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How does that work? How many hours a week do you need to spend for 4 courses? Or is one supposed to focus in 1 or 2 courses if studying one of these?

Are there any known people who go to these hard courses without spending as much time as supposedly required?




How many hours a week do you need to spend for 4 courses?

As you'd expect, it varies substantially person to person. Nominally, each course should take up 12 hours per week, including time spent in class (n units means n hours per week spent on the class). In practice, it can be anywhere from 50% to 300% of that or more. Most people at the extreme top end of the range end up dropping the class, so the top side is pretty well bounded.

Are there any known people who go to these hard courses without spending as much time as supposedly required?

Sure. When I was a TA (for an advanced control theory class), there was a huge range of time spent. Some people never showed up for class and did great; others came to every class, recitation, and all of my office hours (that alone constitutes ~10 hours per week) and reported spending another 6 to 10 hours on each problem set, and probably double or triple that on each lab.

Most of my undergrad career I took 5 classes a term, and I did my absolute best never to study from Friday afternoon until Sunday afternoon. As long as I stuck to my schedule, it was completely doable. Of course, I skipped classes and recitations that I found unhelpful in order to reduce wasted time.


Almost everyone registers for atleast 4 courses a term. You need to work on all of them because every course counts. However, when you're going to take the Junior Lab (if you're in Physics) or the digital death lab/ software labs (if you're in EECS), you take classes that are relatively easy. For example, you might take extra humanities classes to work on the HASS requirement and then in a later semester not take the humanities class and replace them with courses in your own major.

I don't know about the junior lab (i'm in eecs), but when I take classes that are difficult (which has been pretty much every semester for the past 2 years :(), I am working overtime on these classes. Besides attending lectures/recitations during the day, I spend every evening, and all of my weekend coding for the projects. Having projects and labs that took over 20-30 hours to complete were the norm, and in a particularly bad semester, I'd have one of those due almost every two weeks.

Initially, there would be people who could get by without putting in as much effort because they already knew the material, but as you go higher and start talking about lab classes (where the work is punishing regardless of your knowledge/experience) or graduate classes (very intensive, almost no one can coast), you don't see people coasting.




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