@ kael: I don't know if Psychology has lab classes, but you better enjoy those new Physics and Chemistry lab classes. Pro tip: always come prepared with good cheats for the reports, it'll save you a lot of trouble.
But so little lab classes? I had a ton of them: the chemistry side has Inorganic Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Bioinorganic Chemistry, Analytic Chemistry, Food and Nutrition Chemistry, Biochemistry & Biophysics, Bioniorganic Chemistry & Quimiobiophysics; the biology side has Animal Physiology, Plant Physiology, Histology, Animal Physiology & Biophysics, Microbiology, Toxicology, Molecular Biology.
Good thing I like labs, or else I'd go nuts.
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What would that be? My guidance counselor put me in pre-calc this year(No choice) since I was a freshman at the time and couldn't choose my class. This year, I'm a sophmore and learned about matrices, imaginary graphs, polar forms, hyperbolas, parabolas, ellipses and whatnot and should be taking AP Calculus AB(I think it's AB, is there a such thing?) next year if they don't force me into statistics next year(Better not.) So far, math is easy.
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Meh, that's easy indeed. When you have to go to exams with 100+ pages of mathematical tables for statistical distribution (like Poisson and others) and start to calculate the metabolism of living organisms considering a humongous amount of factors, from area & volume to each metabolic process (and we have to bring the metabolic map to the exams... which big enough to cover a bedroom wall), then you'll be thankful for easy shenanigans like matrices and graphs.