Anne Hong-Hermesdorf
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
AD
3.4
Overall Rating
Based on 39 Users
Easiness 2.5 / 5 How easy the class is, 1 being extremely difficult and 5 being easy peasy.
Clarity 3.4 / 5 How clear the class is, 1 being extremely unclear and 5 being very clear.
Workload 2.3 / 5 How much workload the class is, 1 being extremely heavy and 5 being extremely light.
Helpfulness 4.2 / 5 How helpful the class is, 1 being not helpful at all and 5 being extremely helpful.

TOP TAGS

  • Uses Slides
  • Participation Matters
  • Gives Extra Credit
  • Engaging Lectures
  • Has Group Projects
GRADE DISTRIBUTIONS
29.3%
24.4%
19.5%
14.6%
9.8%
4.9%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

28.7%
23.9%
19.1%
14.3%
9.6%
4.8%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

29.0%
24.1%
19.3%
14.5%
9.7%
4.8%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

34.2%
28.5%
22.8%
17.1%
11.4%
5.7%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

37.8%
31.5%
25.2%
18.9%
12.6%
6.3%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

40.5%
33.7%
27.0%
20.2%
13.5%
6.7%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

26.5%
22.1%
17.7%
13.3%
8.8%
4.4%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

39.4%
32.9%
26.3%
19.7%
13.1%
6.6%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

46.1%
38.4%
30.7%
23.0%
15.4%
7.7%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

66.2%
55.2%
44.2%
33.1%
22.1%
11.0%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

44.5%
37.1%
29.7%
22.3%
14.8%
7.4%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

20.9%
17.4%
14.0%
10.5%
7.0%
3.5%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

39.3%
32.8%
26.2%
19.7%
13.1%
6.6%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

21.1%
17.6%
14.1%
10.5%
7.0%
3.5%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

33.9%
28.3%
22.6%
17.0%
11.3%
5.7%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

31.7%
26.4%
21.1%
15.8%
10.6%
5.3%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

21.7%
18.1%
14.5%
10.8%
7.2%
3.6%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

29.6%
24.7%
19.7%
14.8%
9.9%
4.9%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

24.6%
20.5%
16.4%
12.3%
8.2%
4.1%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

18.4%
15.3%
12.3%
9.2%
6.1%
3.1%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

26.6%
22.1%
17.7%
13.3%
8.9%
4.4%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

18.6%
15.5%
12.4%
9.3%
6.2%
3.1%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

21.7%
18.1%
14.5%
10.9%
7.2%
3.6%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

22.0%
18.3%
14.7%
11.0%
7.3%
3.7%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

32.4%
27.0%
21.6%
16.2%
10.8%
5.4%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

ENROLLMENT DISTRIBUTIONS
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Reviews (33)

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Quarter: Fall 2020
Grade: B
COVID-19 This review was submitted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Your experience may vary.
Dec. 24, 2020

To be honest this class was not it. Professor Hong is a wonderful lady and a great lecturer but the grading system in this class literally sucks ass. Let me start by saying that this class is not curved. I went into this course thinking that this was somehow a good thing and would make make it easier. WRONG, if anything it made the class much harder. I spent countless hours writing my lab reports and was docked down for literally the dumbest shit. A person can follow the exact prompt that was given to them to the T but it really doesn’t make a difference. They look for very specific things in the reports and you basically have to just figure out what that is, if not you will get marked down significantly. There were two test that were administered this quarter, the first one was quite easy but the second was largely focused on information that was barely mentioned in class. Let me just say, that I’m all for professors assigning people tough lab reports, and giving out challenging exams that force you to think critically, but as a professor you should make the class curved then if you’re going to make the class this hard. The point system in this class made it a million times more stressful than it had to be and I do not feel like the grade I received was at all a reflection of the knowledge that I extracted from the course. DO NOT BELIEVE THE GRADE DISTRIBUTIONS IN THIS CLASS, the majority of people do NOT gets As. Bottom line if you want an A take a different Professor. And if you must take this class do so with a very light course load and treat every point like it’s gold. The TAs in this class are basically given god like authority over a persons grade and if they are anything like the one I had, they will dock you for the most minuscule shit. I went into this class thinking that it was the type of class I could get an A in if I worked hard but this was sadly not the case. Even in the midst of this pandemic, the grading was extremely subjective and punitive.

