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Based on 86 Users
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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.
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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AD
I'm selling the course reader for $40. The course reader has no notes or highlights but the cover does have small folds (nothing big). If you're interested, text ********** (:
Edit: Already sold it!
The theme of this class was about travel. Overall, this class isn't difficult or time consuming. Professor Moe is very understanding and truly wants to see your truest potential. Although there are times when class can be boring, it's overall helpful and really does make you think in depth about certain topics that you don't usually think about. Her class consisted of many short readings from her course reader and short quizzes.
Selling the course reader for this class for $34 ($20 cheaper than store price). Email ************* if interested.
Things to know about this class:
- The subject of the class is travel and tourism.
- Grade is based on participation in discussions, reading quizzes, occasional (short) homework essays, and two 5-6 page papers. You will get to submit a draft for each paper and you have more than enough time for both of them.
- There will be an in-class quiz on almost every reading. They're open note, so if you take good notes as you read they're easy.
- You and a group will have to visit an iconic L.A. hotel of your choice for credit. I was skeptical at first, but it's actually a fun assignment. You basically just hang out in a hotel and pretend to be a guest for an hour.
- You will watch 5 movies, mostly on your own time but partially in class: North by Northwest, Ninotchka, Get Out, Human Flow, and Grand Budapest Hotel.
Overall, an easy and pretty entertaining English class. Even if you aren't super passionate about the subject, you get to read some good pieces and watch some good movies without much work outside class.
The topic when I took this class was travel. The class was fair and interesting if you did the readings and participated in discussions. She'd usually assign 1 reading each class and have an open note quiz on it the next class, so you have to do the reading. She also assigned homework essays every once in a while but those are only 1-1.5 pages. We had two major essays where we would turn in a rough draft first, have a meeting with her to discuss it, then turn in a final copy at least 5 pages long. A lot of the class and writing is connecting readings and ideas. Then, for the last thing, we had to visit a hotel with a group and watch a movie and present to the class on both of those.
I'm selling the course reader "Travel, Tourism and the Mapping of Experience" for $25, no notes or highlights but the cover is a little roughed up. If interested, text **********
This class was very fair, and actually pretty interesting. She assigns readings but it's not a lot, plus she gives you a good amount of time to do it. The quizzes are not hard at all as long as you actually read, and you could use a page of notes if you want to. We had two major essays, plus some homework essays that were really easy too. The one thing I didn't really like about this class was the group project of going to a hotel. All we have to do is go to a hotel and talk about our experience (no paper or PowerPoint or anything like that. It just seemed kind of pointless, but maybe it's to boost our grade. Ultimately, I would recommend her because it's a super fair and interesting class.
I was scared for my Eng Comp 3 class, but Dr Moe is actually a really decent and helpful teacher. There are some readings and most likely quiz afterward. But all the quizzes are open note and very manageable. There are two major essays, a project and no final! I had a good time in the class. Im selling her course reader "travel, tourism and mapping of experience" for $30, its in perfect condition with no note, no highlights. If interested please text **********.
Professor Moe was engaging and her class was fun. The theme of the class was travel, so most of the readings were about travel and we watched a couple of movies. The amount of required reading and writing is reasonable for an introductory college class. Make sure to read/watch all of the material, twice if necessary, and be engaged in class and you will do fine. The most fun and memorable thing we did was while we were learning about hotels, we had to sneak into a nearby fancy hotel and see how much we could "get away with" (stealing a towel, swimming in the pool, getting on the roof). Overall a great class and I would recommend Professor Moe if you have to take Eng Comp 3.
Before I start, to give you an idea of how great this class is - I'm a writer, and I came out of it full of ideas and concepts for new novels. Not my normal experience coming out of any class, much less one focused on nonfiction. It's been months since I took the class and I still can't stop thinking about it - that's how interesting it was!
