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- ENGCOMP 3
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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.
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Professor Kipen himself is an interesting character....he refuses to give students A's right away and is a great criticizer. At the end of the day he looks for growth in students writings. Only thing I did not like was his very vague comments on how to better prepare for essays. For example I would ask "How can I make sure my essay doesn't seem too opinionated? How can I equally spread out my opinion, evidence, facts, etc?" and he would respond "Well that is tough, but keep in my mind opinion in an essay is necessary and important but refrain from using too much or it will take over the entire thing, just make sure to add enough evidence." Like SIR you did NOT answer my question.
Kipen is an interesting guy. His class is only around 20-30 people and the desks were organized around him so that he was always facing you and ready to call on you if nobody raised their hand to volunteer.
His class works like this:
-you get assigned reading from the course reader ($20) every day after class and by the next class, you should have read it and be ready to talk about it. (if the passages were long I usually read them an hour before class but most of them I read the first few paragraphs at the beginning of class and then tried to explain something early so he wouldn't call on me later).
-"Class discussion" (Kipen explaining the piece) takes up most of the class so be ready to listen for an hour
-The last thing you do at the end of the discussion is to email him an answer to some question that he gives you and then he critiques everyone's responses in front of the class
-There are also 3 writing assignments that make up most of your grade. Mine were: Write about nature (3 pages), choose an author and explain their writing (5 pages), and Choose any topic you want (7 pages).
-Conferences: the week after you turn in your paper he holds conferences where he meets with everyone individually and reads their work in from of them. He makes a few marks and makes noises but he doesn't give you any helpful comments.
Tips:
-Volunteer at the beginning of class to get your participation and also so he doesn't surprise you when he calls on random people
-Get rid of the formatted high school writing because he likes pieces that are more conversational so try and make it chill
-Try to have fun even though it's super boring. Kipen is a chill guy and his class is super easy
I love his classes, and I improved a lot in writing.
PROS:
Only three papers throughout the quarter ( 3page+ 5 page+ 7page)
No finals or Midterms
Easy participation points, just need to show up every class.
CONS:
In the end of each class, he will ask students to write a paragraph. He will project the paragraph on the screen and ask students to read it and judge it.
Class is composed of 3 papers and class participation
paper 1: 20% - 3/4 pages
paper 2: 25% - 5 pages
paper 3: 30% - 7 pages
participation: 25%
No extra credit, no homework/busywork
Attendance is mandatory
If you have to miss class you need to let him know in advanced and do an alternative one for missing the in class assignment. Do NOT be late to class, he takes it to heart. Kipen is a good person but not the best prof. Its definitely doable to get an A in the class, but I'm pretty sure majority of people didn't get it. Class is basically useless, but you still had to show up. Everyone was either playing chess or on their phone and he always starts right on time and uses the whole time. He doesn't actually teach, he just critiques your work and expects you to learn from that. The papers are not difficult but there is no rubric or example paper so it is difficult to know what he wants. Make sure you start the papers well in advance so you can really turn in your best work, because profs can really tell if you write something in one sitting. The prompts are super open ended and he is really open to anything (I included pictures that took up half the page for one of my essays) which can be a blessing in disguise. He grades the first two papers in front of you which is really nerve-wracking, since he's ivy educated with a degree in Comp. Lit from Yale. He's an intelligent person who is very knowledgeable about literature and very open to helping students, but you have to reach out to him. I would say he is a pretty lenient grader (I don't think he has ever failed anyone and I submitted my first paper late for no reason and still got a B+ on it) but since he is so passionate and intelligent he finds errors in your work that other profs probably would not point out and then all those small mistakes add up. If you need an extension on a paper he is super lenient and willing to grant it to you, just let him know in advanced. Overall I'd say his 4.1 star Bruinwalk rating is accurate. He is a good person and you can do well in the class, but you really have to put in the work into your papers if you want that A.
Selling required class book $20 (originally $30)
Email: *************
kipen is alright! the class is pretty easy and the reading isnt too heavy. at the beginning of every class you talk about the reading, and at the end of the class you write a prompt. when youre done writing, you email it to him and he puts it on the board for everyone to see while he critiques. definitely anxiety inducing.
aside from that, the workload is light. you'll write two papers and then a third extra writing assignment thats pretty easy. he's a lenient grader and is nice with his critiques. you'll have to meet with him and you grade your paper together, but its not that bad.
