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Sarah Stein
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I LOVED THIS CLASS. Honestly everyone should have to take this class at UCLA. Gives you a whole new perspective and will forever change the way you look at the world. Professor Stein is amazing. She teaches the class so respectfully and cares so much about the subject. She makes it as easy for you as possible to do well, she posts lecture slides online and you are even allowed a cheat sheet on the midterm AND final. You learn extremely valuable material and the readings are really good. 10/10 would recommend
When I realized this class was structured based around objects, I was kinda disappointed and even wanted to drop it. However, over the course of the class, I grew to appreciate this new way of looking at history. The lectures encompasses many events and many "stuff" that pushed me into researching things beyond the syllabus on my free time. However, some miscommunication between me and my TA on my essays caused me to lose a couple points on my assignments. However, the lecture itself is wonderful and I would highly recommend it.
Professor Stein makes the class interesting by connecting world events to objects, it really opens your perspective about objects you use everyday and really gets you thinking about their place in history. The class is fairly easy, she does assign readings every week which can seem overwhelming and is a lot so really plan out your week and make sure you do the readings, they're manageable. The midterm was a scavenger hunt and easy to get full points on. There were weekly paragraphs due based on the readings, but you have enough time for them just make sure you manage your time. She doesn't have slides, she has pictures while she talks but she doesn't have slides with any information and she doesn't podcast them so it's very important to go to lecture! She also has mini pop quizzes randomly so make sure you go to lecture so you don't miss those points. It can difficult to follow along sometimes because she can talk fast and jumps around in different eras and topics, but just ask your TA for clarification on anything. There are two papers you write, they're not too bad but it all comes down to your TA and how they grade. Overall I think Professor Stein was great, always engaging and you always learn new things which make the class interesting.
The workload for this class will be a lot for someone who's not that interested in history or is taking a lot of GEs in combination with this class. However, Professor Stein is lenient and the way her lectures are structured is enjoyable.
Professor Stein is a very engaging speaker. Her lectures are structured very creatively, and she really tries to get the students to think about the material in a new manner. She focuses each time period on a specific object, and I think she does a good job at connecting some very broad themes in global history to smaller stories. The workload for the class itself is pretty manageable, with weekly written paragraphs and a few readings. The midterm is a scavenger hunt, and the final was fairly straightforward. I highly recommend this class.
It was okay. I just didn’t like that she didn’t have the traditional text slides format and had picture slides while giving background on each one since it made it very easy to doze off in class having to have to listen to her for like 90 minutes straight. Readings a little bit on the heavy side but are manageable (like what 100 a week??). Midterm was a scavenger hunt and Final was easy, allowed us to have a one page cheat sheet. Participation kind of matters since there are quizzes called Four Degrees of Separation but those are open note. If anything, the 2 papers (which are weighted more than the midterm) are more important since it’s kind of harder to get a better grade. Discussions were very engaging though but are mandatory.
Hi, so I am a first year who took Dr. Stein's Hist 22 class for 2019 Fall quarter, and it was actually my favorite class of the quarter. I feel like my passion for history (I'm not a north campus major though) pushed me to want to go to lecture and discussions, but even if you aren't into history at all and just want to get a GE done, then you'll be just fine. She is a really engaging lecturer and a caring professor, she'll make sure to address issues with deadlines and midterms/finals quickly and numerously throughout the quarter. She does a great job at connecting broad and global concepts through a smaller lens, and I guess how she framed her course made me like hist 22. For coursework, there are weekly readings due (depends on your TA when those submissions are due), but I am a procrastinator, so I would always wait till Monday morning to start reading like three sources (about 100 pages altogether, sometimes I would just skip like half of each reading), just to write a short paragraph by Monday afternoon. I'm not sure how my TA ( or how other TAs) graded our weekly submissions though. I forgot to mention that Dr. Stein's weekly readings can range from short stories, articles, to a novel, and they can be read at an appropriate amount of time without feeling the need to cry or stress yourself out. Some of the novels that are used in the weekly readings are used for Dr. Stein's essays (you'll have two papers to write for the course), so you have to read those novels. You have to attend lecture because Dr. Stein does weekly quizzes called 4 Degrees of Separation, and she does it during lecture & will give you around 10-15 min to do it, and those quizzes are based off of the content she explains in lecture, not in the readings. Midterm was extremely easy, it was a scavenger hunt where you take selfies around UCLA campus and/or Los Angeles. For the final, she allowed us to use a one page cheat sheet (front & back). The one thing that I didn't like about Dr. Stein was that she made her entire course purchase her $20+ book that was recently released in November 2019 for a weekly reading, I didn't buy it though because there were free to checkout at Powell ;) (Powell has reserved copies of every book you need to read for hist 22, if you don't want to spend money, go check a book out). I know this is a long description, but I hope this helps. Good luck!
The amount of weekly readings may be a bit overwhelming, but the material taught in this class really helped me learn how to look at history with better understanding. 25% of grades is participation in discussion and pop quizzes (which are easy as long as you attend lectures), and there are 2 papers plus a final. I really recommend this class!
The homework is about 100 pages of reading a week as well as a written response to the readings, plus there's two essays, a midterm scavenger hunt, and the final. The class had a lot of interesting concepts and helped me learn a lot about history. The one thing that I didn't like is that she didn't use traditional slides and just showed us images while she lectured, so it was sometimes hard to get down all of the notes that you needed.
If you have an interest in history then you'll really like this class. Personally, world history isn't my favorite subject and I was just taking this for a GE, but I still learned a lot and got a good grade. It can be a lot of work sometimes but the class isn't that bad.