I literally cannot recommend this class enough. From the first lecture or so, I was very, very pleasantly surprised at the quality of teaching and instruction Professor Moe brings to the table. This is my favorite class of all of the classes I've had at UCLA so far. You've got to be prepared to work, because she really does expect you to engage with the material and participate in class - but if you weren't going to do both of those anyway, I'm not really sure why you'd be going to UCLA, considering it's not exactly known to be an easy school.
English Composition 3 is a required class for almost everybody, so I went in not expecting much. I chose this particular lecturer because people had mentioned that she themes her class on travel, which can be an interesting topic - but good god, I did not know exactly how interesting she would make it.
You definitely have to take very detailed notes for every in-class quiz, because you're going to be expected to remember details. If you don't read carefully, you'll think the details on the quizzes are irrelevant and tiny, but if you understand the text you'll pick them out and understand why they're important before you even take the quiz. Professor Moe is also wonderful at giving constructive and helpful essay criticism - I felt I grew a LOT as a writer in this class.
You might think a class on travel would just explore some boring travel writings that read like bad academic papers (okay, maybe that's slightly too harsh) - but this class was the exact opposite. The readings are actually very intriguing - multiple nonfiction readings were sassy to the point of making me laugh every few minutes, and you read some fiction pieces as well as watching films centered on travel (we watched Alfred Hitchcock's "North by Northwest" and Wes Anderson's "The Grand Budapest Hotel", and "Get Out" counted towards extra credit).
Professor Moe is funny, kind, and honestly just a great professor - she's very open-minded and listens a lot to everybody's input, so class discussion is very fun. She won't like it if you're on your phone during class, so be respectful and put it away, but again - come on, you're (hopefully) not taking this class for the purpose of checking Instagram or sending selfies on Snapchat. You're allowed to have your laptop or tablet during class, but handwritten notes are preferred, and handwritten notes are required for the in-class quizzes. She's also very fair in grading - make an effort, prove you're a good writer, and stay engaged, and you'll do just fine.
Simply put, this class isn't just your average English composition class. It's a unique, in-depth look at travel, and its role and effect in a literary/cinematic sense, psychological sense, historical and political background, cultural experience, and personal experience. When you come out of the class, you won't just be a better writer - you'll think about travel, hotels, and cruise ships (and a lot of other associated things) in a completely different way than you'd ever dreamt you could before.
Willing to work and eager to learn? TAKE THIS CLASS. Really. Do it. You won't be sorry.
Prof. Moe has a very distinct teaching style. She will never post anything on her class website and will literally never give you more than like a day or two of advanced notice for any assignments/reading. The course reader is like $50 (which is overpriced considering it's just a bunch of newspaper articles and short stories that you can find on google) but is 100% necessary for this class. She assigns a shit ton of reading (once like 70 pages), which in itself isn't a big deal, but she expects you to take HAND-WRITTEN notes and bring them to class for the pop quizzes she gives daily that can be on any little minuscule detail from the reading. Hence, you have to write down every detail to ensure you get 100s on the quizzes. There's two papers in this class, which she basically gives you no guidance for until you get your rough draft back. Pretty much just put a bunch of quotes and bs analysis and you'll get an A on them. I honestly just didn't like the way she taught and she appeared very condescending to me. Wouldn't take the class with her again, but if you're willing to work a bunch and read and write, then you'll be fine. Also gives extra credit which is graded based on completion, so it's nbd. She also gives this bs "hotel visit" assignment where she makes you go visit a hotel and STEAL things on your own time. idk.
Dr. Moe is so nice and helpful in class! Her Eng. Comp. 3 course only consists of two essays and additional one-page homework essays on top of that. Both of the essays require you to combine movie themes with the ideas of articles that you read as part of homework. there are always reading quizzes that accompany the readings, but as long as you actually did them, you should be fine.
Also, I'm selling the course reader (about Travel and Tourism, just noting in case her class changes). Just email me at *************
I'm selling the course reader for $40. The course reader has no notes or highlights but the cover does have small folds (nothing big). If you're interested, text ********** (:
Edit: Already sold it!
