You'll definitely excel in computing and the Internet and could likely get an exemption (it's all network connections, basic php, HTML, JavaScript, learning how the Internet and servers talk to eachother, etc.). In terms of your background, I think it's very difficult to say. Pretty much every course has one assignment per week and they have one week to get done, so it becomes fairly clear how to schedule your time when you see how demanding each assignment is and how much time you have left to do it. Other courses, such as computing and the Internet or programming may take up to 5 hours a week in addition to the given lab time. Some courses, such as project planning or any other non-technical course can often be completed in the lab time or with an hour or two/week extra. In terms of homework, it varies a lot by class and by your skill set. Usually you have a more or less stnadard 8 hour day with a one hour lunch break, but will likely have a day or two with an extra few hours free. If you have no course exemptions (you can apply for those for any relevant courses in September), you will have 9 classes of a similar in-course workload. Each class has 1-2 hours of lecture and usually 2 hours of lab a week.except for condensed courses, such a arcgis in the fall and the 3rd semester after march break, in which you have double.so most classes are about a 3 hour on-campus commitment.
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