I'd take this class again. Kipen is nice. hes ego is pretty big, but its UCLA and everyone here is like that. sometimes his prompts arent very clear and hes not too accessible via email, but he'll answer your questions and then some if you ask in class.
attendance is pretty much mandatory, but lectures are only twice a week.
If you want to learn in-depth about a writer's life, then take the class. It's centered around discussion with him lecturing most of the time. Classwork is a short writing assignment via email, which he'll open up on google and point out corrections. Do the classwork!! There are three essays, but they're very flexible (the first one was a diary of your day, the second a book review, and the third about an author you covered in your course reader). The course reader was $25 when I took his class. He goes on tangents, but if you're interested in history or literature, then listen to him. He dresses like a librarian with blazers and that red sweater, and HIS EYEBROWS ARE ON FLEEK. He's really interesting to listen to from self-depreciating humor to book recommendations. But I feel that it didn't help me with my writing, but he taught me to enjoy what I write instead of sticking to conventional mechanics. He's picky about certain word usages but if he likes your content then it's okay. Don't be afraid to talk to him! He also owns a little bookshop check it out it's near UCLA~~
TLDR: If you are an english or literature-related major and/or want to pursue creative writing, please take this class. If not, I wouldn't suggest it.
The class was about films but from my understadning it will be about biographies from this point forward. It had an average-to-low workload with 3 total essays and 2 readings per week that spanned from a couple paragraphs to 50+ pages long. The professor checks that you're doing the readings through a quote submission system (emailing him a quote before class) and he calls on each person during class to talk about their quote. I gathered halfway through the quarter that you could submit any quote and talk about its grammatical aspects instead of it's content, and that would be sufficient enough for him to start rambling on about some sort of writing skill - whether you had done the reading or not.
The real kicker with this class is his grading. No matter what you do, unless you are a naturally-talented writer, you WILL get a B+ on the first paper, so I wouldn't put that might thought into it. Thank goodness that paper is only worth 10%. The next two papers were on a film of our choosing: 5 and 7 pages in length, 30% and 40% of our grades respectively. Note that he grades the first two papers in person, as in you book a time with him at YRL and have him grade it in front of you (could be stressful). Although he never ended up giving any of us horrible grades, we always felt that the papers demanded all of our effort or else we would be doomed. This is mainly because he wanted us to write in his style, which is free-flowing and extremely expressive. As someone who is studying engineering, I could do without reworking how I write essays while I'm being pummeled by my STEM classes.
Another thing is that class has mandatory attendance and is extremely boring. Expect to be staring at a wall for essentially 70 minutes unless you have friends in the class. I had some friends in mine and it honestly felt like highschool.
Overall, Kipen is an extremely caring man who clearly has a passion for creative and critical writing, and I definately learned more about writing in his class than I have in any other class. Give him a chance if you're willing to put in the work, but if you're just trying to get rid of your writing requirement(s), this might not be the best choice.
Kipen is a nice and funny professor, but his lectures are REALLY REALLY boring. Before each class, you pick a quote from the assigned reading (not that long you can skim through it) and email him your quote. During the lectures, Professor Kipen would spend half of the class reading and discussing the emails you sent. Then he assigns a five-minute writing exercise and spends the other half of the class reading the responses out loud. As you see, the class isn't very interesting. When Kipen isn't reading your quote/response, half of the class are messing around, making noises, and going on their phones. In terms of improving your writing, Kipen's class is meh. I learnt to make a couple of sentences interesting to read but I learnt nothing about how to support an argument I am making and how to create a professional piece of writing. The only thing you are learning is tailoring your writing style to match Professor Kipen's personal taste. If you are trying to be a story writer or an article writer, his class would help. To succeed in his class, you have to be conversational and personable in your writing which is something he likes. He also enjoys first-person a lot (not the type of writing for more professional writing). For my first two essays, I got 2 B+ and I am not sure what I got on my final essay but it was enough for a A-. The workload isn't that much so if I spent more time, I could have gotten a A but given my other STEM classes and his harsh grading, I was more than happy. This is my experience with his class and I don't think I would take it again. I know there are other ENGCOMP3 teachers who give out more work than Kipen but are more generous with grading and make you a better writer.
David Kipen is very interesting. He's a great speaker though his class and assignments lack variety. He truly cares for his students and ins incredibly passionate about writing. Make sure to use a conversational style and you'll be fine. More student cooperation would make this class significantly better. Kipen has a lot of room to improve and I could tell he is up for it!
