<p>For McIntire you should take Econ 201 in the fall of first year, Econ 202 in the spring and Comm180 in one of the two semesters. If you have to take ENWR, you have to take that first year, you take if in the fall or spring depending on what number your social security ends in. If you still need to fulfill the language requirement you’ll need to take language classes. How many will depend on what you place out of. If you don’t place out of anything you need to take four semesters of language, so you need to start your first semester at uva.</p>
<p>At some point over the first two years, you need to take Stat212 (or an equivalent stat class) and a fine arts course (you need two before you graduate McIntire so you might want to take both before third year). You also need to take math111 or 121 or 131 if you haven’t placed out of calculus at some point over the first two years. </p>
<p>Second year you should take Comm201 in the fall and Comm202 in the spring.</p>
<p>You also need to take a fine arts credit.</p>
<p>Here’s the link with the requirements:
<a href=“http://www.commerce.virginia.edu/admissions/undergraduate/prerequisites.html[/url]”>http://www.commerce.virginia.edu/admissions/undergraduate/prerequisites.html</a></p>
<p>So your schedule should looks something like this first semester:
Econ201
Enwr/Comm180
Math121
Foreign Language
Elective in anything you want/Fine Arts</p>
<p>Obviously if you’ve already fulfilled the language/math requirement you have more electives to play with. I would take Econ201 (with Elzinga) for sure first semester. </p>
<p>For the “electives” take anything you want. It really doesn’t matter. Just take what interests you. I recommend the USEM’s, PSYC 101, any of the intro sociology classes, and to a lesser extent, the ENLT’s (which also happen to fulfill the fine arts requirements). There are also plenty of great intro history and politics classes out there if your interests lie there, but I can’t make any recommendations. </p>
<p>A caveat about the USEM’s. They seem to be hit or miss. Also they are very hard to get into. I’d do your homework on ratemyprofessor.com/thecourseforum.com before picking some you’d be interested in. Also don’t be afraid (and this goes for all your classes as well) to sign up for a USEM, go the first week, and dump it for something else if you don’t think you’re going to like it.</p>