RUSSN 189HC
Honors Contracts
Description: Tutorial, three hours. Limited to students in College Honors Program. Designed as adjunct to upper-division lecture course. Individual study with lecture course instructor to explore topics in greater depth through supplemental readings, papers, or other activities. May be repeated for maximum of 4 units. Individual honors contract required. Honors content noted on transcript. Letter grading.
Units: 0.0
Units: 0.0
Most Helpful Review
Good Professor (HNRS 166 was not listed) RE: HNRS 166, not H189 (final course grade: A) The name of this class should definitely be changed and dubbed as “Russian Literature” because that’s essentially what the books, essays and class topics revolved around. At the outset of the quarter, we received A LOT of tedious work as with had to outline so many parts of novels and each character, etcetera but towards the end of the class, she slowed down the heavy workload a little. But either way, every week we had an essay to submit along with reading hundreds of pages. I enjoyed the class, but my only STRONG recommendation is please allow the students to engage in discussions; Professor Klenin is very nice but she generally hijacks every discourse so we rarely spoke up after about the third week. Overall, an interesting class if you want to dive in the world of Russian literature taught by an expert in the field.
Good Professor (HNRS 166 was not listed) RE: HNRS 166, not H189 (final course grade: A) The name of this class should definitely be changed and dubbed as “Russian Literature” because that’s essentially what the books, essays and class topics revolved around. At the outset of the quarter, we received A LOT of tedious work as with had to outline so many parts of novels and each character, etcetera but towards the end of the class, she slowed down the heavy workload a little. But either way, every week we had an essay to submit along with reading hundreds of pages. I enjoyed the class, but my only STRONG recommendation is please allow the students to engage in discussions; Professor Klenin is very nice but she generally hijacks every discourse so we rarely spoke up after about the third week. Overall, an interesting class if you want to dive in the world of Russian literature taught by an expert in the field.