Professor

Shervin Moloudi

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4.3
Overall Ratings
Based on 55 Users
Easiness 1.9 / 5 How easy the class is, 1 being extremely difficult and 5 being easy peasy.
Workload 2.0 / 5 How light the workload is, 1 being extremely heavy and 5 being extremely light.
Clarity 4.5 / 5 How clear the professor is, 1 being extremely unclear and 5 being very clear.
Helpfulness 4.2 / 5 How helpful the professor is, 1 being not helpful at all and 5 being extremely helpful.

Reviews (55)

2 of 4
2 of 4
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March 24, 2012
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A

Lectures are clear and organized. Very worth attending. Exams are fair but still a little difficult. As long as you do the HW's you'll be fine on the exams.

He gets mad when people walk in late though.

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April 2, 2012
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A

Moloudi is a hard-ass. Look below and you'll get a feel for how a lot of students felt in the class. I both agree and disagree with the other reviews. I got an A (which it doesn't sound like he gave many), so listen up if you want to know how to do well.

He is in the top tier of EE professors in his lecturing. He teaches a lot by analogy instead of by proofs, which I found a good change of pace.

I didn't read the book much except for a little reference. Take very thorough notes in class - this is the key to doing well in his classes. You must do the (4) homeworks although they take 5-10 hours each because they are the practice problems you need to know how to solve for the tests.

The distribution on his midterm and final was basically 20 people each got in each decade. So ~20 people got 0-9%, ~20 people got 10-19%, ~20 people got 20-29%, etc. I thought the midterm and final were completely reasonable and he taught us how to solve every of the problems. His grading was tough though, so you must put in the time taking good notes during class and doing the homework outside of class.

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April 13, 2012
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A

His grading scale is worse than Abidi's but he does examples and you learn a lot, and he cares about students and responds to emails, I like him, hard but good

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April 25, 2012
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A

While I was surprised at his grading scale (C- average or so) from hearing about grades from other classmates, if you do well on the final and show a big improvement from the midterm, he WILL give you what you get on the final as your overall grade. I pulled off an A- even though the my rank in the class put me somewhere at the 24th percentile just by getting an 88% on the final (from a 38% on the midterm, which was just below the 40% average). He will reward you if he sees you putting in the effort to improve!

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March 24, 2012
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A

Professor Shervin Moloudi has been the BEST lecturer I have had at UCLA (currently a 3rd year) _BY_FAR_. During lectures, he'll pause and tell you to put down your pencils and just absorb whatever explanation about theory or other transistor-y things he's about to tell you. He also uses a lot of analogies, explains the motivations behind why we’re learning about the circuit components we run into in class, and in general explains things very clearly (and often times with humor), making the intro analog circuits class very pleasant. I would highly suggest attending every lecture as well because sometimes he strays from the Razavi textbook (like in chapter 4 where BJTs are introduced through the exponential model versus the in class piece-wise linear model) and for the homework and exams you’re expected to do what he teaches in class. He also calls on people a lot, but does it in a friendly and guiding way if you don’t know the answer, so don’t worry if you’re a socially awkward penguin whose heart rate skyrockets to 300 bpm when called on in class, so take it as a learning experience if you don’t know the answer.

The TAs I interacted with (Hao and Amrutha) are very, very helpful and knowledgeable as well, so attending their discussions/OHs is probably a good idea, especially when you’re confused about material or stuck on homework.

The homework assignments are pretty dang long, but really doing the homework (i.e. not copying the solution manual or friends) definitely prepares you for the exams. Always do your homework and try to start it early if possible so you don’t wind up staying up super late the night before and then turn into a zombie during class after you turn it in. One complaint I have about how Professor Moloudi handled the homework would be how for the first midterm, we had to turn in a homework set (8am) the day of the midterm (6pm) and had minimal time to review the homework solutions (although because of the giant class, I’m guessing it was a hassle to reschedule a time and place for a midterm where we could all fit in every other seat, so it might’ve been difficult to push back the midterm from Tuesday to Thursday). There was also a Pspice design project that was pretty straightforward, but try to start that before the day before its due as well or you may run into complications with how it works on the SEASnet lab computers (the project itself is very easy, but getting it to run can be ridiculously frustrating for seemingly no good reason).

