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- Danny Litt
- MGMT 120B
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Based on 8 Users
TOP TAGS
- Needs Textbook
- Appropriately Priced Materials
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
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Professor Litt has been my professor for multiple accounting courses, including Intermediate Financial Accounting, and he has been clear, precise, and very informative. He also gives real life experiences and aims to tie accounting concepts to real life examples. Thoroughly enjoyed all his classes.
I had 120B with Litt and I got an A in the end. I wouldn't say he grades leniently, he grades fairly. Like if you're around the mean score, you'd end up getting a B+ or B. So you have to really perform better than your classmates.
I am selling his course reader, textbook and past exam, which can save you so much time. Contact **********.
Litt's classes will be what you make of them. Some people enjoy that he focuses on his life experiences as analogies to the material that he's covering, and others prefer if he did practice problems during class. In his classes, you have all of the tools you need to succeed: he's available for help (and friendly, and helpful), the entire course is planned out accurately on the syllabus and he is timely with e-mails and office hours. Personally, I found his stories to be an easier way of remembering or rationalizing through concepts.
As mentioned below, he does tell you what concepts will be covered on the test. The tests are nevertheless challenging, and you have to out-perform your classmates if you want an A. The final is signficantly more challening than his midterm; whereas the midterm is time-pressured, but doable, the final is not time pressured but you either know how to do it or you don't regardless of how much time you have. I recommend knowing how to solve all of the practice problems that he assigns in the textbook, and being able to manipulate those. They are a helpful way of seeing if you understand the material.
Litt doesn't teach. I learned everything by reading the book. His lectures are extremely boring and his grading is completely unpredictable. I got an A- on my midterm and thought I did just as well on the final, but ended up getting a B. Same happened in his 122 class, and I never get anything lower than an A- in my management classes. Klein is so much better. I regret not taking 120B with Klein. Litt is the the worst professor I've had at UCLA.
I had 120B with Litt and I got an A in the end. I wouldn't say he grades leniently, he grades fairly. Like if you're around the mean score, you'd end up getting a B- or B. So you have to really perform better than your classmates.
He makes a lot of jokes in class and always comes up with real examples related to the stuff he talks about. So at least he wouldn't bore you to death. When it comes to the journal entries or calculations, you might not be to follow in class but it doesn't really matter because everything's on the course reader. You don't need to buy the textbook. The course reader alone is already almost like $70.
There's one mid term, one final exam and two cases. No assignments at all. So I think the workload is not really that much. Since the cases are done in groups, you won't need to do much. As long as your answers on the cases make sense, he'll give full marks. For the mid term, you should ask someone to give you his past mid term exam papers because his mid terms are pretty much the same every year. Plus he tells you what he'd test on you and what he wouldn't test on you, so there shouldn't be any reason to not do well in the mid term. For the final, there's a sample set of questions given to you before the exam. It's very simple and the final should be much more difficult. Nevertheless, some questions are really from the sample set. So to do well in the final, again, pay attention to his tips given before class. Litt would simply tell you what will be tested. And the questions are often very similar to those examples on the course reader. So you don't have to study everything on the reader. This saves you lots of time.
So I'd recommend Litt over Klein or someone else for 120B.
Professor Litt has been my professor for multiple accounting courses, including Intermediate Financial Accounting, and he has been clear, precise, and very informative. He also gives real life experiences and aims to tie accounting concepts to real life examples. Thoroughly enjoyed all his classes.
I had 120B with Litt and I got an A in the end. I wouldn't say he grades leniently, he grades fairly. Like if you're around the mean score, you'd end up getting a B+ or B. So you have to really perform better than your classmates.
I am selling his course reader, textbook and past exam, which can save you so much time. Contact **********.
Litt's classes will be what you make of them. Some people enjoy that he focuses on his life experiences as analogies to the material that he's covering, and others prefer if he did practice problems during class. In his classes, you have all of the tools you need to succeed: he's available for help (and friendly, and helpful), the entire course is planned out accurately on the syllabus and he is timely with e-mails and office hours. Personally, I found his stories to be an easier way of remembering or rationalizing through concepts.
As mentioned below, he does tell you what concepts will be covered on the test. The tests are nevertheless challenging, and you have to out-perform your classmates if you want an A. The final is signficantly more challening than his midterm; whereas the midterm is time-pressured, but doable, the final is not time pressured but you either know how to do it or you don't regardless of how much time you have. I recommend knowing how to solve all of the practice problems that he assigns in the textbook, and being able to manipulate those. They are a helpful way of seeing if you understand the material.
Litt doesn't teach. I learned everything by reading the book. His lectures are extremely boring and his grading is completely unpredictable. I got an A- on my midterm and thought I did just as well on the final, but ended up getting a B. Same happened in his 122 class, and I never get anything lower than an A- in my management classes. Klein is so much better. I regret not taking 120B with Klein. Litt is the the worst professor I've had at UCLA.
I had 120B with Litt and I got an A in the end. I wouldn't say he grades leniently, he grades fairly. Like if you're around the mean score, you'd end up getting a B- or B. So you have to really perform better than your classmates.
He makes a lot of jokes in class and always comes up with real examples related to the stuff he talks about. So at least he wouldn't bore you to death. When it comes to the journal entries or calculations, you might not be to follow in class but it doesn't really matter because everything's on the course reader. You don't need to buy the textbook. The course reader alone is already almost like $70.
There's one mid term, one final exam and two cases. No assignments at all. So I think the workload is not really that much. Since the cases are done in groups, you won't need to do much. As long as your answers on the cases make sense, he'll give full marks. For the mid term, you should ask someone to give you his past mid term exam papers because his mid terms are pretty much the same every year. Plus he tells you what he'd test on you and what he wouldn't test on you, so there shouldn't be any reason to not do well in the mid term. For the final, there's a sample set of questions given to you before the exam. It's very simple and the final should be much more difficult. Nevertheless, some questions are really from the sample set. So to do well in the final, again, pay attention to his tips given before class. Litt would simply tell you what will be tested. And the questions are often very similar to those examples on the course reader. So you don't have to study everything on the reader. This saves you lots of time.
So I'd recommend Litt over Klein or someone else for 120B.
Based on 8 Users
TOP TAGS
- Needs Textbook (1)
- Appropriately Priced Materials (1)