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Quarter: Winter 2023
Grade: B+
Verified Reviewer This user is a verified UCLA student/alum.
March 31, 2023

I'll start off to say that Dr. Hong is a great professor. She is very accommodating to her students' needs and confusion and is always looking for feedback. She explains things clearly alongside her PPTs (which comes with her notes which she posts after lecture) and makes sure its relevant to the week's lab. Her exams, however, can be a little hard (however, keep in mind biochem is not my major so it may have been easier for others). You MUST know the experiments and the theory behind it pretty well. **KNOW the purpose, how it works, how it's set up, hypotheticals of the experiment and possible errors that could occur/how to fix it** you can be brief about them for the exams but sometimes it seems she's looking for certain details. Her midterm and final was about a 70s average. She wants the class average to be about a B+ so she offers some extra credit and scales the exam & lab reports (even though she said she doesn't curve). With extra credit, I was at a B- but I managed to still get a B+.

As for the lab part, it isn't bad but manage to get through the worksheet because it takes a lot of time and understanding of the material. The lab reports aren't that bad once you start them so start them early so you can also ask questions early (on Piazza; she doesn't really promote it but she answers stuff there a lot). *tip* perfect the introduction because it can be used for the rest of your lab reports. Your TA could make or break your lab report grades so always ask them what they expect. Some are nicer than others but the scaling will boost things. I suggest you do Thurs/Fri as your lab time to so you have time to do the assignments, ask questions, and actually understand the lecture material as you would've learned it before coming into lab.

Overall: great professor and class, but so-so exams & heavy work that has varied grading from TAs

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Quarter: Winter 2023
Grade: C
Verified Reviewer This user is a verified UCLA student/alum.
March 25, 2023

Good things
- The professor explains well and is really kind. She holds many office hours to assist in clarifying any confusing concepts and reviewing material before lab reports are due.
- Eric Lee, my TA, is fantastic. He has clear expectations and is straight to the point. I admittingly only attended one office hour because I had mandatory discussion at the same time, but that one office hour was amazing with his clarity for my next lab reports.
- My LA was really good. This made the overall lab experience much more enjoyable.
Bad things
- Lab reports will take a while. Especially for your first lab, you're kinda on your own on how to format your lab report, and the average was around the 70s. The best thing you can do is google a biochemistry literature paper and see how they formatted their paper, and then going to your TA to meet their standards. You'll get much more points.
- You'll be in lab for 4 hours, due to the nature of biochemical assays. Unfortunately, your free time in many sections is taken away by the worksheet your group has to do, which takes a good chunk of your time.
- You really have to know a lot of details in this class, as there are many theory-based questions. For some of us, this isn't so bad, but for me, this was probably the second hardest class I've ever taken.

Personally, I'm not a biochemistry person. I really dislike it but I have to take it so I can move on with my major. I'd advise not taken 153A & 153L at the same time. I thought the material overlap would be similar but clearly, this isn't the case. Despite a lot of frustration in this class, overall, this class was quite decent and I learned a lot of useful information. Thanks to my TA, LA, groupmates, and the professor's personality, this class wasn't as bad as I thought. The exam grades were much lower than expected, but the professor curved it up. If you need to take this class, be sure to start early on lab reports and get help if needed. I would take the lab section on Thursday or Friday so you can be up-to-date with the material learned; prioritize a good TA that will assist you in the experiment and lab reports though.

