one or two at a time, you will be left taking lots of other classes which you don't need, or going only part-time for your college education. It wouldn't even speed things up.
The other thing is that those classes actually keep you from being worn out if you take them in college. Students usually weave them among their other classes to keep things from getting too heavy. They are also important courses, not things to be disposed of as quickly as possible. While you are in high school, focus on doing well in high school and on enriching your program as much as possible, which increases the chances of getting into the UCs in the first place.
2007-12-03 17:27:35
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answer #2
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answered by neniaf 7
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That instructor is on crack...i became right into a genetics significant whilst i began out at A&M and now Im Sociology and that's no longer required. I do choose "behavioral technological understanding" credit, yet there have been many instructions i'm going to have taken. I took AP Psyc in highschool by means of fact i wanted extra hours and it sounded extra thrilling then AP Physics.
2016-10-10 05:06:23
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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For California students there is the website assist.org
I think they have the info you're looking for. Good Luck!
Most UC's follow the IGETC which is a list of classes that fulfill most of an undergrad's general ed. They have those listed at the website too.
2007-12-04 13:02:25
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answer #4
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answered by BLAHBlahblah 2
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The credits which you can transfer will vary from school to school.
I would recommend English classes, art or drama classes, a foreign language class, and a math class - from my experience, these classes will translate into credits towards the general graduation requirements which you will need to have at a four year college.
2007-12-03 16:46:07
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answer #5
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answered by orisons 5
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