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Originally Posted by Chris23
Best be glad youre not in engineering then where a typical day has a minimum of three classes back to back to back.
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Good for you. You must feel so accomplished.
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Originally Posted by Chris23
Ive seen health scis schedules where they have one, maybe two classes a day and only three days of classes a week.
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Two classes a day and only three days of classes a week? That would be what, like two courses? I've never seen a schedule like that and I'm in the program. I'll admit that in 4th year, due to the amount of elective space we have, there is the possibility of a light schedule in the occasion that someone doesn't take a full course load. But from what I've seen, most people will take the full course load, which would make two classes a day, three days a week impossible.
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Originally Posted by Chris23
Just going from how much of a course load i have as an engineering student, it scares me that the future doctors attend very little class in comparisson.
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A little arrogant, aren't you? And wrong. Us "future doctors" typically go through 4 years of undergrad, 4 years of medical school, a few more years for residency depending on what the speciality is. That's typically 10+ years of class. On the other hand, don't most engineering students enter the workforce as soon as they get their degree?
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Originally Posted by Chris23
and the arguement cant even be made that they study more than everyone else, because im pretty sure Thode is known as the engineering library for a reason. WE NEVER LEAVE THAT PLACE!
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The argument can also be made that it's called the "health sci" library for a reason. It's a stupid argument, but just to follow your baseless logic.
Maybe you should refrain from posting unless you have something relevant to say to the topic at hand.