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Quarter: Winter 2022
Grade: A
COVID-19 This review was submitted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Your experience may vary.
April 19, 2022

This class is honestly kind of bizarre. The whole quarter was a rollercoaster of ups and downs, and here's why:

The good:
- Professor is a very kind person and seems like she is concerned with students having a good experience in the class. She is excited about the topics you are learning about. Lectures are pretty clear and engaging each week.
- My TA was great and super helpful in lab section when parts of the experiments were confusing.
- The final was really reasonable and straightforward. Plus the midterm scores were scaled down when the averages were super low (see the bad lol)

The bad:
- Section is long. It will take the entire 4 hours that is scheduled in the class planner, but since the experiments are longer biochemical assays this is understandable. Bring other homework to do if you finish the in class worksheet while waiting.
- Grading on the midterm was pretty harsh given the material was not very difficult, and it was basically chopped up to "You can't take tests because of covid"
- The lab reports are terrible. There are no clear instructions for the 3 reports throughout the class, so you are kind of flying blind. I get its important for students to learn how to write, but in a class that is meant to be an introduction to scientific writing, some guidance is really necessary. (the grades are scaled based on TA though so if you get a tough grader like I did, don't worry!)
- The class is pretty disorganized and the lecture schedule doesn't always match lab so you might be doing assays you haven't learned about yet.

Overall:
The one thing I don't know how to interpret is the grading scheme. I objectively did not do very well on pre labs, lab reports, and the midterm, but pulled out a good grade on the final and got an A. So I guess it turned out fine? Theres a whole lot of smoke and mirrors about this class being "points based" and not curved, but I'm pretty sure some sort of scaling happened at the end.

I was pretty frustrated by this class because I was actually super excited to learn about biochemical techniques, but ended up being pretty jaded by the lack of organization and course structure. The professor and TAs are nice people though and the outcome wasn't the worst, plus I did learn a good bit I guess. You are probably reading this long review because you have to take the class like me, but don't stress too much. Even though I expended lots of frustration for 153L, I didn't spend that much time per week on it and everything ended up turning out fine :')

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Quarter: Winter 2021
Grade: A-
COVID-19 This review was submitted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Your experience may vary.
March 24, 2021

Dr. Hong has been great throughout the quarter and was always open to questions! I appreciate her effort to communicate with students as she often sacrificed her time for review sessions, question sessions, campuswire, etc. This class starts off really loose and suddenly starts to be more time-consuming from week 5 as this is when lab reports start to be due weekly. Lab reports are a lot of work and the grading standards seem to heavily vary based on your TA (however, lab report grades are normalized at the end for grading to be fair). I think most reviews indicated that lab reports > exams in terms of grades but personally, the exam has been the only challenging part for this class while I excelled in lab reports. I think the averages for both exams were 72-73ish but this class is not curved (but extra credits are offered). I scored low on my first midterm but Dr. Hong offered higher weight on the second exam (final) if we scored higher in the final and vice versa. Exams were hard to do well on bc they were slightly vague in terms of what they were looking for while they also had very specific grading criteria. This class was definitely beneficial but I still have no idea how to tackle the exams despite having pretty high confidence in mastering this course. I think the overall grade mean for this class was a B+ (87%) and please do not think this is an easy course based on Winter & Spring 2020 grading distribution cuz that was when the pandemic/riots were in considerations! Overall, this course helped me to be a better scientific writer (for lab reports) and I feel that I mastered the course materials really well.

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Quarter: Fall 2019
Grade: B+
Dec. 21, 2019

Dr. Hong is a very kind person who is very passionate about helping her students. The syllabus is very concise, and nothing is hidden for the most part. Despite this, the class is not curved and the grading scale is set up in a way where the grade you receive at the end of the quarter does not accurately reflect your knowledge of the course material. Let me explain.

There are three lab reports you will do throughout the quarter, two of which are very big components of your overall grade. She has a general rubric to follow for writing the reports, but the TAs will always take points off for minuscule things, even if you have followed the rubric completely. She will mention how she wants her reports written, and you will follow it ,and she will still design a grading rubric for the TAs which contradicts what she said in class. She will also give you a lab practical which is very straight forward, but grades on the accuracy of your experiment. This doesn't accurately examine ones understanding of various laboratory techniques in that there could be an array of different variables that will skew ones results (bad equipment, contaminated samples, etc), which is why experiments are always run a multitude of times, in the real world. But due to the fact that many students do poorly on this practical, it somehow becomes a "norm" and the professor doesn't seem bothered by it, keeping in mind there is NO CURVE in the class. I would not recommend this class unless you need it, because even someone with the utmost mastery of the course content will still end up with a grade that does not accurately reflect that individual fairly.