Professor Kipen himself is an interesting character....he refuses to give students A's right away and is a great criticizer. At the end of the day he looks for growth in students writings. Only thing I did not like was his very vague comments on how to better prepare for essays. For example I would ask "How can I make sure my essay doesn't seem too opinionated? How can I equally spread out my opinion, evidence, facts, etc?" and he would respond "Well that is tough, but keep in my mind opinion in an essay is necessary and important but refrain from using too much or it will take over the entire thing, just make sure to add enough evidence." Like SIR you did NOT answer my question.
Kipen is an interesting guy. His class is only around 20-30 people and the desks were organized around him so that he was always facing you and ready to call on you if nobody raised their hand to volunteer.
His class works like this:
-you get assigned reading from the course reader ($20) every day after class and by the next class, you should have read it and be ready to talk about it. (if the passages were long I usually read them an hour before class but most of them I read the first few paragraphs at the beginning of class and then tried to explain something early so he wouldn't call on me later).
-"Class discussion" (Kipen explaining the piece) takes up most of the class so be ready to listen for an hour
-The last thing you do at the end of the discussion is to email him an answer to some question that he gives you and then he critiques everyone's responses in front of the class
-There are also 3 writing assignments that make up most of your grade. Mine were: Write about nature (3 pages), choose an author and explain their writing (5 pages), and Choose any topic you want (7 pages).
-Conferences: the week after you turn in your paper he holds conferences where he meets with everyone individually and reads their work in from of them. He makes a few marks and makes noises but he doesn't give you any helpful comments.
Tips:
-Volunteer at the beginning of class to get your participation and also so he doesn't surprise you when he calls on random people
-Get rid of the formatted high school writing because he likes pieces that are more conversational so try and make it chill
-Try to have fun even though it's super boring. Kipen is a chill guy and his class is super easy
I love his classes, and I improved a lot in writing.
PROS:
Only three papers throughout the quarter ( 3page+ 5 page+ 7page)
No finals or Midterms
Easy participation points, just need to show up every class.
CONS:
In the end of each class, he will ask students to write a paragraph. He will project the paragraph on the screen and ask students to read it and judge it.
Class is composed of 3 papers and class participation
paper 1: 20% - 3/4 pages
paper 2: 25% - 5 pages
paper 3: 30% - 7 pages
participation: 25%
No extra credit, no homework/busywork
Attendance is mandatory
If you have to miss class you need to let him know in advanced and do an alternative one for missing the in class assignment. Do NOT be late to class, he takes it to heart. Kipen is a good person but not the best prof. Its definitely doable to get an A in the class, but I'm pretty sure majority of people didn't get it. Class is basically useless, but you still had to show up. Everyone was either playing chess or on their phone and he always starts right on time and uses the whole time. He doesn't actually teach, he just critiques your work and expects you to learn from that. The papers are not difficult but there is no rubric or example paper so it is difficult to know what he wants. Make sure you start the papers well in advance so you can really turn in your best work, because profs can really tell if you write something in one sitting. The prompts are super open ended and he is really open to anything (I included pictures that took up half the page for one of my essays) which can be a blessing in disguise. He grades the first two papers in front of you which is really nerve-wracking, since he's ivy educated with a degree in Comp. Lit from Yale. He's an intelligent person who is very knowledgeable about literature and very open to helping students, but you have to reach out to him. I would say he is a pretty lenient grader (I don't think he has ever failed anyone and I submitted my first paper late for no reason and still got a B+ on it) but since he is so passionate and intelligent he finds errors in your work that other profs probably would not point out and then all those small mistakes add up. If you need an extension on a paper he is super lenient and willing to grant it to you, just let him know in advanced. Overall I'd say his 4.1 star Bruinwalk rating is accurate. He is a good person and you can do well in the class, but you really have to put in the work into your papers if you want that A.
Selling required class book $20 (originally $30)
Email: *************
kipen is alright! the class is pretty easy and the reading isnt too heavy. at the beginning of every class you talk about the reading, and at the end of the class you write a prompt. when youre done writing, you email it to him and he puts it on the board for everyone to see while he critiques. definitely anxiety inducing.
aside from that, the workload is light. you'll write two papers and then a third extra writing assignment thats pretty easy. he's a lenient grader and is nice with his critiques. you'll have to meet with him and you grade your paper together, but its not that bad.
