A normal undergraduate (licencaturas) student should take 30 ECTS or 15 American credits worth of courses at the very least (the norm for this is 4 courses). These are the courses I took plus comments:
1. International Management:
In my opinion, we should all take this course on Erasmus as management majors. Do NOT take it in your home university, take it in the host university because the different perspectives just make the course much richer than that at home where you barely listen to the internationals anyway.
2. Information Systems:
Professor graduated in MIT so he has higher standards. Students can use either English or any of the 4 Romance languages in the FINAL EXAM (not as impressive as it seems, I'd like to see him be able to understand some Germaic or Sino languages as well). Most local students dread the professor. However, the contents of the course are useful.
3. Social Sciences:
VERY boring and is known to induce sleep ever so often. However, it is relatively easy to pass and even ace this course. (For all party-goers, take this giveaway instead of history)
4. Information and Games:
For those who are either 3 years removed from calculus concepts OR are not economics majors... DO NOT take this course. You have been warned. Though I passed as a management student, I could say that I will not redo this error if given the chance. For those who need this in their program: professor is approachable and gay (in more ways than one I heard...), lectures are very organized.
I ranked the choice of courses under a "Could've been better" because I only had 174 ECTS / 87 American credits upon the second semester of my 3rd year (as to how I survived 87 credits in 2.5 years... I've no clue).
You need 180 ECTS to have masters options available. And I must say, if that had happened, I would have ranked every aspect a "pretty good" at the least.
BTW, crammers rejoice and despair. Finals are given weights of at least 50% so the score may make or break your marks. However, this system gives you 2 cycles of exams which makes failing a formality in a bureaucratic attempt at redemption. Fail the first, pass the second (note: you can only take a total of 2 courses for the 2nd round of exams, so you CAN fail)
On a final note: you may take as many courses as possible. There is NO deadline to DROP a particular course. Extended non-attendance and not taking the finals can be indicative of dropping a course. Yes, the system is sweet. (at least when I left)
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