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Quarter: Fall 2019
Grade: A-
Dec. 20, 2019

The professor was very nice and understanding and always willing to help students but bottom line do not take this class if you don't have to. The exams require detailed memorization and the averages for the midterm and final were around 75% and this class is NOT CURVED. The grading distribution is a lie, the average grade is a B and getting an A is rare.
If you do have to take this class make sure to get a good TA because they impact your grade a lot and learning of the labs which is important for the exams. Make sure you know details of the slides and experiments (but not numbers/volumes).

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Quarter: Spring 2020
Grade: A
COVID-19 This review was submitted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Your experience may vary.
June 17, 2020

This class was super easy. The class consists of a midterm, a final, clicker points, 3 lab reports, group worksheets(super easy), and an enzyme analysis activity. The midterm was very straight forward and easy. I started cramming the day before and got 98%. Just study her notes and powerpoints. For lab reports, you will get an A as long as you follow the instructions she gives you during the lecture. I always started writing lab reports from scratch the day it was due(11:59pm) and got high A's in all three lab reports. There are no separate rubrics for lab reports because all you need is the lab instruction Dr. Hong gives you at the beginning of the quarter. Just make sure to follow all guidelines and you'll get A in lab reports. Enzyme analysis activity was like a mini quiz that we did at the end of the quarter, and it was super easy(got 25/25). You just have to use a software in excel(she'll walk you through it in lecture) in order to figure out the type of inhibitor she'll gives you during the quiz. I was worried about this because I've never used an excel before, but it turned out it was super easy no need to worry. For this quarter, the final was optional so I opted out of the final. There were also plenty of extra credits to help you boost the grade. I am a transfer student with no research experience and no writing skills, so I was really worried about this class. But it turns out that this course was no different than my community college ochem lab classes! Dr.Hong is super sweet and she is very knowledgeable and it was a pleasure learning from her!

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Quarter: Fall 2023
Grade: A
Verified Reviewer This user is a verified UCLA student/alum.
May 1, 2024

Dr. Hong is one of those rare professors that genuinely cares about her quality of teaching. She is a very kind-hearted and caring person, and it shows. During lab sections, she will stop by and chat with both you and the TAs. She even spent the time to memorize my name.

Many students complained about the structure of the class, but I believed that they were necessary evils. These included the 4-hour lab sections and the three lab reports, each around 20 pages long. This class is time consuming and will require a lot of effort on your part, there is no doubt about that. However given that this is a lab class introducing us to laboratory methods, I find it fitting that we would have 4-hour lab sections and lab reports. They just so happened to be for Dr. Hong's class.

Her midterm and final were decently difficult. I find that she tries to improve the content of her course and the quality of her problems each following quarter, so problems on the midterm that were poorly worded or that covered material that wasn't taught won't show up the following quarter. That being said, her exams were still tough. She makes you memorize a lot of lab procedure and will ask you to write it down step-by-step. However, she does post a study guide problem set with over 100 conceptual problems, which was extremely helpful. She is an extremely accommodating professor and hosts review sessions for the midterm and final and workshops for the lab reports.

For biochemistry majors: This lab is something you can't avoid, so why the hell are you reading this review. Just take the class and get through it. You'll come out of it with a lot of valuable information and some laboratory experience (if you don't have any wet lab research experience).

For any other major: I'm assuming that a lot of MIMG majors will take this class. I would recommend avoiding it. Between the 4-hour weekly lab sections and the 3 lab reports, this class is extremely time consuming and really only worth it if you are extremely interested in understanding the chemistry behind laboratory techniques such as Western blots.

All in all, Dr. Hong is an extremely caring and sweet professor. She struggles with her explanations some times, but given that English isn't even her first language, I think she's doing quite well. This is one of those classes where you schedule around it so that you can put most of your efforts and focus onto it while your other class can sort of run in the background or on autopilot.

