alexseanchai: Katsuki Yuuri wearing a blue jacket and his glasses and holding a poodle, in front of the asexual pride flag with a rainbow heart inset. (Oregon State)
let me hear your voice tonight ([personal profile] alexseanchai) wrote2013-06-03 11:40 am
Entry tags:

100 college things 017

Remembering that Lifetime Fitness and Lifetime Fitness for Health total three credits and therefore count as one course:

Poll #13616 Ellie should take...
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 6


how many courses?

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one
0 (0.0%)

two
2 (50.0%)

three
2 (50.0%)

Lifetime Fitness & Lifetime Fitness for Health?

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yes
3 (75.0%)

no
1 (25.0%)

economics?

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Intermediate Microeconomic Theory
1 (25.0%)

Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory
3 (75.0%)

women/gender/sexuality studies?

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Women: Self and Society
3 (60.0%)

Women: Personal and Social Change
2 (40.0%)

ticky?

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ticky!
5 (100.0%)



I want to do three courses, LF&LFfH, one of the economics, and one of the women's studies, but I'm not sure I dare do that heavy a course load given NaNoWriMo and scary time at work and the fact that those two likely overlap. Fall term ends December 13, which is before the scariest part of scary time, but still. And the health stuff are baccalaureate core requirements and the economics courses are major core requirements and the women's studies courses, while both filling other baccalaureate core requirements, are for my minor, which means if I do only two courses it ought to be the health and an economics.

Unless I say my GPA is staying tanked this term no matter what I do and thus I can put off the health courses without worry. I failed the one-credit half of the health course and can't in the fall retake the other two multi-credit courses I failed, and turning one credit from a fail to a pass won't boost my GPA that much.