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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.
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I would 100% recommend taking this as a GE. It was actually interesting material to learn about. The expectations weren't completely clear in the beginning but once you get a hold of things its super easy to get an A in the class. There are 2 writing questions every week and every other week one of them is an essay, with the second one being the midterm and the third being the final. It was a bit time consuming, but not terrible. My TA Avery was amazing, very quick to help and respond. Overall I would recommend this class as an easy A that you actually want to learn about.
Stein's lectures are all online, so it was easy to watch the videos on BruinLearn and follow the course content. She sounds very well versed in the subject of the Holocaust and the coursework is manageable for it being asynchronous. Stein put so much detail into every aspect of the weekly lectures, readings, and questions to the three assigned papers that it makes you think more in-depth about the events of the Holocaust. I highly recommend this course to anyone needing an easy GE over the summer.
Took this class over 6 weeks A sesh, here is the rough breakdown:
On odd weeks, you have to write 2-3 paragraphs for 2 questions (usually about a page and a half-two pages). Even in weeks, you have to write a paper (first two are 500-750 words, last is 800-1000 words) as well as a question. I probably spent around 2-3 hours a week watching lectures + doing readings, then another 2-4 hours a week writing responses. The class is pretty easy overall, nothing is graded overly harshly and its all pretty fair. I did well even though I'm not great at writing so take it as you will. Stein is a great professor and her lectures are amazing, great and easy GE to knock out over summer.
Not an easy G.E. whatsoever. You are expected to do lots of reading, sometimes 100-200 pages a week to answer two weekly discussion posts that are graded harshly by TAs. The class is fully online. You are expected to write weekly discussion posts (worth 25% of your grade), two essays (35%) , a midterm (20%), and a final (20%). The content is very interesting but the workload is a lot for a G.E. You are expected to cite readings or lecture videos in your discussions. The professor's lectures are prerecorded, interesting, and clear, which makes them very helpful. I would recommend visiting the Undergraduate Writing Center. Feedback that the TAs give can be short and vague. Sometimes the TAs take away points for not addressing every single possible event regarding the sometimes-confusing prompts or sometimes take away points for not answering a question they did not explicitly ask in the prompt. Your grade is dependent on your TA and completing every single reading/lecture/assignment. Yes, I got an A, but at the cost of any free time.
The workload for this course can get overwhelming at times, but after a few weeks you can find your rhythm in it. I highly recommend spending one day a week just grinding out the week's work. There are two papers (first is during week 3!!) and one midterm (easier than the papers). Much of this class is dependent on your TA (Natalie was alright).
The "Final Solution" committed by Nazi Germany was the most maleficent and cynical genocide ever committed against enemies of the "Aryan" population, and Professor Sarah Abrevaya Stein professionally lectures her class in regards to fully contextualizing and comprehending how the Nazis implemented genocide against Jews, and other minorities despised by Nazi Germany. Here are my pros and cons for this class
Pro: 1.Steins class is VERY interesting and teaches a lot of good lessons for us to understand in regards to the Holocaust and Stein challenges our views of how we perceive the Holocaust and the many shapes and forms the Holocaust took throughout history.
2.The TAs are really easy graders (at least mine was)
3.Steins lectures are very organized and all the material is presented in a very clean manner
4.Some of the readings are really interesting and taught me a lot that I never knew about the Holocaust.
5. Stein seems like a very polite and professional professor.
6. Stein's class is very easy to complete
Cons
1. Some of the readings were hard to comprehend, sometimes the professor would be too professional and taking notes becomes difficult, the captions for some of her videos were incorrect, some exam questions were a bit abstract, and a lot of the material is very emotional (these are all very small cons though)
Overall I heavily recommend taking this class, I did not have a lot to say about this class in regards to my other classes but I did appreciate this class and would love to take another one of Stein's classes.