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Quarter: Winter 2024
Grade: N/A
Verified Reviewer This user is a verified UCLA student/alum.
March 22, 2024

Dr. Hong was very concerned for the success of her students because she offered lots of extra office hours to help us write the lab reports. The review sessions were very engaging because she let us actively answer each other questions, and she was around to help us solve any questions that our groups could not answer. The material we learned from the lecture is strongly connected to what we did in the labs, so we can apply what we learned in the lecture to run the experiment effectively and have ideas to explain our results in the discussion part. I planned to use this class to practice my lab skills to help me work in labs after I graduate, and I gained what I wanted because I gained lots of knowledge about the mechanisms of lab techniques such as SDS-PAGE and Bradford assays, I became more careful after doing the experiments, my team-work skill increased after I work with my labmates and TA during the lab, and my writing and critical thinking skills increase after writing the lab reports. I also like the way Dr. Hong compares the biochemistry concepts with real-life scenarios to help us understand things longer and more clearly. For example, I still remember how imidazole acted like a single person to release the group of Histidine from the seats of the Ni-NTA party.

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COVID-19 This review was submitted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Your experience may vary.
Quarter: Fall 2020
Grade: B
Dec. 24, 2020

To be honest this class was not it. Professor Hong is a wonderful lady and a great lecturer but the grading system in this class literally sucks ass. Let me start by saying that this class is not curved. I went into this course thinking that this was somehow a good thing and would make make it easier. WRONG, if anything it made the class much harder. I spent countless hours writing my lab reports and was docked down for literally the dumbest shit. A person can follow the exact prompt that was given to them to the T but it really doesn’t make a difference. They look for very specific things in the reports and you basically have to just figure out what that is, if not you will get marked down significantly. There were two test that were administered this quarter, the first one was quite easy but the second was largely focused on information that was barely mentioned in class. Let me just say, that I’m all for professors assigning people tough lab reports, and giving out challenging exams that force you to think critically, but as a professor you should make the class curved then if you’re going to make the class this hard. The point system in this class made it a million times more stressful than it had to be and I do not feel like the grade I received was at all a reflection of the knowledge that I extracted from the course. DO NOT BELIEVE THE GRADE DISTRIBUTIONS IN THIS CLASS, the majority of people do NOT gets As. Bottom line if you want an A take a different Professor. And if you must take this class do so with a very light course load and treat every point like it’s gold. The TAs in this class are basically given god like authority over a persons grade and if they are anything like the one I had, they will dock you for the most minuscule shit. I went into this class thinking that it was the type of class I could get an A in if I worked hard but this was sadly not the case. Even in the midst of this pandemic, the grading was extremely subjective and punitive.

Helpful?

4 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Verified Reviewer This user is a verified UCLA student/alum.
Quarter: Winter 2023
Grade: B+
March 31, 2023

I'll start off to say that Dr. Hong is a great professor. She is very accommodating to her students' needs and confusion and is always looking for feedback. She explains things clearly alongside her PPTs (which comes with her notes which she posts after lecture) and makes sure its relevant to the week's lab. Her exams, however, can be a little hard (however, keep in mind biochem is not my major so it may have been easier for others). You MUST know the experiments and the theory behind it pretty well. **KNOW the purpose, how it works, how it's set up, hypotheticals of the experiment and possible errors that could occur/how to fix it** you can be brief about them for the exams but sometimes it seems she's looking for certain details. Her midterm and final was about a 70s average. She wants the class average to be about a B+ so she offers some extra credit and scales the exam & lab reports (even though she said she doesn't curve). With extra credit, I was at a B- but I managed to still get a B+.

As for the lab part, it isn't bad but manage to get through the worksheet because it takes a lot of time and understanding of the material. The lab reports aren't that bad once you start them so start them early so you can also ask questions early (on Piazza; she doesn't really promote it but she answers stuff there a lot). *tip* perfect the introduction because it can be used for the rest of your lab reports. Your TA could make or break your lab report grades so always ask them what they expect. Some are nicer than others but the scaling will boost things. I suggest you do Thurs/Fri as your lab time to so you have time to do the assignments, ask questions, and actually understand the lecture material as you would've learned it before coming into lab.

