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- Jennifer Jay
- CLUSTER M1A
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Based on 5 Users
TOP TAGS
- Uses Slides
- Gives Extra Credit
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 Jay is very enthusiastic about the topic and attentive to our learning, but her classes are a bit disorganized. Homework are readings that are usually research papers and a detailed reflection about the reading. Her quizzes that we are supposed to take with no notes have questions that can only be answered if you memorized every single detail from her slides, almost like trivia. Her lectures and slides are decent but sometimes it is difficult to know what is the main idea we're supposed to take away. However, you can tell Professor Jay cares about whether you are learning or not because she is very thorough when you ask her questions. But it would be easier if she made the main idea of the lessons clearer in the lecture and slides with the quiz questions reflecting those.
Professor Jay is a very friendly person, but is only a decent professor compared to Jennifer Nordby that taught the first half of fall quarter. Professor Jay is very scatterbrained and quite confusing during lecture. She was not very clear and almost seemed scared of the class at times. She basically never taught either, as 75% of the lectures were just guest speakers that repeated the same thing as the previous guest speaker. The material was interesting and easy, just not really taught. Everyone was confused how the final could be 60% material that she taught and 40% from the midterm/previous professor, as none of us really learned anything from Professor Jay. She also performed several experiments during lecture but they never really worked or went as she hoped. Her final was not very difficult, but she did ask a few weird questions that threw everyone off. Overall, Professor Jay is not horrible, but she is just not as good as the other professors in the food cluster.
While I really enjoyed the first half of this course taught by Professor Nordby, I disliked the second half taught by Professor Jay. Jay undoubtedly is an expert in her field and has done a lot of interesting research on the topics she discussed, but her lectures often did not represent her knowledge. She always appeared very scatterbrained and relatively unorganized, and did not construct slides and presentations that would be beneficial to students' learning. I found her lecture style too fast-paced, as she often skimmed over vital material, and her slides usually consisted of large block quotations from readings and other researchers' studies.
She did attempt to occasionally make the lectures more interesting by including interactive class-participation and experiments, but these often felt unnecessary. Overall, it was difficult to ascertain what I actually was supposed to have learned in her part of the course when it came time to study for the final, and the materials she provided to students were not extremely helpful. Professor Jay is a sweet, bubbly professor, but she did not really effectively "teach" the course.
Professor Jay is very enthusiastic about the topic and attentive to our learning, but her classes are a bit disorganized. Homework are readings that are usually research papers and a detailed reflection about the reading. Her quizzes that we are supposed to take with no notes have questions that can only be answered if you memorized every single detail from her slides, almost like trivia. Her lectures and slides are decent but sometimes it is difficult to know what is the main idea we're supposed to take away. However, you can tell Professor Jay cares about whether you are learning or not because she is very thorough when you ask her questions. But it would be easier if she made the main idea of the lessons clearer in the lecture and slides with the quiz questions reflecting those.
Professor Jay is a very friendly person, but is only a decent professor compared to Jennifer Nordby that taught the first half of fall quarter. Professor Jay is very scatterbrained and quite confusing during lecture. She was not very clear and almost seemed scared of the class at times. She basically never taught either, as 75% of the lectures were just guest speakers that repeated the same thing as the previous guest speaker. The material was interesting and easy, just not really taught. Everyone was confused how the final could be 60% material that she taught and 40% from the midterm/previous professor, as none of us really learned anything from Professor Jay. She also performed several experiments during lecture but they never really worked or went as she hoped. Her final was not very difficult, but she did ask a few weird questions that threw everyone off. Overall, Professor Jay is not horrible, but she is just not as good as the other professors in the food cluster.
While I really enjoyed the first half of this course taught by Professor Nordby, I disliked the second half taught by Professor Jay. Jay undoubtedly is an expert in her field and has done a lot of interesting research on the topics she discussed, but her lectures often did not represent her knowledge. She always appeared very scatterbrained and relatively unorganized, and did not construct slides and presentations that would be beneficial to students' learning. I found her lecture style too fast-paced, as she often skimmed over vital material, and her slides usually consisted of large block quotations from readings and other researchers' studies.
She did attempt to occasionally make the lectures more interesting by including interactive class-participation and experiments, but these often felt unnecessary. Overall, it was difficult to ascertain what I actually was supposed to have learned in her part of the course when it came time to study for the final, and the materials she provided to students were not extremely helpful. Professor Jay is a sweet, bubbly professor, but she did not really effectively "teach" the course.
Based on 5 Users
TOP TAGS
- Uses Slides (2)
- Gives Extra Credit (2)