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Tanya Stivers
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All I learned from taking a class taught by Tanya Stivers was:
1) How to cram without actually learning material.
2) How to take verbal abuse from a professor.
3) Acceptance that no work completed is good enough.
Shes on a power trip and it wouldn't surprise me to later learn she was secretly a psychopath. Judging from the other evaluations, I think its safe to say Tanya and her family have employed self rating.
I thought the overall class was straightforward, with 5 exercises relating to readings/lectures/video recordings as well as two multiple choice exams. The jeopardy reviews our TA's went over during discussions as well as the study guides provided by the Professor were more than enough to prepare yourself for the exams. There are assigned readings, but discussions serve to break these chapters down to ease the workload of the class. I would recommend attending every discussion as well as memorizing the study guides. She also gives extra credit at the beginning of every lecture if you answer one of her questions relating to previous class material. The class isn't as difficult as you would imagine and the Professor was solid in her efforts.
I would definitely take this class again! I did not want to take this class at all, but I ended up finding the subject and readings really interesting. There's a lot of reading, and you do need to do it to do well so be prepared for that, but I loved the books we read so I had no issue with that. The written exercises are graded harshly, but the tests were easy to make up for it. The discussions are actually helpful and worth the time! Lectures are audio-recorded with posted slides so attendance isn't really required, but section attendance is.
The hardest part about this class is definitely the exercises. I did pretty well on all of them, but the class average for them are all fairly low, so do what you will with that information. Tests are multiple choice and easy as long as you attend lectures, do the required readings/videos, and study. Make sure to participate for that bit of extra credit. Attending sections are crucial since every one you miss is -1% on your final grade. Apparently she also curves your grade up if she thinks you're trying and on an upward trajectory, so that's good as well. The actual content itself is pretty interesting and Professor Stivers is a nice teacher. I'd take her again.
I'm surprised the other ratings for this class are so low, but it seems those reviewers have a problem with the professor herself. The actual class was fine and pretty straightforward so I didn't need to interact with the professor, but maybe she has attitude if you do talk to her.
The assignments included
- 4 out of 5 biweekly assignments; lowest score is dropped
- Two 35 question multiple choice tests for the midterm and final
The assignments are 1-2 pages 1.5 spacing so aren't the worst, and the midterm/final are pretty easy if you go to discussion and skim the readings (the tests include questions on the readings). I missed a couple lectures and only reviewed for an hour before each test and got a 32 and 33 out of 35 respectively.
The prof can go a little fast during lecture but she'll slow down if someone asks. The slides are easy to understand, but make sure to go to the first few lectures so you understand how the transcripts work if you're planning on skipping later in the quarter. The most frustrating part of the class was how the TAs were rotated when grading the biweekly assignments -- some of the TAs didn't give feedback on the assignments even if you didn't get full credit and if the TA grading it wasn't your TA you'd have no way of knowing why you lost points.
The late policy allows you to turn in assignments up to 2 days late and you lose a point each day late. This quarter the protests were going on, and she accommodated students by postponing the midterm a week then allowed each student the option to take the midterm and final like normal or skip the midterm and take a cumulative final. I assume she didn't accommodate on the biweekly assignments based on other reviews, but during a normal quarter I think the lowest score being dropped is pretty reasonable.
Ultimately the class ended up being more interesting than I thought it would be -- it covered the history of how physician-patient dynamics developed and then analyzed how interactions between physicians and patients influence different public health problems like the opioid epidemic, antibiotic resistance, antivaxxers, etc which I guess is why it's a soc class rather than a comm class. If you're interested in the subject or need to fill a space in your schedule I'd recommend it. It isn't a guaranteed A but I think it'd be hard to get below a B if you're putting the baseline effort into the class.
By far, probably the w0r$t professor at UCLA. I am actually in shock that she still continues to teach. She is so unprofessional and condescending to students and I'm not sure why. She tries to use her "conversational analysis" on her students (or talking to people in general) but it backfires on her because she is a terrible communicator. She deletes reviews but they always come back saying the same exact thing. I really, and I mean, REALLY, tried to give her the benefit of the doubt but she consistently betrays her students.
