Question about taking graduate courses while undergraduate.

<p>Hello I am accepted at AEM. My transfer evaluation says I have about 4.1 semesters until graduation. They assume 15 credits a semester. So I have about 27 credits of free time because I plan to be at Cornell for 5 semesters. </p>

<p>I want to take many classes at the Johnson School of Management. Can someone give me information about how I can go about this? The ease? and Limitations? </p>

<p>If I do in the end take many graduate courses, how can I bring this out on say… an application for work or a resum</p>

<p>Oh, I feel like I’m dominating the forum too much today. Anyway, there’s a specific listing of classes published by the Johnson School (JGSM) that are open to undergrads (search the JGSM website and you’ll find it). As far as I know, you register for a course just like any other course.
While I don’t know much about JGSM, I know many friends that have taken classes at the Law School (which is obviously a lot different in teaching style, etc). They enjoyed it a lot, and it gave them a good intro to what law school would be like. They mentioned having a different grading scheme (I think they had to do essays instead of sitting exams, or something like that), which may/may not be the case for JGSM classes.
It’s definitely something doable, though.</p>

<p>Are these the only courses available to non-Johnson school studentS? </p>

<p><a href=“404 | CUinfo | Cornell University”>404 | CUinfo | Cornell University;

<p><a href=“404 | CUinfo | Cornell University”>404 | CUinfo | Cornell University;
Because there are others I wanted to take.</p>

<p>courses vary…but they probably arent your typical first year courses…maybe like special seminars…</p>

<p><a href=“http://www.johnson.cornell.edu/academic/courses_sup/[/url]”>http://www.johnson.cornell.edu/academic/courses_sup/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>This has more classes than the links listed above (which did also seem few to me).</p>

<p>Thanks guys, I’ll also check with a counselor.</p>

<p>You’re not going to be able to do this your freshman year. Don’t worry about this until you get a feel for AEM and what you want to get out of the department, and you know your advisor.</p>