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- PHYSICS 4BL
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Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.
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The trick to this class is to schmooz your TA because they are likely a master's engineering student who doesn't give a fuck. Take the time to learn LaTeX before you take this class. I spent the week before the quarter started to figure out how to code and format with it and my lab reports looked very beautiful.
Make your worksheets a bit dense, not too much but minimum 2 sentences, have consistent formatting, DRAW NICE COLORFUL FIGURES! I got a 60% on my first lab report but for all the rest of them I consistently became the top score in the class as the reports got more involved since I mastered LaTeX and drew a bunch of basic figures in powerpoint. I typed up a bunch of bullshit, our experiments wouldn't work every now and then but it looked nice.
The workload gets better after the first one.
I despise this class. It's better than 4AL, but it still sucks. Make sure to review someone else's later labs from 4AL/BL to get a hang of the formatting. This class is a formatting class. It's an absolute waste of time and the curve is ridiculous. I was in a class of 9 people, and I am pretty sure I was 3rd overall. Each rank got a different grade, from what I heard (1st - A, 2nd - A-, 3rd - B+ etc).
Make sure you ask your TA for formatting advice/show them your labs before you submit them.
On the bright side, you usually don't need the entire 3 hours for the lab. Get started early because starting the lab the night before it's due is a killer.
The quizzes are easy in that you have 3 tries. The questions stay the same, but the numbers switch.
This class sucks. Some ways to make it suck marginally less:
- If you haven't taken 4AL, in the first lab try to figure out how many people in your section have. 90% of the points you lose will be on formatting details if you're new to writing labs like this. People who've taken 4AL will know how to do it and jack up the curve while you have to figure it out. If more than half of the people in your section have taken 4AL, switch to a new one immediately.
- Also if your TA is unhelpful or doesn't seem to know what they're doing, find a new section as well. I had to ask mine for clarification on almost every lab because the manual is so poorly written. Also make sure you know what your TA wants format-wise so you're not losing points.
- Reading at least the introduction section of each lab before you take the quiz will help you know what equations and concepts are important - makes it easier to figure out the questions.
- You don't have to read each lab in detail before you do it, but at least get a look at the questions for the worksheet and what data you have to analyze in the report. This'll tell you what parts of the experiments are actually important and you don't have to waste time on minor parts of it (especially for the labs where you'll probably have a time crunch).
- Try to do the analysis sections (graphing, linear regressions, etc.) in lab if you have extra time. That way you know you have everything you need and if something seems off about the data, you can ask your TA about it. If you're lucky, they won't dock you for your data seeming off if your procedure and analysis follow the correct steps, but it's good to ask them in lab and make sure.
- This will sound like a broken record but START EARLY. Writing up the labs are a lot of work but much more manageable as 1-2 hours a day. Especially since you have to pay attention to a lot of details like precision and significant figures, it's better to give yourself time to review it and fix stuff.
- As said before, most of the points you'll lose will be due to nitpicky formatting things. The only real way to see what was specifically wrong with your report is to check back on the Turnitin links for each lab after a week or so following its due date. If your TA leaves comments on the labs it'll help figure out where specifically points are being taken off and what you need to fix. A lot of the things I lost points for were formatting requirements my TA did not mention at all in lab.
- See if the TA would be willing to share information about score distributions for each lab after they're graded. Since the classes are curved by section, it'll help you get a better idea of where you stand compared to everyone else.
Yeah...I don't like this class.
-----------
Pros:
* Shorter lab reports than 4AL
* Honestly the experiments are cool
* TA's can be nice
-----------
Cons:
* Grading is very subjective
* The class itself is hard, wires are annoying
* Time crunch in labs
Only take this BS if you need to. They will take off points on your report for anything. Too much white space, showing consecutive figures (even though professional reports do this all the time), spelling, punctuation, etc. Legit the grading for this class is BULL#@$%. I don't understand the logic here. By their reasoning, one could have everything correct and displayed correctly, but if there is too much white space between ideas or bad spelling or pretty much anything, they could technically get a zero. This is where my 60k out of state tuition is going? Are you kidding me? Like what exactly is this crap, shoulda went to SC man. Don't take this crap, go to a CC for it.
4BL is a lot like the older, cooler brother of 4AL. In my opinion, 4BL is a lot more manageable than 4AL. Although the labs are often longer than 4AL, where you could usually leave after 1-1.5 hours, the reports are graded far more generously than in 4AL. If you're ever confused in lab just make sure you ask your TA a bunch of questions, because the manual can be painfully vague at times. It's not like you have any choice whether you take this lab or not, so just be appreciative that it's better than 4AL. Oh and make sure you start early on your lab reports.
This class is ass.
It is exactly like Physics 4AL . TA's do not want to grade hard, but they are forced to because the Physics department wants grade deflation. As an engineer, you just have to suck it up and take this class to graduate.