4.5/5
surprisingly interesting for a class dedicated to a short time period in history. the prof is clearly very educated on and passionate about the subject, which makes this class more enjoyable. I took the class fully online, and there were 3 weekly asynchronous lectures and no discussion section meetings. LOTS of reading and a decent amount of writing, felt like I should've gotten writing 2 credit for this. not an easy GE, but definitely manageable and would recommend to anyone who enjoys history. the grading isn't too harsh either
This class was kinda hard and had a heavy workload, despite my grade. Also your grade depends on your TA heavily. I had Marissa and she is so kind. The workload was insane when I took it. I remember we had to write 2 mini essays (page and a half each) weekly based on longgggg, sometimes hard to understand, readings (sometimes on an entire book!) for the discussion board. We also had to write two 5 page papers that were pretty tough questions. We also had three lectures per week, and sometimes there were not short. The final was also answering some short answer questions I believe, which wasn't horrible, but again it was if your TA was a harsh grader. The easiest part was the midterm, where we did an online activity, such as watch a holocaust survivor share their story and write about it. It was really interesting, but the work load was intense and the information was dense and emotional. You can only do well if you focus a lot of time to this class.
This was an amazing class and Professor Stein did a great job putting it together. I took it during the summer asynchronously, and learned a lot.
The class consists of lectures and readings each week. Every Friday one or two discussion posts were required, depending on if an essay was also due that day. The essays were due every two weeks, for a total of three for the six week course. The first two essays were 500-750 words, while the last was 800-1000 words. There were two prompts to choose from each time, and they were very straightforward.
The lectures were extremely informative and high quality. Professor Stein is a great lecturer, and very knowledgeable about the subject.
The readings were primary sources, as well as two books and the graphic novels Maus I and Maus II. All were very interesting, and covered some unique aspect of the Holocaust.
I would highly recommend taking this class, either for a GE or a major/minor requirement. It's one of the best classes I've taken at UCLA.
Overall it's an amazing class. Prof Stein's lectures are amazing and I also loved the book she wrote that we read. The breakdown of work is as follows: two discussion posts per week (2-3 paragraphs each); two essays (5 pages-ish each); a midterm activity (super easy - basically graded on completeness); and two discussion-post like things for the final. There is a LOTTTT of reading. However, I found most of the books very engaging and you can probably get away with not reading everything super in-depth like I did. I didn't take notes on readings, but I did on the lectures.
I would 100% recommend taking this as a GE. It was actually interesting material to learn about. The expectations weren't completely clear in the beginning but once you get a hold of things its super easy to get an A in the class. There are 2 writing questions every week and every other week one of them is an essay, with the second one being the midterm and the third being the final. It was a bit time consuming, but not terrible. My TA Avery was amazing, very quick to help and respond. Overall I would recommend this class as an easy A that you actually want to learn about.
Stein's lectures are all online, so it was easy to watch the videos on BruinLearn and follow the course content. She sounds very well versed in the subject of the Holocaust and the coursework is manageable for it being asynchronous. Stein put so much detail into every aspect of the weekly lectures, readings, and questions to the three assigned papers that it makes you think more in-depth about the events of the Holocaust. I highly recommend this course to anyone needing an easy GE over the summer.
Took this class over 6 weeks A sesh, here is the rough breakdown:
On odd weeks, you have to write 2-3 paragraphs for 2 questions (usually about a page and a half-two pages). Even in weeks, you have to write a paper (first two are 500-750 words, last is 800-1000 words) as well as a question. I probably spent around 2-3 hours a week watching lectures + doing readings, then another 2-4 hours a week writing responses. The class is pretty easy overall, nothing is graded overly harshly and its all pretty fair. I did well even though I'm not great at writing so take it as you will. Stein is a great professor and her lectures are amazing, great and easy GE to knock out over summer.
Not an easy G.E. whatsoever. You are expected to do lots of reading, sometimes 100-200 pages a week to answer two weekly discussion posts that are graded harshly by TAs. The class is fully online. You are expected to write weekly discussion posts (worth 25% of your grade), two essays (35%) , a midterm (20%), and a final (20%). The content is very interesting but the workload is a lot for a G.E. You are expected to cite readings or lecture videos in your discussions. The professor's lectures are prerecorded, interesting, and clear, which makes them very helpful. I would recommend visiting the Undergraduate Writing Center. Feedback that the TAs give can be short and vague. Sometimes the TAs take away points for not addressing every single possible event regarding the sometimes-confusing prompts or sometimes take away points for not answering a question they did not explicitly ask in the prompt. Your grade is dependent on your TA and completing every single reading/lecture/assignment. Yes, I got an A, but at the cost of any free time.
