If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
School/college was Banned
|
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
oh yes I think I may have been misunderstood here too (or I misspoke) I
meant around 2 hours per night of homework per class. Sorry~ Sarah "Meredith" wrote in message ... My mom was an academic advisor at the local community college for a while and she said that the rule of thumb was 3x the number of hours spent in class. I think that my school has more intensive classes than most, in comparison to where my siblings and friends went. Do you mean music theory? My mom teaches that and told me not to take it in college because it would consume all my free time! Meredith Dianne Lewandowski wrote: Meredith wrote: Ah, well that explains that, then. I'd estimate that the average amount of homework for my college classes was at least 10h/week for each, more if they were in the humanities. I knew very few people who had time to work more than 10h/week (at an actual job). But then again, I am an Ivy League snob so there's probably no comparision. Well, now I feel MUCH better. I remember my theory prof saying 3 to 5 hours per week. I spent at least 10. I thought that made me stupid. grin Yes, whatever the class hours were, I spent at least double or triple on assignments. You're making me feel so much better, Meredith. Dianne |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Yep. Theory. Two years of it. It was "consuming". grin
Dianne Meredith wrote: My mom was an academic advisor at the local community college for a while and she said that the rule of thumb was 3x the number of hours spent in class. I think that my school has more intensive classes than most, in comparison to where my siblings and friends went. Do you mean music theory? My mom teaches that and told me not to take it in college because it would consume all my free time! Meredith Dianne Lewandowski wrote: Meredith wrote: Ah, well that explains that, then. I'd estimate that the average amount of homework for my college classes was at least 10h/week for each, more if they were in the humanities. I knew very few people who had time to work more than 10h/week (at an actual job). But then again, I am an Ivy League snob so there's probably no comparision. Well, now I feel MUCH better. I remember my theory prof saying 3 to 5 hours per week. I spent at least 10. I thought that made me stupid. grin Yes, whatever the class hours were, I spent at least double or triple on assignments. You're making me feel so much better, Meredith. Dianne |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
On 7/22/03 6:28 AM,"Cheryl Isaak" posted:
On 7/21/03 7:58 PM, "Dianne Lewandowski" wrote: Meredith wrote: Ah, well that explains that, then. I'd estimate that the average amount of homework for my college classes was at least 10h/week for each, more if they were in the humanities. I knew very few people who had time to work more than 10h/week (at an actual job). But then again, I am an Ivy League snob so there's probably no comparision. Well, now I feel MUCH better. I remember my theory prof saying 3 to 5 hours per week. I spent at least 10. I thought that made me stupid. grin Yes, whatever the class hours were, I spent at least double or triple on assignments. You're making me feel so much better, Meredith. Try physics classes - 4 hours of class, 3+ of lab, another 2+ to write it up and 20+ on problem sets! 20 on problem sets - yikes. My favorite physics class - there were 2 sections of it, which after 2 weeks were 20 or so in mine, and 100 in the big one. The prof, who we called "Arnie" - really, his name, was a fellow at the Brookhaven institute. He also taught full time, kind of juggling which term where. Great guy. Very theoretical, and expected us to have good calculus understanding - else you couldn't follow him. He also chain smoked, always had a cigarette dangling from his lip, pants belted somewhere so low we were sure it was going to be pornographic one day, and sandals - to go with his flowing white mane. Regularly we had the extra problem session review at the campus Rathskellar, and he always bought a round or two. It was the only physics class I struggled with, and only one I loved - a matter of pride to get through it. We had to have groups to work on our problem sets. But, he wanted us to learn physics in a Socratic method - the other class, very traditional, younger guy. But, it was tough. The engineers and physics majors were the only ones in this class, there was a slightly easier, less complex, class for the other science major, and then of course the totally dumbed down physics for the rest. I believe this was 2nd semester, optics and electro-magnetism. What fun. Years later, auditing a class in MagnetoHydrodynamics (taught by prof for whom I taught Thermo) I often thought how good it was I'd had Arnie's class for background. But, countless hours in study group working on problems. I'm pretty sure that we were followed in the classroom by stars for studs (Astronomy 101 for non-science majors) - we'd always be at the board still working problems. Those guys thought we were brilliant - because the board looked so complex. Little did they know - we were partially goofing, and always confused. My favorite, hardest undergrad classs - Fracture Mechanics. Not to be taken lightly. I thought it would be interesting, and a good elective prior to grad school. 3 hours lecture. 3 hour lab sections. 10-12 hours more in lab to actually finish the lab. 5-10 hours at least to write it up. Cool 10 hours to do the problems. I had 22 semester hours that term, of which that was 4, and had a car accident just before finals (not my fault). The dean sent me home from school day after. Had to take 3 incompletes. Accepted Bs in2 classes, not taking final. The Dpt chair in Mech Eng - grabbed me to tell me he was concerned that my "grades" had slipped - jeez. I was already accepted for grad school, so it was moot, really. But, that fracture Mech lab, we had to prep samples, treat them, look at them under the SEM, and do diagrams. Problem was you had to get access to the ovens, and the SEM - there were 2 in the lab - which meant being at school at all kinds of hours. We had to get keys for the lab room. The guy who taught the class was an old-school engineer. Everything in your lab book, and each lab then also got a separate report turned in - had to be perfect. All your homework - perfect format - indentations following links - in and out, all perfectly lettered in draftsmen's printing. It was tough. It's actually a very hard class - I learned a lot. Fortunaately, I had a good background in stats (having an OR major as well) which really helped. When I went to grad school, many friends then and before laughed at what a fool I was taking such a class for an "elective" . ellice |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
No problem! Sometimes those hours turned into DAYS - Em used to steal my
pencils when I was trying to do my accounting problems Sarah "Meredith" wrote in message ... Ah, I see. Sorry about the misunderstanding! Meredith sunflower wrote: oh yes I think I may have been misunderstood here too (or I misspoke) I meant around 2 hours per night of homework per class. Sorry~ Sarah "Meredith" wrote in message ... My mom was an academic advisor at the local community college for a while and she said that the rule of thumb was 3x the number of hours spent in class. I think that my school has more intensive classes than most, in comparison to where my siblings and friends went. Do you mean music theory? My mom teaches that and told me not to take it in college because it would consume all my free time! Meredith Dianne Lewandowski wrote: Meredith wrote: Ah, well that explains that, then. I'd estimate that the average amount of homework for my college classes was at least 10h/week for each, more if they were in the humanities. I knew very few people who had time to work more than 10h/week (at an actual job). But then again, I am an Ivy League snob so there's probably no comparision. Well, now I feel MUCH better. I remember my theory prof saying 3 to 5 hours per week. I spent at least 10. I thought that made me stupid. grin Yes, whatever the class hours were, I spent at least double or triple on assignments. You're making me feel so much better, Meredith. Dianne |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Banned from the Garden!--very long | emerald | Needlework | 497 | August 23rd 03 06:14 AM |
Ot time zones in Canada was Banned from the Garden!--very long | Mirjam Bruck-Cohen | Needlework | 27 | July 25th 03 01:38 PM |
Student loans Banned from the Garden!--very long | Brenda Lewis | Needlework | 10 | July 23rd 03 11:09 AM |
Dolphins (was) Banned from the Garden!--very long | Pat Porter | Needlework | 1 | July 22nd 03 11:19 PM |