Two years of a language on quarters is six classes. A year-long series of any subject will be a fall, winter, and spring class in it, each having the last as a prerequisite. If you fail one you have to wait a year. (Math being the biggest exception, since lots of people fail it and lots of majors require it.) Summer quarter never counts for anything, since most students don't even attend summer quarter and those that do often have to pay more tuition with less financial aid. UCSD being in California, all the rich kids might throw that off a bit, but I'm still betting you'll take six classes.
My university considered two years of a language in highschool equivalent to one year in college (university or otherwise), either of which met the minimum language requirement to graduate. American sign language counted as a foreign language; fluency in one learned in the real world did not. I think Washington State law had a lot to do with all of that, though.
The Experimental Syntax Reading Group meets every other Friday at 11 am to discuss methods of collecting syntactic data in an objective and precise manner.
no subject
My university considered two years of a language in highschool equivalent to one year in college (university or otherwise), either of which met the minimum language requirement to graduate. American sign language counted as a foreign language; fluency in one learned in the real world did not. I think Washington State law had a lot to do with all of that, though.
The Experimental Syntax Reading Group meets every other Friday at 11 am to discuss methods of collecting syntactic data in an objective and precise manner.
I didn't understand a word of that.