The exams are definitely fair, although it is clear that the vast majority of the class just copies the solution manual for the homework and never puts the time into learning the material (40% average on the midterm). Just took the final today, but I’m guessing the class behavior will be roughly the same. By being familiar with the last 3 homework sets and doing the examples he suggested us do on our own from the textbook, you should be able to cleanly get at least 75% of the final correct.

While I know that most people crammed into this class (175 students out of an enrollment cap of 100) to avoid Abidi (47 students out of an enrollment cap of 100 in Fall 2011), I think some people expected a cakewalk because they lucked out by dodging the Abidi bullet and just didn’t put any effort into the class, which is unfortunate because with just a bit of work, the course is a very easy “B” and a reasonable “A”, especially with such a huge class.

Overall, two thumbs up for Moloudi. Even considering taking EE 115B because of him and this how 115A went (despite not being in the IC pathway).

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March 26, 2012
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A

Lectures are extremely worth it. This man is a teacher. He does his job very well.
His lectures are clear and he presents the material extremely well. He went slower at the beginning of the quarter to ensure we would have a good foundation for the rest of the material later on. Other professors like to rush in the beginning of the quarter, thus creating a disparity from the beginning.
Easily, one of the best professors I've had at UCLA.

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July 3, 2023
Quarter: Spring 2023
Grade: B-

Moloudi is a very good and clear lecturer. The class is at 8 am and lectures are not recorded + notes are not uploaded. Even though the class is early, it is definitely worth it to attend lecture, especially since his explanations of concepts are often very well done and he makes pretty good analogies. The homeworks are difficult, but doable as long as you put time into them. There are about 6 homeworks + 1 quiz on SPICE(10% of your grade), 1 midterm (35% of your grade), and final (55% of grade). The midterms are pretty tough, with the average being around a 66% and he doesn't curve the class. While the class was really difficult, I think I got a lot out of it and I would definitely recommend taking this class with Moloudi.

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May 27, 2014
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A

Excellent professor, patient and detailed in explaining course concepts. You have to go to classes

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March 29, 2017
Quarter: Winter 2017
Grade: N/A

I took EE110 with Moloudi in Winter 2017.

Moloudi was probably the best EE professor I ever had so far, together with Lorenzelli's EE102 class.

The cons to taking him were the 8AM lectures, and the fact he doesn't give many A's (he doesn't curve). Now keep in mind I don't know anyone else's grades, but he said that he wouldn' t give anyone below 80% an A. I did OK in the class considering I bombed the midterm. Also note that he very rarely post his lecture notes, unless they're math-based equational notes. The TA's didn't post notes until later in the quarter, so try and find a friend.

Now for the pros. If you go to lecture, chances are you will understand the material fairly well, since Moloudi is such an excellent lecturer and fails to leave out even the most miniscule of details. This could actually be a bit of a bad thing since everyone in the class felt they were on a level playing field in terms of understanding the material. The homework, which isn't too tricky minus one BS problem on the second homework, is excellent preparation for the exams, which are tricky but not too hard if you understood the homework.

Helpful?

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April 7, 2017
Quarter: Winter 2017
Grade: A-

Actually I took his EE 110. He is by far the best lecturer in EE department.

He writes everything on board and doesn't post lecture notes. But that's not a problem if you attend his lecture. His lectures are so clear and effective. He can cover up to twice the stuff that any other professor could cover in one lecture, which makes students really concentrate (there's no time for cell phone). The attendency was around 90% for every lecture, which is very impressive for an 8am class. He really cares about students and can remember most of their names. Also he doesn't seem to be so sarcastic now.

His hws and test are time-consuming and not easy, but definetly doable. The tests are homework typed questions and are really straightforward, not tricky. If you make sure you understand homework solutions and go over the homework , you should be fine. Doing extra exercises from the textbook before the test is helpful.

As for his grading, it sounded scary when he said he wouldn't curve. But I think either he curved in the end or I did extremely good on the final (which seems unlikely because I know for sure I got 2 of the questions wrong). The median for the midterm was 55 and I got 70, according to him, I would ended up with a C range. But since I got A-, and I know friends who did worse than me also got A range, I think his grading is not that horrible.