I'd take this class again. Kipen is nice. hes ego is pretty big, but its UCLA and everyone here is like that. sometimes his prompts arent very clear and hes not too accessible via email, but he'll answer your questions and then some if you ask in class.
attendance is pretty much mandatory, but lectures are only twice a week.
If you want to learn in-depth about a writer's life, then take the class. It's centered around discussion with him lecturing most of the time. Classwork is a short writing assignment via email, which he'll open up on google and point out corrections. Do the classwork!! There are three essays, but they're very flexible (the first one was a diary of your day, the second a book review, and the third about an author you covered in your course reader). The course reader was $25 when I took his class. He goes on tangents, but if you're interested in history or literature, then listen to him. He dresses like a librarian with blazers and that red sweater, and HIS EYEBROWS ARE ON FLEEK. He's really interesting to listen to from self-depreciating humor to book recommendations. But I feel that it didn't help me with my writing, but he taught me to enjoy what I write instead of sticking to conventional mechanics. He's picky about certain word usages but if he likes your content then it's okay. Don't be afraid to talk to him! He also owns a little bookshop check it out it's near UCLA~~
TLDR: If you are an english or literature-related major and/or want to pursue creative writing, please take this class. If not, I wouldn't suggest it.
The class was about films but from my understadning it will be about biographies from this point forward. It had an average-to-low workload with 3 total essays and 2 readings per week that spanned from a couple paragraphs to 50+ pages long. The professor checks that you're doing the readings through a quote submission system (emailing him a quote before class) and he calls on each person during class to talk about their quote. I gathered halfway through the quarter that you could submit any quote and talk about its grammatical aspects instead of it's content, and that would be sufficient enough for him to start rambling on about some sort of writing skill - whether you had done the reading or not.
The real kicker with this class is his grading. No matter what you do, unless you are a naturally-talented writer, you WILL get a B+ on the first paper, so I wouldn't put that might thought into it. Thank goodness that paper is only worth 10%. The next two papers were on a film of our choosing: 5 and 7 pages in length, 30% and 40% of our grades respectively. Note that he grades the first two papers in person, as in you book a time with him at YRL and have him grade it in front of you (could be stressful). Although he never ended up giving any of us horrible grades, we always felt that the papers demanded all of our effort or else we would be doomed. This is mainly because he wanted us to write in his style, which is free-flowing and extremely expressive. As someone who is studying engineering, I could do without reworking how I write essays while I'm being pummeled by my STEM classes.
Another thing is that class has mandatory attendance and is extremely boring. Expect to be staring at a wall for essentially 70 minutes unless you have friends in the class. I had some friends in mine and it honestly felt like highschool.
Overall, Kipen is an extremely caring man who clearly has a passion for creative and critical writing, and I definately learned more about writing in his class than I have in any other class. Give him a chance if you're willing to put in the work, but if you're just trying to get rid of your writing requirement(s), this might not be the best choice.
Kipen is a nice and funny professor, but his lectures are REALLY REALLY boring. Before each class, you pick a quote from the assigned reading (not that long you can skim through it) and email him your quote. During the lectures, Professor Kipen would spend half of the class reading and discussing the emails you sent. Then he assigns a five-minute writing exercise and spends the other half of the class reading the responses out loud. As you see, the class isn't very interesting. When Kipen isn't reading your quote/response, half of the class are messing around, making noises, and going on their phones. In terms of improving your writing, Kipen's class is meh. I learnt to make a couple of sentences interesting to read but I learnt nothing about how to support an argument I am making and how to create a professional piece of writing. The only thing you are learning is tailoring your writing style to match Professor Kipen's personal taste. If you are trying to be a story writer or an article writer, his class would help. To succeed in his class, you have to be conversational and personable in your writing which is something he likes. He also enjoys first-person a lot (not the type of writing for more professional writing). For my first two essays, I got 2 B+ and I am not sure what I got on my final essay but it was enough for a A-. The workload isn't that much so if I spent more time, I could have gotten a A but given my other STEM classes and his harsh grading, I was more than happy. This is my experience with his class and I don't think I would take it again. I know there are other ENGCOMP3 teachers who give out more work than Kipen but are more generous with grading and make you a better writer.
David Kipen is very interesting. He's a great speaker though his class and assignments lack variety. He truly cares for his students and ins incredibly passionate about writing. Make sure to use a conversational style and you'll be fine. More student cooperation would make this class significantly better. Kipen has a lot of room to improve and I could tell he is up for it!
Based on 50 Users
TOP TAGS
- Often Funny (28)
- Participation Matters (31)