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Sixiang Wang
AD
Based on 26 Users
This course will only be fun if you have an interest in Korean history. Due to the quarter system, he does rush 5000 years of Korean history in 20 lectures. However, he does teach in a great fashion and is always willing to help students via Discord channel.
The grade breakdown:
- Participation (20%)
- Weekly postings (30%)
- Take-home midterm (25%)
- Take-home Final (35%)
This class may be painful if you are just willing to fulfill the GE req. If that is the case, consider other courses.
Prof. Wang is a wonderful and passionate instructor. Throughout the quarter, he made adjustments to the structure of lectures as to make them more organized. Assignments included weekly polls, a few quizzes, a few worksheets, weekly discussion posts, as well as a take-home midterm and take-home final. Midterm was an essay, and the final involved discussing 7 passages and writing one regular essay. Discussion is required and participation was very much emphasized.
I don't know if I would consider this an easy GE, but I enjoyed this course nonetheless. Weekly blog posts felt a bit demanding but were manageable. For the midterm and final essays, you're given two prompt options each, but as a whole I considered the prompts to be quite challenging. Prof. Wang as well as my TA were very helpful in answering questions though! Wang even created a forum for us to send in anonymous questions about Korean history, which I thought was very considerate :)
Prof. Wang was absolutely hilarious. He always made class engaging and accessible. Lecture was in person, on zoom and recorded. All the exams were online asynch. and open note open book. The assignments were always engaging and fairly easy, especially if you paid attention to the slides. The book was completely unnecessary, I don't even remember if there was a book honestly. Highly recommend!
I took this class out of pure interest since all of my GEs are done and I had room to take classes I liked, and never again. For a lower division course, it really doesn't need to be this difficult. Overall, the material is interesting and Prof. Wang's lectures are helpful but the number of readings you need to look over each week is beyond incompatible with other schedules. If you skim readings, you better read it over again because it will find a way to be used against you. My TA was absolutely horrible and grades far harsher than Prof. Wang. His class is honestly fun to learn about when you're going at your own pace but the assignments and how strictly they're graded suck the fun out of it. I'll admit that there are not many assignments but I'd say that's even worse since it impacts your grade a lot harder. We had to write a 2-3 page midterm and final paper which basically are the make or break. The other two graded assignments are weekly discussion posts and participation (which was just interacting with the course website). Because of how harsh Prof. Wang's TAs grade, you will most likely not get a full score on your discussion posts, which brings down your grade a lot. Office hours don't really help either, you're better off talking to classmates about the material. But, I will say that I like Prof. Wang as a person: He's a nice guy, hears out your problems, tries to help in the best way he can, is responsive to emails in a timely manner, and is very lenient with deadlines. I just wish his TAs and grading rubric would make the experience a lot easier
The professor is very nice. His lectures are really good (asynchronous), the TA mainly graded our discussion posts and she was a very harsh grader. Make sure you choose a good TA because I would say the TA is more in control of your grades. They use a very unique grading scale, and for my quarter they curved the class.
Professor Wang is an amazing professor who truly makes an effort every day. He is super approachable and encourages questions on any topic within the course. I knew nothing about Korean history before this class, but I'm so interested in it now.
Chill. Posts slides and knowledgeable on where to find book. Streams lectures on Discord, so even if you're late to class you can just open up the stream, sit, and take notes. Some humor.
You can get by without doing all the textbook readings later in the course, because his lectures are informative and digestible, but you HAVE to read the given discussion and module sources for the midterm and final paper. The only thing I disliked was how some weekly discussion prompts were posted late and made me procrastinate reading the passages. Try to keep postings under 200 words and answer all the questions in the prompt, else it sucks for the TAs when they grade the weekly required discussion (and thus it will also suck out a bit of your grade).
Wang tries to make his facts relevant to the modern day and emphasizes the multiple perspectives of everything through interesting questions and interacting with students, some compensation for exposition dumping thousands of years of political intrigue in a 75 minute period. A lot of hand waving on what Korea is but it's for a purpose. Occasionally gives async lecture recordings, which are nice.
The professor himself is very knowledgeable not only in Korean history, customs, and modern culture but also that of other Asian cultures' intersections, continuities and contrasts with Korea, and he is approachable, easy and enjoyable to talk to outside of class. The TAs for this quarter were also nice; Richard helped me with my midterm paper, and Matthew gave me great advice when I was struggling with discussion posts. I recommend taking this class.
Professor Wang is such an educated and charismatic professor. He has a very engaging personality, is very funny, and is just very fun to listen to. Sometimes lectures would be a little snooze-y, but that was just because of the content occasionally, not his lecturing. He gives weekly discussions based on reading, and the midterm and final are essays, but a passage analysis part based on the whole quarter's sources is added on for the final. He also streams lectures on Discord and sends out recordings so attendance is not mandatory, but I find attending lectures is important in the weekly reading and discussion post, and he often gives ideas for what to write. Your TA 100% matters though, mine was a harsh grader but also very lenient with attendance. I cannot vouch for Professor Wang enough, take Korea 50 as a GE!!!
Lectures and readings are excellent. Material covered is interesting and is likely to give you new perspectives on history.
Professor is very knowledgeable and answers all sorts of questions about Asian history. Professor is active on Discord.
The prof is incredibly passionate and highly knowledgeable on the subject; he is also actively involved in helping his students succeed if they reach out for assistance. However, you do have to actually be interested in the subject to succeed - there is a lot of reading and weekly discussion postings, so it's not an "easy GE". I really liked the class overall though because it was engaging, all resources were uploaded by prof (no need to buy things, he gave us pdfs <3) and I definitely learned a LOT. If you genuinely want to learn about Korean history and about Korea's history with international relations, you'll enjoy the course without any major issues.
