<p>I stumbled upon this thread looking for something else and wanted to take a quick look. I can’t believe how confused many of you people are here about how professors teach and grade.</p>
<p>I’d like to make a clarification about the grading style of many of the faculty. I have been a TA for a few different “departments” already. The lower division classes are graded way too nicely - almost everyone behind-the-scenes thinks so (no joke). People who legitimately DON’T know their stuff are passing (this pertains to undergraduate students only). If they don’t pass, they whine about it saying “oh boo hoo, this professor (TA) grades too hard, boo hoo” when, chances are, they were too busy scuffling for a social life and neglected their studies (I’ve seen it happen to friends). The level of education is nothing like at Berkeley or LA, it can’t be - I’ve studied there, it’s nothing near the same. Bet you didn’t know this - the state requires the university to pass (I believe) 70% of the students, otherwise we (UCM) don’t get funding to grow. Well, if everyone is doing poorly then you have a bunch of people moving on to higher level courses, things get difficult, and more whining commences. I taught a class once where nobody could do a simple integral (integral of dx … !!!) by the end of Calculus II. Everyone passed … EVERYONE passed. They had to.</p>
<p>Grading is just a little easier than UCB or UCLA? Please… if the professors graded the same way as they did at, say, Berkeley, before coming here I’d estimate only about 4 or 5 kids would pass out of an upper-division class of 20, and that’s with a grade of B- or higher!</p>
<p>Also, an aside: nobody I know here curves, curves would kill everyone in the class. Curves bunch people towards a C, or whatever the average grade is. They do grade adjustments here, top certain bit get an A (whether or not they deserve it), the next bit gets a B, etc…</p>
<p>The level of education can’t be similar to any of the other UCs because the majority of the students don’t care about their own work - this is obvious; sad, but obvious; students, I find, don’t often take pride in the work they turn in, professors would be the first to confess, then TAs. Most people come here as undergrads with the hope of one day going to medical school. It’s not happening, I’m sorry, pick another field of study, there are plenty more exciting things out there than being a doctor, really. If money is your motivation you’re a sad individual.</p>
<p>There was something mentioned early in the thread. There are a few student that take advantage of the small student:teacher ratio; they come in for office hours, ask questions, debate and discuss topics, etc… Those students are almost always at the top of their classes, they have a future!</p>