Overall: great professor and class, but so-so exams & heavy work that has varied grading from TAs

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Verified Reviewer This user is a verified UCLA student/alum.
Quarter: Winter 2023
Grade: C
March 25, 2023

Good things
- The professor explains well and is really kind. She holds many office hours to assist in clarifying any confusing concepts and reviewing material before lab reports are due.
- Eric Lee, my TA, is fantastic. He has clear expectations and is straight to the point. I admittingly only attended one office hour because I had mandatory discussion at the same time, but that one office hour was amazing with his clarity for my next lab reports.
- My LA was really good. This made the overall lab experience much more enjoyable.
Bad things
- Lab reports will take a while. Especially for your first lab, you're kinda on your own on how to format your lab report, and the average was around the 70s. The best thing you can do is google a biochemistry literature paper and see how they formatted their paper, and then going to your TA to meet their standards. You'll get much more points.
- You'll be in lab for 4 hours, due to the nature of biochemical assays. Unfortunately, your free time in many sections is taken away by the worksheet your group has to do, which takes a good chunk of your time.
- You really have to know a lot of details in this class, as there are many theory-based questions. For some of us, this isn't so bad, but for me, this was probably the second hardest class I've ever taken.

Personally, I'm not a biochemistry person. I really dislike it but I have to take it so I can move on with my major. I'd advise not taken 153A & 153L at the same time. I thought the material overlap would be similar but clearly, this isn't the case. Despite a lot of frustration in this class, overall, this class was quite decent and I learned a lot of useful information. Thanks to my TA, LA, groupmates, and the professor's personality, this class wasn't as bad as I thought. The exam grades were much lower than expected, but the professor curved it up. If you need to take this class, be sure to start early on lab reports and get help if needed. I would take the lab section on Thursday or Friday so you can be up-to-date with the material learned; prioritize a good TA that will assist you in the experiment and lab reports though.

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COVID-19 This review was submitted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Your experience may vary.
Quarter: Winter 2022
Grade: A
April 19, 2022

This class is honestly kind of bizarre. The whole quarter was a rollercoaster of ups and downs, and here's why:

The good:
- Professor is a very kind person and seems like she is concerned with students having a good experience in the class. She is excited about the topics you are learning about. Lectures are pretty clear and engaging each week.
- My TA was great and super helpful in lab section when parts of the experiments were confusing.
- The final was really reasonable and straightforward. Plus the midterm scores were scaled down when the averages were super low (see the bad lol)

The bad:
- Section is long. It will take the entire 4 hours that is scheduled in the class planner, but since the experiments are longer biochemical assays this is understandable. Bring other homework to do if you finish the in class worksheet while waiting.
- Grading on the midterm was pretty harsh given the material was not very difficult, and it was basically chopped up to "You can't take tests because of covid"
- The lab reports are terrible. There are no clear instructions for the 3 reports throughout the class, so you are kind of flying blind. I get its important for students to learn how to write, but in a class that is meant to be an introduction to scientific writing, some guidance is really necessary. (the grades are scaled based on TA though so if you get a tough grader like I did, don't worry!)
- The class is pretty disorganized and the lecture schedule doesn't always match lab so you might be doing assays you haven't learned about yet.

Overall:
The one thing I don't know how to interpret is the grading scheme. I objectively did not do very well on pre labs, lab reports, and the midterm, but pulled out a good grade on the final and got an A. So I guess it turned out fine? Theres a whole lot of smoke and mirrors about this class being "points based" and not curved, but I'm pretty sure some sort of scaling happened at the end.

