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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.
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.
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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I took this course online. I am genuinely surprised about his low rating. He seemed very sweet and my friends and I all liked him too. Econ 1 with him was easy, especially if you are coming in with some Econ knowledge. He takes time to explain every concept and terms which makes it easier for us to follow and understand. He made sure he answered all our questions too. The only negative thing about his course is how expensive the required online textbook (cengage) is. I remember it charged me about $160 on bruinbill, but it was a very helpful textbook/website. Even though I have not taken the final yet, the two midterms were completely doable if you made sure to know and understand the content. The weekly homeworks took like an hour to complete at most and they were all very good practice for the exams. Take his Econ 1 if you can!
Professor Rojas is a really great lecturer. Although it was online and that sucked, his explanations were clear and thorough and I got an A- putting in pretty minimal effort.
This class was very lecture heavy and Rojas does a good job of explaining the material. It does feel a little bit like you are on your own in this class as the one-on-one aspect isn't really there. I felt like I leaned on my other fellow students more for help than Rojas or my TA. The material isn't super engaging and the slides are pretty lengthy. Attendance wasn't mandatory but I learned the most from the slides. Exams were progressively harder but they were never too difficult.
Written from the perspective of someone who struggles with auditory processing:
Helpfulness: "5" because Professor Rojas was open to my questions and feedback on the course content.
Clarity: "5" because during the lectures he took care to enunciate verbal information and connect it with visual information.
Workload: "3" because the amount of homework assigned was fair and left me with enough time and resources to practice on my own.
Easiness: "3" because the course readings aside from the textbook were super helpful for getting me to consider the textbook info more deeply.
Overall: “5” because I believe Professor Rojas has succeeded in setting up a welcoming environment while encouraging critical thinking about economics.
The workload of the class wasn't too bad, but the material in the second half of the quarter was difficult to learn. The professor seemed really nice, but I stopped going to lecture because I couldn't pay attention for that long. I think lectures would've been more helpful if I skimmed the chapter before going to class. I found that reading the book at my own pace, watching videos, and going to discussion were good enough to learn the material.
My TA Fatih was extremely helpful in learning the material. During discussion, we go through problems and his explanations were very clear and helpful. I asked him for explanations on difficult homework problems during office hours and that was really helpful.
There was homework almost every week. It was all multiple choice, not timed, and there's a check your work button you can use before you submit. Homework can be long, but I basically learned the material as I did the homework.
There's two midterms and one final. All of the tests are on MindTap and all of the tests are multiple choice. The time frame was a bit short. I found the second midterm to be the hardest. You can choose to take the midterms in the morning or in the afternoon so there is a morning curve and an afternoon curve. To study for the tests, just do a bunch of practice problems on MindTap because all of the tests questions and homework questions have a very similar structure.
*COVID Review*
Rojas is probably the best econ professor for this class. Lectures and discussions were recorded and not mandatory and all of the materials were on Cengage. You had to buy a mandatory online textbook and all exams were on there so the question pool was all in the practice questions. The final (worth 40%) was more difficult than the 2 midterms and only one midterm was slightly curved. As long as you read the textbook, did the homework problems, and practiced questions before the test it was an easy A.
The only problem I had with this class was that Rojas was terrible at responding to emails, students had to wait for days to get a reply. Overall, if you want an easy A for the class definitely go with Rojas.
I'm an international student and I do not intend to major econ. I took this class just for learning about some basic concepts and approach that might be helpful for my other projects. And I DO NOT recommend any non-econ major student to take this course only because you are curious or want to challenge yourself.
Professor's lectures are not helpful at all (at least for me), because I could barely catch up without previous econ experience. So I turned to self-study with the textbook and practices on mindtap, which is expensive but helpful. Every week it took me about a day to read the chapters and finish the homework (not hard), so the workload is pretty light. And the tests are not difficult at all, although the professor does not care about time-zone differences and makes international students like me get up at 2:30am for final.
So this course, generally, is not hard, but I feel like it has no difference with self-learning. Thus, if this course is not a prerequisite for you, you are totally able to rent an ebook and learn by yourself. There's nothing hard. Do not waste your money on expensive materials required for this course.
this class was not too hard but a lot of material. rojas uses mindtap instead of ccle for homework and tests. lectures are dry but the professor just read off the slides. the material is introduction level so it is not too hard but there is minimal outside help from TAs and the professor
He didn't teach that well and just basically read off the slides. But, he went through the material for the chapter, so it was fine. The tests were unclear many times and tested concepts that we didn't really cover or at least not in any real depth. Much of the homework didn't compare to the tests. He also didn't conduct the final well since the software glitched halfway through and he gave us an extra 15 mins even though it was down for a lot longer. There wasn't any real workload though, just the homework due every Friday which I think you could check up to three times. Overall, he's not terrible if you need to take the class, but he's not amazing either.
I only attended the first lecture. After that, I mainly relied on reading the textbook and taking notes to learn and understand the material. His lectures are fine, but they are pretty much a summarized version of what the textbook offers. Because of this, it could be a lot more helpful to go through the textbook yourself rather than relying on a watered-down summary. Test questions are usually not memory-based and require you to understand the material and be able to apply it. Homework questions were quite similar to test questions, so you should definitely make sure you understand those and consult your TA if you have any questions.