The theme of this class was about travel. Overall, this class isn't difficult or time consuming. Professor Moe is very understanding and truly wants to see your truest potential. Although there are times when class can be boring, it's overall helpful and really does make you think in depth about certain topics that you don't usually think about. Her class consisted of many short readings from her course reader and short quizzes.
Selling the course reader for this class for $34 ($20 cheaper than store price). Email ************* if interested.
Things to know about this class:
- The subject of the class is travel and tourism.
- Grade is based on participation in discussions, reading quizzes, occasional (short) homework essays, and two 5-6 page papers. You will get to submit a draft for each paper and you have more than enough time for both of them.
- There will be an in-class quiz on almost every reading. They're open note, so if you take good notes as you read they're easy.
- You and a group will have to visit an iconic L.A. hotel of your choice for credit. I was skeptical at first, but it's actually a fun assignment. You basically just hang out in a hotel and pretend to be a guest for an hour.
- You will watch 5 movies, mostly on your own time but partially in class: North by Northwest, Ninotchka, Get Out, Human Flow, and Grand Budapest Hotel.
Overall, an easy and pretty entertaining English class. Even if you aren't super passionate about the subject, you get to read some good pieces and watch some good movies without much work outside class.
The topic when I took this class was travel. The class was fair and interesting if you did the readings and participated in discussions. She'd usually assign 1 reading each class and have an open note quiz on it the next class, so you have to do the reading. She also assigned homework essays every once in a while but those are only 1-1.5 pages. We had two major essays where we would turn in a rough draft first, have a meeting with her to discuss it, then turn in a final copy at least 5 pages long. A lot of the class and writing is connecting readings and ideas. Then, for the last thing, we had to visit a hotel with a group and watch a movie and present to the class on both of those.
I'm selling the course reader "Travel, Tourism and the Mapping of Experience" for $25, no notes or highlights but the cover is a little roughed up. If interested, text **********
This class was very fair, and actually pretty interesting. She assigns readings but it's not a lot, plus she gives you a good amount of time to do it. The quizzes are not hard at all as long as you actually read, and you could use a page of notes if you want to. We had two major essays, plus some homework essays that were really easy too. The one thing I didn't really like about this class was the group project of going to a hotel. All we have to do is go to a hotel and talk about our experience (no paper or PowerPoint or anything like that. It just seemed kind of pointless, but maybe it's to boost our grade. Ultimately, I would recommend her because it's a super fair and interesting class.
I was scared for my Eng Comp 3 class, but Dr Moe is actually a really decent and helpful teacher. There are some readings and most likely quiz afterward. But all the quizzes are open note and very manageable. There are two major essays, a project and no final! I had a good time in the class. Im selling her course reader "travel, tourism and mapping of experience" for $30, its in perfect condition with no note, no highlights. If interested please text **********.
Professor Moe was engaging and her class was fun. The theme of the class was travel, so most of the readings were about travel and we watched a couple of movies. The amount of required reading and writing is reasonable for an introductory college class. Make sure to read/watch all of the material, twice if necessary, and be engaged in class and you will do fine. The most fun and memorable thing we did was while we were learning about hotels, we had to sneak into a nearby fancy hotel and see how much we could "get away with" (stealing a towel, swimming in the pool, getting on the roof). Overall a great class and I would recommend Professor Moe if you have to take Eng Comp 3.
Before I start, to give you an idea of how great this class is - I'm a writer, and I came out of it full of ideas and concepts for new novels. Not my normal experience coming out of any class, much less one focused on nonfiction. It's been months since I took the class and I still can't stop thinking about it - that's how interesting it was!
I literally cannot recommend this class enough. From the first lecture or so, I was very, very pleasantly surprised at the quality of teaching and instruction Professor Moe brings to the table. This is my favorite class of all of the classes I've had at UCLA so far. You've got to be prepared to work, because she really does expect you to engage with the material and participate in class - but if you weren't going to do both of those anyway, I'm not really sure why you'd be going to UCLA, considering it's not exactly known to be an easy school.