I was pretty frustrated by this class because I was actually super excited to learn about biochemical techniques, but ended up being pretty jaded by the lack of organization and course structure. The professor and TAs are nice people though and the outcome wasn't the worst, plus I did learn a good bit I guess. You are probably reading this long review because you have to take the class like me, but don't stress too much. Even though I expended lots of frustration for 153L, I didn't spend that much time per week on it and everything ended up turning out fine :')

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COVID-19 This review was submitted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Your experience may vary.
Quarter: Winter 2021
Grade: A-
March 24, 2021

Dr. Hong has been great throughout the quarter and was always open to questions! I appreciate her effort to communicate with students as she often sacrificed her time for review sessions, question sessions, campuswire, etc. This class starts off really loose and suddenly starts to be more time-consuming from week 5 as this is when lab reports start to be due weekly. Lab reports are a lot of work and the grading standards seem to heavily vary based on your TA (however, lab report grades are normalized at the end for grading to be fair). I think most reviews indicated that lab reports > exams in terms of grades but personally, the exam has been the only challenging part for this class while I excelled in lab reports. I think the averages for both exams were 72-73ish but this class is not curved (but extra credits are offered). I scored low on my first midterm but Dr. Hong offered higher weight on the second exam (final) if we scored higher in the final and vice versa. Exams were hard to do well on bc they were slightly vague in terms of what they were looking for while they also had very specific grading criteria. This class was definitely beneficial but I still have no idea how to tackle the exams despite having pretty high confidence in mastering this course. I think the overall grade mean for this class was a B+ (87%) and please do not think this is an easy course based on Winter & Spring 2020 grading distribution cuz that was when the pandemic/riots were in considerations! Overall, this course helped me to be a better scientific writer (for lab reports) and I feel that I mastered the course materials really well.

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Quarter: Fall 2019
Grade: B+
Dec. 21, 2019

Dr. Hong is a very kind person who is very passionate about helping her students. The syllabus is very concise, and nothing is hidden for the most part. Despite this, the class is not curved and the grading scale is set up in a way where the grade you receive at the end of the quarter does not accurately reflect your knowledge of the course material. Let me explain.

There are three lab reports you will do throughout the quarter, two of which are very big components of your overall grade. She has a general rubric to follow for writing the reports, but the TAs will always take points off for minuscule things, even if you have followed the rubric completely. She will mention how she wants her reports written, and you will follow it ,and she will still design a grading rubric for the TAs which contradicts what she said in class. She will also give you a lab practical which is very straight forward, but grades on the accuracy of your experiment. This doesn't accurately examine ones understanding of various laboratory techniques in that there could be an array of different variables that will skew ones results (bad equipment, contaminated samples, etc), which is why experiments are always run a multitude of times, in the real world. But due to the fact that many students do poorly on this practical, it somehow becomes a "norm" and the professor doesn't seem bothered by it, keeping in mind there is NO CURVE in the class. I would not recommend this class unless you need it, because even someone with the utmost mastery of the course content will still end up with a grade that does not accurately reflect that individual fairly.

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Quarter: Fall 2019
Grade: A-
Dec. 20, 2019

The professor was very nice and understanding and always willing to help students but bottom line do not take this class if you don't have to. The exams require detailed memorization and the averages for the midterm and final were around 75% and this class is NOT CURVED. The grading distribution is a lie, the average grade is a B and getting an A is rare.
If you do have to take this class make sure to get a good TA because they impact your grade a lot and learning of the labs which is important for the exams. Make sure you know details of the slides and experiments (but not numbers/volumes).

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COVID-19 This review was submitted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Your experience may vary.
Quarter: Spring 2020
Grade: A
June 17, 2020

This class was super easy. The class consists of a midterm, a final, clicker points, 3 lab reports, group worksheets(super easy), and an enzyme analysis activity. The midterm was very straight forward and easy. I started cramming the day before and got 98%. Just study her notes and powerpoints. For lab reports, you will get an A as long as you follow the instructions she gives you during the lecture. I always started writing lab reports from scratch the day it was due(11:59pm) and got high A's in all three lab reports. There are no separate rubrics for lab reports because all you need is the lab instruction Dr. Hong gives you at the beginning of the quarter. Just make sure to follow all guidelines and you'll get A in lab reports. Enzyme analysis activity was like a mini quiz that we did at the end of the quarter, and it was super easy(got 25/25). You just have to use a software in excel(she'll walk you through it in lecture) in order to figure out the type of inhibitor she'll gives you during the quiz. I was worried about this because I've never used an excel before, but it turned out it was super easy no need to worry. For this quarter, the final was optional so I opted out of the final. There were also plenty of extra credits to help you boost the grade. I am a transfer student with no research experience and no writing skills, so I was really worried about this class. But it turns out that this course was no different than my community college ochem lab classes! Dr.Hong is super sweet and she is very knowledgeable and it was a pleasure learning from her!