This course will only be fun if you have an interest in Korean history. Due to the quarter system, he does rush 5000 years of Korean history in 20 lectures. However, he does teach in a great fashion and is always willing to help students via Discord channel.
The grade breakdown:
- Participation (20%)
- Weekly postings (30%)
- Take-home midterm (25%)
- Take-home Final (35%)
This class may be painful if you are just willing to fulfill the GE req. If that is the case, consider other courses.
Prof. Wang is a wonderful and passionate instructor. Throughout the quarter, he made adjustments to the structure of lectures as to make them more organized. Assignments included weekly polls, a few quizzes, a few worksheets, weekly discussion posts, as well as a take-home midterm and take-home final. Midterm was an essay, and the final involved discussing 7 passages and writing one regular essay. Discussion is required and participation was very much emphasized.
I don't know if I would consider this an easy GE, but I enjoyed this course nonetheless. Weekly blog posts felt a bit demanding but were manageable. For the midterm and final essays, you're given two prompt options each, but as a whole I considered the prompts to be quite challenging. Prof. Wang as well as my TA were very helpful in answering questions though! Wang even created a forum for us to send in anonymous questions about Korean history, which I thought was very considerate :)
Prof. Wang was absolutely hilarious. He always made class engaging and accessible. Lecture was in person, on zoom and recorded. All the exams were online asynch. and open note open book. The assignments were always engaging and fairly easy, especially if you paid attention to the slides. The book was completely unnecessary, I don't even remember if there was a book honestly. Highly recommend!
I took this class out of pure interest since all of my GEs are done and I had room to take classes I liked, and never again. For a lower division course, it really doesn't need to be this difficult. Overall, the material is interesting and Prof. Wang's lectures are helpful but the number of readings you need to look over each week is beyond incompatible with other schedules. If you skim readings, you better read it over again because it will find a way to be used against you. My TA was absolutely horrible and grades far harsher than Prof. Wang. His class is honestly fun to learn about when you're going at your own pace but the assignments and how strictly they're graded suck the fun out of it. I'll admit that there are not many assignments but I'd say that's even worse since it impacts your grade a lot harder. We had to write a 2-3 page midterm and final paper which basically are the make or break. The other two graded assignments are weekly discussion posts and participation (which was just interacting with the course website). Because of how harsh Prof. Wang's TAs grade, you will most likely not get a full score on your discussion posts, which brings down your grade a lot. Office hours don't really help either, you're better off talking to classmates about the material. But, I will say that I like Prof. Wang as a person: He's a nice guy, hears out your problems, tries to help in the best way he can, is responsive to emails in a timely manner, and is very lenient with deadlines. I just wish his TAs and grading rubric would make the experience a lot easier
The professor is very nice. His lectures are really good (asynchronous), the TA mainly graded our discussion posts and she was a very harsh grader. Make sure you choose a good TA because I would say the TA is more in control of your grades. They use a very unique grading scale, and for my quarter they curved the class.
Professor Wang is an amazing professor who truly makes an effort every day. He is super approachable and encourages questions on any topic within the course. I knew nothing about Korean history before this class, but I'm so interested in it now.
Chill. Posts slides and knowledgeable on where to find book. Streams lectures on Discord, so even if you're late to class you can just open up the stream, sit, and take notes. Some humor.
You can get by without doing all the textbook readings later in the course, because his lectures are informative and digestible, but you HAVE to read the given discussion and module sources for the midterm and final paper. The only thing I disliked was how some weekly discussion prompts were posted late and made me procrastinate reading the passages. Try to keep postings under 200 words and answer all the questions in the prompt, else it sucks for the TAs when they grade the weekly required discussion (and thus it will also suck out a bit of your grade).
Wang tries to make his facts relevant to the modern day and emphasizes the multiple perspectives of everything through interesting questions and interacting with students, some compensation for exposition dumping thousands of years of political intrigue in a 75 minute period. A lot of hand waving on what Korea is but it's for a purpose. Occasionally gives async lecture recordings, which are nice.
The professor himself is very knowledgeable not only in Korean history, customs, and modern culture but also that of other Asian cultures' intersections, continuities and contrasts with Korea, and he is approachable, easy and enjoyable to talk to outside of class. The TAs for this quarter were also nice; Richard helped me with my midterm paper, and Matthew gave me great advice when I was struggling with discussion posts. I recommend taking this class.
Professor Wang is such an educated and charismatic professor. He has a very engaging personality, is very funny, and is just very fun to listen to. Sometimes lectures would be a little snooze-y, but that was just because of the content occasionally, not his lecturing. He gives weekly discussions based on reading, and the midterm and final are essays, but a passage analysis part based on the whole quarter's sources is added on for the final. He also streams lectures on Discord and sends out recordings so attendance is not mandatory, but I find attending lectures is important in the weekly reading and discussion post, and he often gives ideas for what to write. Your TA 100% matters though, mine was a harsh grader but also very lenient with attendance. I cannot vouch for Professor Wang enough, take Korea 50 as a GE!!!
Lectures and readings are excellent. Material covered is interesting and is likely to give you new perspectives on history.
Professor is very knowledgeable and answers all sorts of questions about Asian history. Professor is active on Discord.
The prof is incredibly passionate and highly knowledgeable on the subject; he is also actively involved in helping his students succeed if they reach out for assistance. However, you do have to actually be interested in the subject to succeed - there is a lot of reading and weekly discussion postings, so it's not an "easy GE". I really liked the class overall though because it was engaging, all resources were uploaded by prof (no need to buy things, he gave us pdfs <3) and I definitely learned a LOT. If you genuinely want to learn about Korean history and about Korea's history with international relations, you'll enjoy the course without any major issues.