I took this course online. I am genuinely surprised about his low rating. He seemed very sweet and my friends and I all liked him too. Econ 1 with him was easy, especially if you are coming in with some Econ knowledge. He takes time to explain every concept and terms which makes it easier for us to follow and understand. He made sure he answered all our questions too. The only negative thing about his course is how expensive the required online textbook (cengage) is. I remember it charged me about $160 on bruinbill, but it was a very helpful textbook/website. Even though I have not taken the final yet, the two midterms were completely doable if you made sure to know and understand the content. The weekly homeworks took like an hour to complete at most and they were all very good practice for the exams. Take his Econ 1 if you can!
Professor Rojas is a really great lecturer. Although it was online and that sucked, his explanations were clear and thorough and I got an A- putting in pretty minimal effort.
This class was very lecture heavy and Rojas does a good job of explaining the material. It does feel a little bit like you are on your own in this class as the one-on-one aspect isn't really there. I felt like I leaned on my other fellow students more for help than Rojas or my TA. The material isn't super engaging and the slides are pretty lengthy. Attendance wasn't mandatory but I learned the most from the slides. Exams were progressively harder but they were never too difficult.
Written from the perspective of someone who struggles with auditory processing:
Helpfulness: "5" because Professor Rojas was open to my questions and feedback on the course content.
Clarity: "5" because during the lectures he took care to enunciate verbal information and connect it with visual information.
Workload: "3" because the amount of homework assigned was fair and left me with enough time and resources to practice on my own.
Easiness: "3" because the course readings aside from the textbook were super helpful for getting me to consider the textbook info more deeply.
Overall: “5” because I believe Professor Rojas has succeeded in setting up a welcoming environment while encouraging critical thinking about economics.
The workload of the class wasn't too bad, but the material in the second half of the quarter was difficult to learn. The professor seemed really nice, but I stopped going to lecture because I couldn't pay attention for that long. I think lectures would've been more helpful if I skimmed the chapter before going to class. I found that reading the book at my own pace, watching videos, and going to discussion were good enough to learn the material.
My TA Fatih was extremely helpful in learning the material. During discussion, we go through problems and his explanations were very clear and helpful. I asked him for explanations on difficult homework problems during office hours and that was really helpful.
There was homework almost every week. It was all multiple choice, not timed, and there's a check your work button you can use before you submit. Homework can be long, but I basically learned the material as I did the homework.
There's two midterms and one final. All of the tests are on MindTap and all of the tests are multiple choice. The time frame was a bit short. I found the second midterm to be the hardest. You can choose to take the midterms in the morning or in the afternoon so there is a morning curve and an afternoon curve. To study for the tests, just do a bunch of practice problems on MindTap because all of the tests questions and homework questions have a very similar structure.
*COVID Review*
Rojas is probably the best econ professor for this class. Lectures and discussions were recorded and not mandatory and all of the materials were on Cengage. You had to buy a mandatory online textbook and all exams were on there so the question pool was all in the practice questions. The final (worth 40%) was more difficult than the 2 midterms and only one midterm was slightly curved. As long as you read the textbook, did the homework problems, and practiced questions before the test it was an easy A.
The only problem I had with this class was that Rojas was terrible at responding to emails, students had to wait for days to get a reply. Overall, if you want an easy A for the class definitely go with Rojas.
I'm an international student and I do not intend to major econ. I took this class just for learning about some basic concepts and approach that might be helpful for my other projects. And I DO NOT recommend any non-econ major student to take this course only because you are curious or want to challenge yourself.
Professor's lectures are not helpful at all (at least for me), because I could barely catch up without previous econ experience. So I turned to self-study with the textbook and practices on mindtap, which is expensive but helpful. Every week it took me about a day to read the chapters and finish the homework (not hard), so the workload is pretty light. And the tests are not difficult at all, although the professor does not care about time-zone differences and makes international students like me get up at 2:30am for final.
So this course, generally, is not hard, but I feel like it has no difference with self-learning. Thus, if this course is not a prerequisite for you, you are totally able to rent an ebook and learn by yourself. There's nothing hard. Do not waste your money on expensive materials required for this course.
this class was not too hard but a lot of material. rojas uses mindtap instead of ccle for homework and tests. lectures are dry but the professor just read off the slides. the material is introduction level so it is not too hard but there is minimal outside help from TAs and the professor
He didn't teach that well and just basically read off the slides. But, he went through the material for the chapter, so it was fine. The tests were unclear many times and tested concepts that we didn't really cover or at least not in any real depth. Much of the homework didn't compare to the tests. He also didn't conduct the final well since the software glitched halfway through and he gave us an extra 15 mins even though it was down for a lot longer. There wasn't any real workload though, just the homework due every Friday which I think you could check up to three times. Overall, he's not terrible if you need to take the class, but he's not amazing either.
I only attended the first lecture. After that, I mainly relied on reading the textbook and taking notes to learn and understand the material. His lectures are fine, but they are pretty much a summarized version of what the textbook offers. Because of this, it could be a lot more helpful to go through the textbook yourself rather than relying on a watered-down summary. Test questions are usually not memory-based and require you to understand the material and be able to apply it. Homework questions were quite similar to test questions, so you should definitely make sure you understand those and consult your TA if you have any questions.
Based on 136 Users
TOP TAGS
- Uses Slides (66)