I am truly at a loss for words, I just can't comprehend why someone would want to be a professor if they hate students so much. If you even remotely try to question any of her ideas, she immediately shuts it down and takes it as a defense. I think that's what it is... she is just always in defensive mode... for no reason. You can literally be on a hospital bed and kindly ask her for an extension and she would be like "nope, paper is a set deadline for tomorrow." That's how intense she is. There's just no attempt to actually connect with her students.
Don't even get me started on lectures, readings, materials, and we can't forget about TESTS!!! Just absolutely and unnecessarily difficult. Lectures would say one thing and the readings would say another... next thing you know, you're being tested based on what you know, and one of the questions would be like "based on lecture and the readings..."... like she COMPLETELY contradicts herself so much with the material.
This is the grading structure:
Exercises (4 out 5 would be graded; lowest would be dropped) = 45%
Exam(s) (2) = 45%
Section attendance & participation = 10%
You think this might be simple and easy right (or maybe you don't, I don't know)? WRONG! She has like 4-5 TAs but she only allows one TA to grade all of the students' assignments and makes them rotate (e.g., One TA would grade exercise 1 and the another TA would grade exercise 2, and would rotate)(just brutal). That's not all, every single TA grades so differently from one another!! At first, you get somewhat upset at the TAs but then you discover, that THERE IS NO RUBRIC IN PLACE!! So you realize that the TAs are probably equally as lost as you are because there is no guidance as to what specifically they should be looking for.
Professor Stivers, if you ever read this, PLEASE take this as criticism so you know how to improve for the next class. This review is to genuinely help you because you left the impression that you don't care about your students and that's devastating! Conversation analysis aside, please learn how to empathize with other people rather than focusing on what people are saying, doing, etc., Not everyone is out to get you. We, students, also have feelings, concern, passion to learn, and LIVES! I have never been so disappointed in a professor. Please. Do better.
avoid this teacher AT ALL COSTS. if you are already enrolled, drop it and take a summer course! she uses favoritism, is unhelpful and unprofessional in communication with students for accommodations. talks way too fast unless someone mentions for her to slow down. the work is not relatively hard, but she grades 'holistically', so you will not know what exactly you made a mistake on (but just know it is not good enough for her!)
- for context, the protests were going on around this point of spring quarter and she still was not accommodating to students, and if you see the track record all the way back to COVID of 2021, she has NOT changed!
DISREGARD SOC 24, I took SOC 20 with Prof. Stivers and she is a great teacher and her material is interesting. If you go to every class and take good notes you dont need the book. What makes the class hard is having a bad group (THERE IS ALOT OF GROUP WORK) and/or a bad TA. Other than that the material is pretty simple. The class requires alot of time but nothing to confusing, just alot of observing and working on the group project.
Professor Stivers is really nice and works to make sure that all of her students stay on track throughout the quarter. There was a midterm, a final, 4 homework assignments, and 2 projects. The class was not hard, but you need to show up and be sure to work relatively hard on the research projects. Overall, I would recommend professor Stivers and this class.
Professor Stivers is an awesome teacher who is really passionate about Sociology and what it is all about in practicality.
The class is relatively time consuming. There are 4 HW assignments, each reading an article and writing a 1pg paper that answers the questions that are on the assignment sheet. Choose your answers wisely for they are graded meticulously and each point counts (there is no way you can earn extra credit in this class).
There are two group projects, one in which you conduct a survey (quantitative study) and the other where you do ethnographic observation (qualitative study). Be wise to pick good team members or else they will drag you down. Overall, I had really serious team mates who wanted A's so everything went pretty smoothly.
The midterm and finals are MCQ and these were the most difficult. If you lose points in these, you better hope to maximize points elsewhere in either your HW or projects. I was 1 point away from an A but in the end got an -A.
I truly did enjoy the class however and believe that Stivers is a great teacher. Just show up everyday, take good notes (literally copy the whole powerpoint and what she says simultaneously because you won't get it anywhere otherwise). Best of luck.