Anyway take him if you can. His lectures are extremely clear and helpful and his grading is not that bad (I would say normal).

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
EC ENGR 115A
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A
March 24, 2012

Lectures are clear and organized. Very worth attending. Exams are fair but still a little difficult. As long as you do the HW's you'll be fine on the exams.

He gets mad when people walk in late though.

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
EC ENGR 115A
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A
April 2, 2012

Moloudi is a hard-ass. Look below and you'll get a feel for how a lot of students felt in the class. I both agree and disagree with the other reviews. I got an A (which it doesn't sound like he gave many), so listen up if you want to know how to do well.

He is in the top tier of EE professors in his lecturing. He teaches a lot by analogy instead of by proofs, which I found a good change of pace.

I didn't read the book much except for a little reference. Take very thorough notes in class - this is the key to doing well in his classes. You must do the (4) homeworks although they take 5-10 hours each because they are the practice problems you need to know how to solve for the tests.

The distribution on his midterm and final was basically 20 people each got in each decade. So ~20 people got 0-9%, ~20 people got 10-19%, ~20 people got 20-29%, etc. I thought the midterm and final were completely reasonable and he taught us how to solve every of the problems. His grading was tough though, so you must put in the time taking good notes during class and doing the homework outside of class.

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
EC ENGR 115A
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A
April 13, 2012

His grading scale is worse than Abidi's but he does examples and you learn a lot, and he cares about students and responds to emails, I like him, hard but good

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
EC ENGR 115A
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A
April 25, 2012

While I was surprised at his grading scale (C- average or so) from hearing about grades from other classmates, if you do well on the final and show a big improvement from the midterm, he WILL give you what you get on the final as your overall grade. I pulled off an A- even though the my rank in the class put me somewhere at the 24th percentile just by getting an 88% on the final (from a 38% on the midterm, which was just below the 40% average). He will reward you if he sees you putting in the effort to improve!

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
EC ENGR 115A
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A
March 24, 2012

Professor Shervin Moloudi has been the BEST lecturer I have had at UCLA (currently a 3rd year) _BY_FAR_. During lectures, he'll pause and tell you to put down your pencils and just absorb whatever explanation about theory or other transistor-y things he's about to tell you. He also uses a lot of analogies, explains the motivations behind why we’re learning about the circuit components we run into in class, and in general explains things very clearly (and often times with humor), making the intro analog circuits class very pleasant. I would highly suggest attending every lecture as well because sometimes he strays from the Razavi textbook (like in chapter 4 where BJTs are introduced through the exponential model versus the in class piece-wise linear model) and for the homework and exams you’re expected to do what he teaches in class. He also calls on people a lot, but does it in a friendly and guiding way if you don’t know the answer, so don’t worry if you’re a socially awkward penguin whose heart rate skyrockets to 300 bpm when called on in class, so take it as a learning experience if you don’t know the answer.

The TAs I interacted with (Hao and Amrutha) are very, very helpful and knowledgeable as well, so attending their discussions/OHs is probably a good idea, especially when you’re confused about material or stuck on homework.

The homework assignments are pretty dang long, but really doing the homework (i.e. not copying the solution manual or friends) definitely prepares you for the exams. Always do your homework and try to start it early if possible so you don’t wind up staying up super late the night before and then turn into a zombie during class after you turn it in. One complaint I have about how Professor Moloudi handled the homework would be how for the first midterm, we had to turn in a homework set (8am) the day of the midterm (6pm) and had minimal time to review the homework solutions (although because of the giant class, I’m guessing it was a hassle to reschedule a time and place for a midterm where we could all fit in every other seat, so it might’ve been difficult to push back the midterm from Tuesday to Thursday). There was also a Pspice design project that was pretty straightforward, but try to start that before the day before its due as well or you may run into complications with how it works on the SEASnet lab computers (the project itself is very easy, but getting it to run can be ridiculously frustrating for seemingly no good reason).

The exams are definitely fair, although it is clear that the vast majority of the class just copies the solution manual for the homework and never puts the time into learning the material (40% average on the midterm). Just took the final today, but I’m guessing the class behavior will be roughly the same. By being familiar with the last 3 homework sets and doing the examples he suggested us do on our own from the textbook, you should be able to cleanly get at least 75% of the final correct.