English Composition 3 is a required class for almost everybody, so I went in not expecting much. I chose this particular lecturer because people had mentioned that she themes her class on travel, which can be an interesting topic - but good god, I did not know exactly how interesting she would make it.
You definitely have to take very detailed notes for every in-class quiz, because you're going to be expected to remember details. If you don't read carefully, you'll think the details on the quizzes are irrelevant and tiny, but if you understand the text you'll pick them out and understand why they're important before you even take the quiz. Professor Moe is also wonderful at giving constructive and helpful essay criticism - I felt I grew a LOT as a writer in this class.
You might think a class on travel would just explore some boring travel writings that read like bad academic papers (okay, maybe that's slightly too harsh) - but this class was the exact opposite. The readings are actually very intriguing - multiple nonfiction readings were sassy to the point of making me laugh every few minutes, and you read some fiction pieces as well as watching films centered on travel (we watched Alfred Hitchcock's "North by Northwest" and Wes Anderson's "The Grand Budapest Hotel", and "Get Out" counted towards extra credit).
Professor Moe is funny, kind, and honestly just a great professor - she's very open-minded and listens a lot to everybody's input, so class discussion is very fun. She won't like it if you're on your phone during class, so be respectful and put it away, but again - come on, you're (hopefully) not taking this class for the purpose of checking Instagram or sending selfies on Snapchat. You're allowed to have your laptop or tablet during class, but handwritten notes are preferred, and handwritten notes are required for the in-class quizzes. She's also very fair in grading - make an effort, prove you're a good writer, and stay engaged, and you'll do just fine.
Simply put, this class isn't just your average English composition class. It's a unique, in-depth look at travel, and its role and effect in a literary/cinematic sense, psychological sense, historical and political background, cultural experience, and personal experience. When you come out of the class, you won't just be a better writer - you'll think about travel, hotels, and cruise ships (and a lot of other associated things) in a completely different way than you'd ever dreamt you could before.
Willing to work and eager to learn? TAKE THIS CLASS. Really. Do it. You won't be sorry.
Prof. Moe has a very distinct teaching style. She will never post anything on her class website and will literally never give you more than like a day or two of advanced notice for any assignments/reading. The course reader is like $50 (which is overpriced considering it's just a bunch of newspaper articles and short stories that you can find on google) but is 100% necessary for this class. She assigns a shit ton of reading (once like 70 pages), which in itself isn't a big deal, but she expects you to take HAND-WRITTEN notes and bring them to class for the pop quizzes she gives daily that can be on any little minuscule detail from the reading. Hence, you have to write down every detail to ensure you get 100s on the quizzes. There's two papers in this class, which she basically gives you no guidance for until you get your rough draft back. Pretty much just put a bunch of quotes and bs analysis and you'll get an A on them. I honestly just didn't like the way she taught and she appeared very condescending to me. Wouldn't take the class with her again, but if you're willing to work a bunch and read and write, then you'll be fine. Also gives extra credit which is graded based on completion, so it's nbd. She also gives this bs "hotel visit" assignment where she makes you go visit a hotel and STEAL things on your own time. idk.
Dr. Moe is so nice and helpful in class! Her Eng. Comp. 3 course only consists of two essays and additional one-page homework essays on top of that. Both of the essays require you to combine movie themes with the ideas of articles that you read as part of homework. there are always reading quizzes that accompany the readings, but as long as you actually did them, you should be fine.
Also, I'm selling the course reader (about Travel and Tourism, just noting in case her class changes). Just email me at *************
Based on 86 Users
TOP TAGS
- Participation Matters (41)
- Has Group Projects (35)
- Needs Textbook (29)
- Useful Textbooks (28)
- Gives Extra Credit (33)
- Would Take Again (30)