All I learned from taking a class taught by Tanya Stivers was:
1) How to cram without actually learning material.
2) How to take verbal abuse from a professor.
3) Acceptance that no work completed is good enough.
Shes on a power trip and it wouldn't surprise me to later learn she was secretly a psychopath. Judging from the other evaluations, I think its safe to say Tanya and her family have employed self rating.
I thought the overall class was straightforward, with 5 exercises relating to readings/lectures/video recordings as well as two multiple choice exams. The jeopardy reviews our TA's went over during discussions as well as the study guides provided by the Professor were more than enough to prepare yourself for the exams. There are assigned readings, but discussions serve to break these chapters down to ease the workload of the class. I would recommend attending every discussion as well as memorizing the study guides. She also gives extra credit at the beginning of every lecture if you answer one of her questions relating to previous class material. The class isn't as difficult as you would imagine and the Professor was solid in her efforts.
I would definitely take this class again! I did not want to take this class at all, but I ended up finding the subject and readings really interesting. There's a lot of reading, and you do need to do it to do well so be prepared for that, but I loved the books we read so I had no issue with that. The written exercises are graded harshly, but the tests were easy to make up for it. The discussions are actually helpful and worth the time! Lectures are audio-recorded with posted slides so attendance isn't really required, but section attendance is.
The hardest part about this class is definitely the exercises. I did pretty well on all of them, but the class average for them are all fairly low, so do what you will with that information. Tests are multiple choice and easy as long as you attend lectures, do the required readings/videos, and study. Make sure to participate for that bit of extra credit. Attending sections are crucial since every one you miss is -1% on your final grade. Apparently she also curves your grade up if she thinks you're trying and on an upward trajectory, so that's good as well. The actual content itself is pretty interesting and Professor Stivers is a nice teacher. I'd take her again.
I'm surprised the other ratings for this class are so low, but it seems those reviewers have a problem with the professor herself. The actual class was fine and pretty straightforward so I didn't need to interact with the professor, but maybe she has attitude if you do talk to her.
The assignments included
- 4 out of 5 biweekly assignments; lowest score is dropped
- Two 35 question multiple choice tests for the midterm and final
The assignments are 1-2 pages 1.5 spacing so aren't the worst, and the midterm/final are pretty easy if you go to discussion and skim the readings (the tests include questions on the readings). I missed a couple lectures and only reviewed for an hour before each test and got a 32 and 33 out of 35 respectively.
The prof can go a little fast during lecture but she'll slow down if someone asks. The slides are easy to understand, but make sure to go to the first few lectures so you understand how the transcripts work if you're planning on skipping later in the quarter. The most frustrating part of the class was how the TAs were rotated when grading the biweekly assignments -- some of the TAs didn't give feedback on the assignments even if you didn't get full credit and if the TA grading it wasn't your TA you'd have no way of knowing why you lost points.
The late policy allows you to turn in assignments up to 2 days late and you lose a point each day late. This quarter the protests were going on, and she accommodated students by postponing the midterm a week then allowed each student the option to take the midterm and final like normal or skip the midterm and take a cumulative final. I assume she didn't accommodate on the biweekly assignments based on other reviews, but during a normal quarter I think the lowest score being dropped is pretty reasonable.
Ultimately the class ended up being more interesting than I thought it would be -- it covered the history of how physician-patient dynamics developed and then analyzed how interactions between physicians and patients influence different public health problems like the opioid epidemic, antibiotic resistance, antivaxxers, etc which I guess is why it's a soc class rather than a comm class. If you're interested in the subject or need to fill a space in your schedule I'd recommend it. It isn't a guaranteed A but I think it'd be hard to get below a B if you're putting the baseline effort into the class.
By far, probably the w0r$t professor at UCLA. I am actually in shock that she still continues to teach. She is so unprofessional and condescending to students and I'm not sure why. She tries to use her "conversational analysis" on her students (or talking to people in general) but it backfires on her because she is a terrible communicator. She deletes reviews but they always come back saying the same exact thing. I really, and I mean, REALLY, tried to give her the benefit of the doubt but she consistently betrays her students.
