110 Units for German and Philosophy?

<p>Yay! I think I can do it!!!</p>

<p>I’ve studied material related to a handful of courses [eg Math 152, ]. So it seems like it’s down to the number of hours in a day. The main problem will be coming out of my comfort zone, and doing those interesting-looking chem classes to meet reqs.</p>

<p>So can anyone IN Stanford say if this is timewise possible? </p>

<p>BS Mathematics Honors
BA German Literature and Philosophy
BS CS MS Coterminal [4 years]</p>

<p>Should I expect to have like 4 - 5 + classes per quarter and Sophomore College &c? It is provocative that the CS site mentions taking 5 UG CS classes per term.</p>

<p>I expect the courses to be hard, but in cases where electives force me to pick between low-unit classes [for example, Math Honors asks for at least 1 analysis in 131, 132, 151, 174A, 174B and 175 and at least one algebra in 114, 121, 152, 153 and 156.] The Bulletin says all are 3 units and I’m concerned that time is precious, so if I just pick restricted electives of which I already know much, I should be able to focus on the 5-unit courses for most of the time. Grad courses should be good preparation elsewhere. But still, it seems kind of impossible.</p>

<p>Thanks for your comments, and if I seem cocky please just say so and don’t ridicule the naif high on who-knows-what. We have many months to plan.
What’s worrying me is that I expect to get carried away reading Physics e-texts and yet I still intend squeeze in some Anthropological Sciences in there. The field work in Anthro is a radiating bloom to the compound eyes on my mosquito face. Sleepy… still don’t know if German LitPhil needs 100 units.</p>

<p>New, different question:
Math Dept says Dual Degree persons are exempt from double counting rules. A handful of majors [well, at least Math] permit restricted electives from a list and then say that some grad classes will work, subject to approval. Does this mean that if I focus on Math 2XX courses I can count them many times?</p>