The trick to this class is to schmooz your TA because they are likely a master's engineering student who doesn't give a fuck. Take the time to learn LaTeX before you take this class. I spent the week before the quarter started to figure out how to code and format with it and my lab reports looked very beautiful.
Make your worksheets a bit dense, not too much but minimum 2 sentences, have consistent formatting, DRAW NICE COLORFUL FIGURES! I got a 60% on my first lab report but for all the rest of them I consistently became the top score in the class as the reports got more involved since I mastered LaTeX and drew a bunch of basic figures in powerpoint. I typed up a bunch of bullshit, our experiments wouldn't work every now and then but it looked nice.
The workload gets better after the first one.
I despise this class. It's better than 4AL, but it still sucks. Make sure to review someone else's later labs from 4AL/BL to get a hang of the formatting. This class is a formatting class. It's an absolute waste of time and the curve is ridiculous. I was in a class of 9 people, and I am pretty sure I was 3rd overall. Each rank got a different grade, from what I heard (1st - A, 2nd - A-, 3rd - B+ etc).
Make sure you ask your TA for formatting advice/show them your labs before you submit them.
On the bright side, you usually don't need the entire 3 hours for the lab. Get started early because starting the lab the night before it's due is a killer.
The quizzes are easy in that you have 3 tries. The questions stay the same, but the numbers switch.
This class sucks. Some ways to make it suck marginally less:
- If you haven't taken 4AL, in the first lab try to figure out how many people in your section have. 90% of the points you lose will be on formatting details if you're new to writing labs like this. People who've taken 4AL will know how to do it and jack up the curve while you have to figure it out. If more than half of the people in your section have taken 4AL, switch to a new one immediately.
- Also if your TA is unhelpful or doesn't seem to know what they're doing, find a new section as well. I had to ask mine for clarification on almost every lab because the manual is so poorly written. Also make sure you know what your TA wants format-wise so you're not losing points.
- Reading at least the introduction section of each lab before you take the quiz will help you know what equations and concepts are important - makes it easier to figure out the questions.
- You don't have to read each lab in detail before you do it, but at least get a look at the questions for the worksheet and what data you have to analyze in the report. This'll tell you what parts of the experiments are actually important and you don't have to waste time on minor parts of it (especially for the labs where you'll probably have a time crunch).
- Try to do the analysis sections (graphing, linear regressions, etc.) in lab if you have extra time. That way you know you have everything you need and if something seems off about the data, you can ask your TA about it. If you're lucky, they won't dock you for your data seeming off if your procedure and analysis follow the correct steps, but it's good to ask them in lab and make sure.
- This will sound like a broken record but START EARLY. Writing up the labs are a lot of work but much more manageable as 1-2 hours a day. Especially since you have to pay attention to a lot of details like precision and significant figures, it's better to give yourself time to review it and fix stuff.
- As said before, most of the points you'll lose will be due to nitpicky formatting things. The only real way to see what was specifically wrong with your report is to check back on the Turnitin links for each lab after a week or so following its due date. If your TA leaves comments on the labs it'll help figure out where specifically points are being taken off and what you need to fix. A lot of the things I lost points for were formatting requirements my TA did not mention at all in lab.
- See if the TA would be willing to share information about score distributions for each lab after they're graded. Since the classes are curved by section, it'll help you get a better idea of where you stand compared to everyone else.
Yeah...I don't like this class.
-----------
Pros:
* Shorter lab reports than 4AL
* Honestly the experiments are cool
* TA's can be nice
-----------
Cons:
* Grading is very subjective
* The class itself is hard, wires are annoying
* Time crunch in labs
Only take this BS if you need to. They will take off points on your report for anything. Too much white space, showing consecutive figures (even though professional reports do this all the time), spelling, punctuation, etc. Legit the grading for this class is BULL#@$%. I don't understand the logic here. By their reasoning, one could have everything correct and displayed correctly, but if there is too much white space between ideas or bad spelling or pretty much anything, they could technically get a zero. This is where my 60k out of state tuition is going? Are you kidding me? Like what exactly is this crap, shoulda went to SC man. Don't take this crap, go to a CC for it.
4BL is a lot like the older, cooler brother of 4AL. In my opinion, 4BL is a lot more manageable than 4AL. Although the labs are often longer than 4AL, where you could usually leave after 1-1.5 hours, the reports are graded far more generously than in 4AL. If you're ever confused in lab just make sure you ask your TA a bunch of questions, because the manual can be painfully vague at times. It's not like you have any choice whether you take this lab or not, so just be appreciative that it's better than 4AL. Oh and make sure you start early on your lab reports.
This class is ass.
It is exactly like Physics 4AL . TA's do not want to grade hard, but they are forced to because the Physics department wants grade deflation. As an engineer, you just have to suck it up and take this class to graduate.
Based on 10 Users
TOP TAGS
- Participation Matters (3)
- Has Group Projects (3)