Professor
Junko Yamazaki
Most Helpful Review
Winter 2020 - This class is an interesting GE option, as it will introduce you to some Japanese films that you likely have not yet seen. Professor Yamazaki is also very nice and will do her best to be flexible and resolve any issues that may arise. Regarding the grading breakdown, there is a participation component worth 15%, discussion board postings that account for 20%, a paper worth 20%, pop quizzes that total 5%, an in-discussion assignment worth 10%, and a final paper worth 30%. Participating grading is fairly lenient, as I contributed just an average amount and still got 100%. Discussion board postings are weekly and are about 250 words each. Grading on these was tougher at the beginning of the quarter than the end. The midterm paper was just three pages or so, and was not overwhelming by any means. The pop quizzes and in-discussion assignment are nothing to be concerned about - participation is the primary aspect being graded in both instances. The final paper, for me, was during the COVID-19 pandemic, and therefore was made optional. However, I still did it because I'm dedicated to the Bruinwalk community and wanted to provide a thorough review. There are three options, two of which are papers and one which is a creative project. I opted for one of the papers, which was 5-7 pages long and entailed comparing two of the films we watched. This option is structured around your choice of prompt that Professor Yamazaki provides, and therefore you are provided some guidance in that sense. I suspect grading was fairly lenient given the circumstances surrounding the end of this quarter. Other items of note: There is no textbook, as all of the readings are on CCLE. The workload is moderate due to the films that you must watch on your own. Also, the grading scheme is favorable, as she rounds up to the nearest integer (so a 92.01% becomes a 93%, and therefore an A). Moreover, extra credit is offered (up to 2%), which further benefits students grade-wise. TL;DR: An interesting, unique GE with a nice Professor and a favorable grading scheme.
Winter 2020 - This class is an interesting GE option, as it will introduce you to some Japanese films that you likely have not yet seen. Professor Yamazaki is also very nice and will do her best to be flexible and resolve any issues that may arise. Regarding the grading breakdown, there is a participation component worth 15%, discussion board postings that account for 20%, a paper worth 20%, pop quizzes that total 5%, an in-discussion assignment worth 10%, and a final paper worth 30%. Participating grading is fairly lenient, as I contributed just an average amount and still got 100%. Discussion board postings are weekly and are about 250 words each. Grading on these was tougher at the beginning of the quarter than the end. The midterm paper was just three pages or so, and was not overwhelming by any means. The pop quizzes and in-discussion assignment are nothing to be concerned about - participation is the primary aspect being graded in both instances. The final paper, for me, was during the COVID-19 pandemic, and therefore was made optional. However, I still did it because I'm dedicated to the Bruinwalk community and wanted to provide a thorough review. There are three options, two of which are papers and one which is a creative project. I opted for one of the papers, which was 5-7 pages long and entailed comparing two of the films we watched. This option is structured around your choice of prompt that Professor Yamazaki provides, and therefore you are provided some guidance in that sense. I suspect grading was fairly lenient given the circumstances surrounding the end of this quarter. Other items of note: There is no textbook, as all of the readings are on CCLE. The workload is moderate due to the films that you must watch on your own. Also, the grading scheme is favorable, as she rounds up to the nearest integer (so a 92.01% becomes a 93%, and therefore an A). Moreover, extra credit is offered (up to 2%), which further benefits students grade-wise. TL;DR: An interesting, unique GE with a nice Professor and a favorable grading scheme.