While I know that most people crammed into this class (175 students out of an enrollment cap of 100) to avoid Abidi (47 students out of an enrollment cap of 100 in Fall 2011), I think some people expected a cakewalk because they lucked out by dodging the Abidi bullet and just didn’t put any effort into the class, which is unfortunate because with just a bit of work, the course is a very easy “B” and a reasonable “A”, especially with such a huge class.

Overall, two thumbs up for Moloudi. Even considering taking EE 115B because of him and this how 115A went (despite not being in the IC pathway).

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
EC ENGR 115A
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A
March 26, 2012

Lectures are extremely worth it. This man is a teacher. He does his job very well.
His lectures are clear and he presents the material extremely well. He went slower at the beginning of the quarter to ensure we would have a good foundation for the rest of the material later on. Other professors like to rush in the beginning of the quarter, thus creating a disparity from the beginning.
Easily, one of the best professors I've had at UCLA.

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
EC ENGR 110
Quarter: Spring 2023
Grade: B-
July 3, 2023

Moloudi is a very good and clear lecturer. The class is at 8 am and lectures are not recorded + notes are not uploaded. Even though the class is early, it is definitely worth it to attend lecture, especially since his explanations of concepts are often very well done and he makes pretty good analogies. The homeworks are difficult, but doable as long as you put time into them. There are about 6 homeworks + 1 quiz on SPICE(10% of your grade), 1 midterm (35% of your grade), and final (55% of grade). The midterms are pretty tough, with the average being around a 66% and he doesn't curve the class. While the class was really difficult, I think I got a lot out of it and I would definitely recommend taking this class with Moloudi.

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
EC ENGR 115B
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A
May 27, 2014

Excellent professor, patient and detailed in explaining course concepts. You have to go to classes

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
EC ENGR 115A
Quarter: Winter 2017
Grade: N/A
March 29, 2017

I took EE110 with Moloudi in Winter 2017.

Moloudi was probably the best EE professor I ever had so far, together with Lorenzelli's EE102 class.

The cons to taking him were the 8AM lectures, and the fact he doesn't give many A's (he doesn't curve). Now keep in mind I don't know anyone else's grades, but he said that he wouldn' t give anyone below 80% an A. I did OK in the class considering I bombed the midterm. Also note that he very rarely post his lecture notes, unless they're math-based equational notes. The TA's didn't post notes until later in the quarter, so try and find a friend.

Now for the pros. If you go to lecture, chances are you will understand the material fairly well, since Moloudi is such an excellent lecturer and fails to leave out even the most miniscule of details. This could actually be a bit of a bad thing since everyone in the class felt they were on a level playing field in terms of understanding the material. The homework, which isn't too tricky minus one BS problem on the second homework, is excellent preparation for the exams, which are tricky but not too hard if you understood the homework.

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
EC ENGR 115A
Quarter: Winter 2017
Grade: A-
April 7, 2017

Actually I took his EE 110. He is by far the best lecturer in EE department.

He writes everything on board and doesn't post lecture notes. But that's not a problem if you attend his lecture. His lectures are so clear and effective. He can cover up to twice the stuff that any other professor could cover in one lecture, which makes students really concentrate (there's no time for cell phone). The attendency was around 90% for every lecture, which is very impressive for an 8am class. He really cares about students and can remember most of their names. Also he doesn't seem to be so sarcastic now.

His hws and test are time-consuming and not easy, but definetly doable. The tests are homework typed questions and are really straightforward, not tricky. If you make sure you understand homework solutions and go over the homework , you should be fine. Doing extra exercises from the textbook before the test is helpful.

As for his grading, it sounded scary when he said he wouldn't curve. But I think either he curved in the end or I did extremely good on the final (which seems unlikely because I know for sure I got 2 of the questions wrong). The median for the midterm was 55 and I got 70, according to him, I would ended up with a C range. But since I got A-, and I know friends who did worse than me also got A range, I think his grading is not that horrible.

Anyway take him if you can. His lectures are extremely clear and helpful and his grading is not that bad (I would say normal).

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
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