I LOVED THIS CLASS. Honestly everyone should have to take this class at UCLA. Gives you a whole new perspective and will forever change the way you look at the world. Professor Stein is amazing. She teaches the class so respectfully and cares so much about the subject. She makes it as easy for you as possible to do well, she posts lecture slides online and you are even allowed a cheat sheet on the midterm AND final. You learn extremely valuable material and the readings are really good. 10/10 would recommend
When I realized this class was structured based around objects, I was kinda disappointed and even wanted to drop it. However, over the course of the class, I grew to appreciate this new way of looking at history. The lectures encompasses many events and many "stuff" that pushed me into researching things beyond the syllabus on my free time. However, some miscommunication between me and my TA on my essays caused me to lose a couple points on my assignments. However, the lecture itself is wonderful and I would highly recommend it.
Professor Stein makes the class interesting by connecting world events to objects, it really opens your perspective about objects you use everyday and really gets you thinking about their place in history. The class is fairly easy, she does assign readings every week which can seem overwhelming and is a lot so really plan out your week and make sure you do the readings, they're manageable. The midterm was a scavenger hunt and easy to get full points on. There were weekly paragraphs due based on the readings, but you have enough time for them just make sure you manage your time. She doesn't have slides, she has pictures while she talks but she doesn't have slides with any information and she doesn't podcast them so it's very important to go to lecture! She also has mini pop quizzes randomly so make sure you go to lecture so you don't miss those points. It can difficult to follow along sometimes because she can talk fast and jumps around in different eras and topics, but just ask your TA for clarification on anything. There are two papers you write, they're not too bad but it all comes down to your TA and how they grade. Overall I think Professor Stein was great, always engaging and you always learn new things which make the class interesting.
The workload for this class will be a lot for someone who's not that interested in history or is taking a lot of GEs in combination with this class. However, Professor Stein is lenient and the way her lectures are structured is enjoyable.
Professor Stein is a very engaging speaker. Her lectures are structured very creatively, and she really tries to get the students to think about the material in a new manner. She focuses each time period on a specific object, and I think she does a good job at connecting some very broad themes in global history to smaller stories. The workload for the class itself is pretty manageable, with weekly written paragraphs and a few readings. The midterm is a scavenger hunt, and the final was fairly straightforward. I highly recommend this class.
It was okay. I just didn’t like that she didn’t have the traditional text slides format and had picture slides while giving background on each one since it made it very easy to doze off in class having to have to listen to her for like 90 minutes straight. Readings a little bit on the heavy side but are manageable (like what 100 a week??). Midterm was a scavenger hunt and Final was easy, allowed us to have a one page cheat sheet. Participation kind of matters since there are quizzes called Four Degrees of Separation but those are open note. If anything, the 2 papers (which are weighted more than the midterm) are more important since it’s kind of harder to get a better grade. Discussions were very engaging though but are mandatory.
Hi, so I am a first year who took Dr. Stein's Hist 22 class for 2019 Fall quarter, and it was actually my favorite class of the quarter. I feel like my passion for history (I'm not a north campus major though) pushed me to want to go to lecture and discussions, but even if you aren't into history at all and just want to get a GE done, then you'll be just fine. She is a really engaging lecturer and a caring professor, she'll make sure to address issues with deadlines and midterms/finals quickly and numerously throughout the quarter. She does a great job at connecting broad and global concepts through a smaller lens, and I guess how she framed her course made me like hist 22. For coursework, there are weekly readings due (depends on your TA when those submissions are due), but I am a procrastinator, so I would always wait till Monday morning to start reading like three sources (about 100 pages altogether, sometimes I would just skip like half of each reading), just to write a short paragraph by Monday afternoon. I'm not sure how my TA ( or how other TAs) graded our weekly submissions though. I forgot to mention that Dr. Stein's weekly readings can range from short stories, articles, to a novel, and they can be read at an appropriate amount of time without feeling the need to cry or stress yourself out. Some of the novels that are used in the weekly readings are used for Dr. Stein's essays (you'll have two papers to write for the course), so you have to read those novels. You have to attend lecture because Dr. Stein does weekly quizzes called 4 Degrees of Separation, and she does it during lecture & will give you around 10-15 min to do it, and those quizzes are based off of the content she explains in lecture, not in the readings. Midterm was extremely easy, it was a scavenger hunt where you take selfies around UCLA campus and/or Los Angeles. For the final, she allowed us to use a one page cheat sheet (front & back). The one thing that I didn't like about Dr. Stein was that she made her entire course purchase her $20+ book that was recently released in November 2019 for a weekly reading, I didn't buy it though because there were free to checkout at Powell ;) (Powell has reserved copies of every book you need to read for hist 22, if you don't want to spend money, go check a book out). I know this is a long description, but I hope this helps. Good luck!
The amount of weekly readings may be a bit overwhelming, but the material taught in this class really helped me learn how to look at history with better understanding. 25% of grades is participation in discussion and pop quizzes (which are easy as long as you attend lectures), and there are 2 papers plus a final. I really recommend this class!
The homework is about 100 pages of reading a week as well as a written response to the readings, plus there's two essays, a midterm scavenger hunt, and the final. The class had a lot of interesting concepts and helped me learn a lot about history. The one thing that I didn't like is that she didn't use traditional slides and just showed us images while she lectured, so it was sometimes hard to get down all of the notes that you needed.
If you have an interest in history then you'll really like this class. Personally, world history isn't my favorite subject and I was just taking this for a GE, but I still learned a lot and got a good grade. It can be a lot of work sometimes but the class isn't that bad.