The workload for this course can get overwhelming at times, but after a few weeks you can find your rhythm in it. I highly recommend spending one day a week just grinding out the week's work. There are two papers (first is during week 3!!) and one midterm (easier than the papers). Much of this class is dependent on your TA (Natalie was alright).
The "Final Solution" committed by Nazi Germany was the most maleficent and cynical genocide ever committed against enemies of the "Aryan" population, and Professor Sarah Abrevaya Stein professionally lectures her class in regards to fully contextualizing and comprehending how the Nazis implemented genocide against Jews, and other minorities despised by Nazi Germany. Here are my pros and cons for this class
Pro: 1.Steins class is VERY interesting and teaches a lot of good lessons for us to understand in regards to the Holocaust and Stein challenges our views of how we perceive the Holocaust and the many shapes and forms the Holocaust took throughout history.
2.The TAs are really easy graders (at least mine was)
3.Steins lectures are very organized and all the material is presented in a very clean manner
4.Some of the readings are really interesting and taught me a lot that I never knew about the Holocaust.
5. Stein seems like a very polite and professional professor.
6. Stein's class is very easy to complete
Cons
1. Some of the readings were hard to comprehend, sometimes the professor would be too professional and taking notes becomes difficult, the captions for some of her videos were incorrect, some exam questions were a bit abstract, and a lot of the material is very emotional (these are all very small cons though)
Overall I heavily recommend taking this class, I did not have a lot to say about this class in regards to my other classes but I did appreciate this class and would love to take another one of Stein's classes.
4.5/5
surprisingly interesting for a class dedicated to a short time period in history. the prof is clearly very educated on and passionate about the subject, which makes this class more enjoyable. I took the class fully online, and there were 3 weekly asynchronous lectures and no discussion section meetings. LOTS of reading and a decent amount of writing, felt like I should've gotten writing 2 credit for this. not an easy GE, but definitely manageable and would recommend to anyone who enjoys history. the grading isn't too harsh either
This class was kinda hard and had a heavy workload, despite my grade. Also your grade depends on your TA heavily. I had Marissa and she is so kind. The workload was insane when I took it. I remember we had to write 2 mini essays (page and a half each) weekly based on longgggg, sometimes hard to understand, readings (sometimes on an entire book!) for the discussion board. We also had to write two 5 page papers that were pretty tough questions. We also had three lectures per week, and sometimes there were not short. The final was also answering some short answer questions I believe, which wasn't horrible, but again it was if your TA was a harsh grader. The easiest part was the midterm, where we did an online activity, such as watch a holocaust survivor share their story and write about it. It was really interesting, but the work load was intense and the information was dense and emotional. You can only do well if you focus a lot of time to this class.
This was an amazing class and Professor Stein did a great job putting it together. I took it during the summer asynchronously, and learned a lot.
The class consists of lectures and readings each week. Every Friday one or two discussion posts were required, depending on if an essay was also due that day. The essays were due every two weeks, for a total of three for the six week course. The first two essays were 500-750 words, while the last was 800-1000 words. There were two prompts to choose from each time, and they were very straightforward.
The lectures were extremely informative and high quality. Professor Stein is a great lecturer, and very knowledgeable about the subject.
The readings were primary sources, as well as two books and the graphic novels Maus I and Maus II. All were very interesting, and covered some unique aspect of the Holocaust.
I would highly recommend taking this class, either for a GE or a major/minor requirement. It's one of the best classes I've taken at UCLA.
Overall it's an amazing class. Prof Stein's lectures are amazing and I also loved the book she wrote that we read. The breakdown of work is as follows: two discussion posts per week (2-3 paragraphs each); two essays (5 pages-ish each); a midterm activity (super easy - basically graded on completeness); and two discussion-post like things for the final. There is a LOTTTT of reading. However, I found most of the books very engaging and you can probably get away with not reading everything super in-depth like I did. I didn't take notes on readings, but I did on the lectures.
Based on 27 Users
TOP TAGS
- Engaging Lectures (17)
- Appropriately Priced Materials (14)
- Would Take Again (13)