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- Leah Anne Keating
- COMPTNG 10A
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I honestly felt that she was very dismissive. I felt very unsupported by her and my TA. I felt like I was treated as if I should have already known the material... except I thought this class was for people that have never coded before? Of course after lecture I would understand the concepts, but when it came to applying them to the homework, I often thought I needed a push or at least a similar example. When I would reach out, she would say to come to her in person instead of messaging her. However, there are only so many times I can call off from work or ask to switch shifts. When I would message her she would leave me on read for hours only to tell me again to go to office hours. Little did she know I was only able to attend my TA's office hours for the first few times.
Asking her about any code that she didn't write in her office hour will result in being told to ask the person who wrote it, not me. The person who only answered the code she written. The person who let you lose 5% of your total grade for computer compilation problems in one hw.
Contrary to some of the other reviews, I really enjoyed taking this class with this professor. I'm currently taking PIC16A with her because I appreciated her way of teaching that much. Her lectures are efficient and understandable, and she posts the code in case you miss class. The homework can be difficult, but they are definitely doable and related to the class content. The exams definitely can be tricky but still fair and based off the content you learn in class. She also gives you a double-sided page of cheat sheet. I had a medical emergency this quarter, and she gave me a VERY gracious extension which was incredibly appreciated. I would take any other PIC class offered by her if I could.
DO NOT TAKE THIS CLASS IF YOU CAN AVOID HER!! otherwise you could survive but it will be very hard
She teaches this class like you're supposed to know the material even though it's supposed to be for beginners. She throws the terms and concepts out there in lecture without explaining well or at all. Sometimes it's like she doesn't even know her lessons and code (probably because she doesn't write her own code most of the time). She is dismissive and her attitude when writing tests can be described in one quote: "I knew no one would get full marks on this question when I wrote it". I don't think that's how tests are supposed to work... The only thing that saved me in this class was my TA, Ely Jrade. If he TAs, try to get in his section!!! He is so helpful and nice, so clutch.
This class was OK given that this is her first time teaching. The lectures were quite straightforward. There're 7 homework assignments worth 50% of your grade, and the lowest one was dropped. HWs were not long/hard, but since there were no autograders set up on Gradescope, it can be tricky when it comes to edge-case testing and might lead to some points deductions. Plus, there were a lot of typos in the HW prompts, which might cause some confusion (she borrowed HW questions from another professor). Exams also contained some tricky questions but were doable for the most parts.
I honestly felt that she was very dismissive. I felt very unsupported by her and my TA. I felt like I was treated as if I should have already known the material... except I thought this class was for people that have never coded before? Of course after lecture I would understand the concepts, but when it came to applying them to the homework, I often thought I needed a push or at least a similar example. When I would reach out, she would say to come to her in person instead of messaging her. However, there are only so many times I can call off from work or ask to switch shifts. When I would message her she would leave me on read for hours only to tell me again to go to office hours. Little did she know I was only able to attend my TA's office hours for the first few times.
Asking her about any code that she didn't write in her office hour will result in being told to ask the person who wrote it, not me. The person who only answered the code she written. The person who let you lose 5% of your total grade for computer compilation problems in one hw.
Contrary to some of the other reviews, I really enjoyed taking this class with this professor. I'm currently taking PIC16A with her because I appreciated her way of teaching that much. Her lectures are efficient and understandable, and she posts the code in case you miss class. The homework can be difficult, but they are definitely doable and related to the class content. The exams definitely can be tricky but still fair and based off the content you learn in class. She also gives you a double-sided page of cheat sheet. I had a medical emergency this quarter, and she gave me a VERY gracious extension which was incredibly appreciated. I would take any other PIC class offered by her if I could.
DO NOT TAKE THIS CLASS IF YOU CAN AVOID HER!! otherwise you could survive but it will be very hard
She teaches this class like you're supposed to know the material even though it's supposed to be for beginners. She throws the terms and concepts out there in lecture without explaining well or at all. Sometimes it's like she doesn't even know her lessons and code (probably because she doesn't write her own code most of the time). She is dismissive and her attitude when writing tests can be described in one quote: "I knew no one would get full marks on this question when I wrote it". I don't think that's how tests are supposed to work... The only thing that saved me in this class was my TA, Ely Jrade. If he TAs, try to get in his section!!! He is so helpful and nice, so clutch.
This class was OK given that this is her first time teaching. The lectures were quite straightforward. There're 7 homework assignments worth 50% of your grade, and the lowest one was dropped. HWs were not long/hard, but since there were no autograders set up on Gradescope, it can be tricky when it comes to edge-case testing and might lead to some points deductions. Plus, there were a lot of typos in the HW prompts, which might cause some confusion (she borrowed HW questions from another professor). Exams also contained some tricky questions but were doable for the most parts.
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