Not sure if this is on the current topic of the thread but...

I have five classes, and I like a couple of them and am not so fond of a couple others. For the most part, I'm satisfied with my classes. I list them from least favorite to favorite.
Early Christianity
This is basically a class that looks at historical analyses of Jesus. It should be interesting, but I'm tempted to fall asleep in every single class. Perhaps it's because I'm not used to raw history absent of theory. While the history is mostly speculative, it is not theoretical. There is no defined window through which to view it. The class lacks direction, and I will say so on my assessment; but it is not the fault of the professor.
Beginner's Poetry Workshop
It's a poetry workshop class, and I suck at poetry. In spite of having an awesome professor, this class causes me an undue amount of stress.
Comparative Foreign Policy
My third foreign policy class. Once again, we study the dynamics of the cold war through the window of realist and liberal theory primarily; but soon we will also be moving into Iraq, evaluating the decisions and how they relate to past foreign policy decisions. It's interesting, but it's hardly uncharted water for me.
Policy Making Institutions
A neat class in which we study the interactions and individual decisions of congress, the executive branch, and the federal judiciary. Thus far, we've based most of our analyses around two types of methods for graphing the decision-making of legislative members--the cartel theory and the pivot theory. We're moving on from that now. Given my interest in government, it's my second-favorite class. Lots of fun.
Medical Ethics
Of all my classes, I consider this one the "red meat"--the real, down-and-dirty look at how one can apply popular philosophy to issues with which people are faced every day. We cover everything; paternity testing, abortion, universal health care, euthanasia, physician-assisted death penalty, patient-doctor confidentiality...everything. We focus on the ethical issues, but we also look at Supreme Court decisions and ask constitutional questions. The professor balances lecture with discussion, and for that, he should be commended. The class is fun, oftentimes funny, but it's dead serious at the same time.