I am truly at a loss for words, I just can't comprehend why someone would want to be a professor if they hate students so much. If you even remotely try to question any of her ideas, she immediately shuts it down and takes it as a defense. I think that's what it is... she is just always in defensive mode... for no reason. You can literally be on a hospital bed and kindly ask her for an extension and she would be like "nope, paper is a set deadline for tomorrow." That's how intense she is. There's just no attempt to actually connect with her students.
Don't even get me started on lectures, readings, materials, and we can't forget about TESTS!!! Just absolutely and unnecessarily difficult. Lectures would say one thing and the readings would say another... next thing you know, you're being tested based on what you know, and one of the questions would be like "based on lecture and the readings..."... like she COMPLETELY contradicts herself so much with the material.
This is the grading structure:
Exercises (4 out 5 would be graded; lowest would be dropped) = 45%
Exam(s) (2) = 45%
Section attendance & participation = 10%
You think this might be simple and easy right (or maybe you don't, I don't know)? WRONG! She has like 4-5 TAs but she only allows one TA to grade all of the students' assignments and makes them rotate (e.g., One TA would grade exercise 1 and the another TA would grade exercise 2, and would rotate)(just brutal). That's not all, every single TA grades so differently from one another!! At first, you get somewhat upset at the TAs but then you discover, that THERE IS NO RUBRIC IN PLACE!! So you realize that the TAs are probably equally as lost as you are because there is no guidance as to what specifically they should be looking for.
Professor Stivers, if you ever read this, PLEASE take this as criticism so you know how to improve for the next class. This review is to genuinely help you because you left the impression that you don't care about your students and that's devastating! Conversation analysis aside, please learn how to empathize with other people rather than focusing on what people are saying, doing, etc., Not everyone is out to get you. We, students, also have feelings, concern, passion to learn, and LIVES! I have never been so disappointed in a professor. Please. Do better.
avoid this teacher AT ALL COSTS. if you are already enrolled, drop it and take a summer course! she uses favoritism, is unhelpful and unprofessional in communication with students for accommodations. talks way too fast unless someone mentions for her to slow down. the work is not relatively hard, but she grades 'holistically', so you will not know what exactly you made a mistake on (but just know it is not good enough for her!)
- for context, the protests were going on around this point of spring quarter and she still was not accommodating to students, and if you see the track record all the way back to COVID of 2021, she has NOT changed!
DISREGARD SOC 24, I took SOC 20 with Prof. Stivers and she is a great teacher and her material is interesting. If you go to every class and take good notes you dont need the book. What makes the class hard is having a bad group (THERE IS ALOT OF GROUP WORK) and/or a bad TA. Other than that the material is pretty simple. The class requires alot of time but nothing to confusing, just alot of observing and working on the group project.
Professor Stivers is really nice and works to make sure that all of her students stay on track throughout the quarter. There was a midterm, a final, 4 homework assignments, and 2 projects. The class was not hard, but you need to show up and be sure to work relatively hard on the research projects. Overall, I would recommend professor Stivers and this class.
Professor Stivers is an awesome teacher who is really passionate about Sociology and what it is all about in practicality.
The class is relatively time consuming. There are 4 HW assignments, each reading an article and writing a 1pg paper that answers the questions that are on the assignment sheet. Choose your answers wisely for they are graded meticulously and each point counts (there is no way you can earn extra credit in this class).
There are two group projects, one in which you conduct a survey (quantitative study) and the other where you do ethnographic observation (qualitative study). Be wise to pick good team members or else they will drag you down. Overall, I had really serious team mates who wanted A's so everything went pretty smoothly.
The midterm and finals are MCQ and these were the most difficult. If you lose points in these, you better hope to maximize points elsewhere in either your HW or projects. I was 1 point away from an A but in the end got an -A.
I truly did enjoy the class however and believe that Stivers is a great teacher. Just show up everyday, take good notes (literally copy the whole powerpoint and what she says simultaneously because you won't get it anywhere otherwise). Best of luck.