Quote from Specterx:
Funny because that sounds exactly like my college experience. I felt sorry for the science, engineering, and math guys because they were working almost continuously on problem sets and the like - but these folks absolutely hated and feared anything that forced them to write. 20-40 pages a quarter (we were on the quarter system) per class was the norm for soft majors, often with a multiple-essay final in addition. The longest paper I ever wrote was something like 45 pages (for a bachelor's).
But I graduated in 2008, not 1978 - so I guess things haven't changed all that much, at least at some schools.
Of course college isn't so much about actually learning anything as it is getting that piece of paper. Quals inflation is all the rage and these days a bachelor's is just the price of admission. I'm sure you can coast by at most schools by majoring in something like communications, doing the minimum, and deliberately picking the very easiest classes. I haven't the faintest idea whether this is different than forty years ago, though it's without question different than a hundred years ago.
If I have to do it over again, I would not be doing a hard science major. I would subjects like psychology, sociology or economics or even Lit - I like reading. The long hours of lab work and homework was not the best way to spend so many hours of my youth, esp when I was adapting to a new culture and a new country.