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Verified Reviewer This user is a verified UCLA student/alum.
Quarter: Fall 2023
Grade: A
May 1, 2024

Dr. Hong is one of those rare professors that genuinely cares about her quality of teaching. She is a very kind-hearted and caring person, and it shows. During lab sections, she will stop by and chat with both you and the TAs. She even spent the time to memorize my name.

Many students complained about the structure of the class, but I believed that they were necessary evils. These included the 4-hour lab sections and the three lab reports, each around 20 pages long. This class is time consuming and will require a lot of effort on your part, there is no doubt about that. However given that this is a lab class introducing us to laboratory methods, I find it fitting that we would have 4-hour lab sections and lab reports. They just so happened to be for Dr. Hong's class.

Her midterm and final were decently difficult. I find that she tries to improve the content of her course and the quality of her problems each following quarter, so problems on the midterm that were poorly worded or that covered material that wasn't taught won't show up the following quarter. That being said, her exams were still tough. She makes you memorize a lot of lab procedure and will ask you to write it down step-by-step. However, she does post a study guide problem set with over 100 conceptual problems, which was extremely helpful. She is an extremely accommodating professor and hosts review sessions for the midterm and final and workshops for the lab reports.

For biochemistry majors: This lab is something you can't avoid, so why the hell are you reading this review. Just take the class and get through it. You'll come out of it with a lot of valuable information and some laboratory experience (if you don't have any wet lab research experience).

For any other major: I'm assuming that a lot of MIMG majors will take this class. I would recommend avoiding it. Between the 4-hour weekly lab sections and the 3 lab reports, this class is extremely time consuming and really only worth it if you are extremely interested in understanding the chemistry behind laboratory techniques such as Western blots.

All in all, Dr. Hong is an extremely caring and sweet professor. She struggles with her explanations some times, but given that English isn't even her first language, I think she's doing quite well. This is one of those classes where you schedule around it so that you can put most of your efforts and focus onto it while your other class can sort of run in the background or on autopilot.

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Verified Reviewer This user is a verified UCLA student/alum.
Quarter: Winter 2024
Grade: N/A
March 22, 2024

Dr. Hong was very concerned for the success of her students because she offered lots of extra office hours to help us write the lab reports. The review sessions were very engaging because she let us actively answer each other questions, and she was around to help us solve any questions that our groups could not answer. The material we learned from the lecture is strongly connected to what we did in the labs, so we can apply what we learned in the lecture to run the experiment effectively and have ideas to explain our results in the discussion part. I planned to use this class to practice my lab skills to help me work in labs after I graduate, and I gained what I wanted because I gained lots of knowledge about the mechanisms of lab techniques such as SDS-PAGE and Bradford assays, I became more careful after doing the experiments, my team-work skill increased after I work with my labmates and TA during the lab, and my writing and critical thinking skills increase after writing the lab reports. I also like the way Dr. Hong compares the biochemistry concepts with real-life scenarios to help us understand things longer and more clearly. For example, I still remember how imidazole acted like a single person to release the group of Histidine from the seats of the Ni-NTA party.

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1 of 4
3.4
Overall Rating
Based on 39 Users
Easiness 2.5 / 5 How easy the class is, 1 being extremely difficult and 5 being easy peasy.
Clarity 3.4 / 5 How clear the class is, 1 being extremely unclear and 5 being very clear.
Workload 2.3 / 5 How much workload the class is, 1 being extremely heavy and 5 being extremely light.
Helpfulness 4.2 / 5 How helpful the class is, 1 being not helpful at all and 5 being extremely helpful.

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