<p>Do the people with more AP credits register first?</p>
<p>No, AP credits have nothing to do with registration for the Orientation. However, you will get a piece of paper that shows which AP tests you took that were accepted. It’ll show how many credits/units you earned from it.</p>
<p>You have to register for Orientation on your own. The first session is for Honors students, Chancellor and Dean’s list students (I think). They have Priority over the other freshmen students, due to priority registration. The other later sessions split into the college of the major you got accepted with. There’s three colleges, so check up on the Bear Facts site to see if which days you can attend to.</p>
<p>Let me be more specific, I registered for the 7/6-7/7 CNAS orientation. I understand that on the second day, the students get to register. Is there any specific order or appointment time, or is it first come first serve to sign up for classes?</p>
<p>You get in line and register, simple as that.</p>
<p>Most likely, given that you’re in the second registration period, you won’t run into any conflicts regarding a class that has been filled up beforehand. There might be some, but chances are you’ll be able to work around them easily without any discomfort regarding the results. </p>
<p>And in regard to AP credit, it will help you somewhat in later registrations - if you accumulated enough credits from High school that you might be sophomore status during freshman year (or junior status in soph year, etc.), you’ll get registration periods ahead of other freshmen. </p>
<p>however, given that for registration during orientation, they only receive your AP scores like, 1 week before. I don’t think they’d be able to sort out registration order in that manner. I remember they received my AP scores the day OF registration, since I got in for the first orientation date - and even then, my papers somehow weren’t received and I ended up having my counselor listen to my AP score report on the phone.</p>
<p>orientation is wed-friday? I read somewhere that wed is an optional day? Do many people only attend two out of the three days?</p>