easiest eng comp 3 prof

<p>we must be completely opposite people since i pwned baugh but i think i got owned on that 30a final. also fell asleep. that was bad.</p>

<p>haha yeah, i walked out an hour early.. for baugh i sat there and sweated my way to a C+ in the class.</p>

<p>NO! someone please buy my reader off me if you're taking Fallows! haha. BoelterHall, classes in eng comp 100W with him are 2 hrs long. But yea, we still watch videos. :D </p>

<p>I'd say you learn stuff in Fallows. The thing I love about him is that he's really chill, he sometimes even let us out of class early. For eng. comp 3, it's just 3 papers, 7-9 pages long as Boelter said. Unlike other professors, he tells you exactly what he wants from you, and you get to show him as many revisions of your paper as you want until you get the desired grade. He is very nice and very helpful in and out of class. The only reason that you don't get an A is if you don't try. Seriously, if you put in the effort, you'll get an A no problem. It only took me one or two revisions for each essay to get to an A. And I am a HORRIBLE essay writer... I'm getting B's in stupid classics 30 because I can't write for crap. </p>

<p>The essays for his class are fun to write too, the topics are pretty broad so you basically get to write on whatever you want. </p>

<p>Eng comp 100W was even easier, but maybe it's because I already know what he looks for in essays. Instead of three essays, we only have to do two, but there's some research involved, and they each have to be about 10 pages long. Also, a lot of the material in the course readers are the same for both classes, so I didn't even have to do some of the readings since I read it before already.</p>

<p>oh, and this is totally off topic, but I accidentally found out where he lives too.. haha. I was going to my friend's apt when I saw him walking down the sidewalk... apparently he lives in the same building -____- Isn't that weird? If you live like next door to your professor or something... hah.</p>

<p>Moldau: I wish you luck if you're taking CHE 100/102 at the same time. Oh, if you want to graduate, add CHE 101A too for more pain.</p>

<p>I call them, double trouble. "Monotone" Monobquette and Orkoulas. </p>

<p>Monboquette teaches 100 but his homework is a real pain in the ass. His whizzo problem is infamous. He's real nice but he'll weed out a lot of people with his homework and hard tests. Oh, he owns in pool, he's really good at it for a 50 year old guy.</p>

<p>Orkoulas teaches 102A/B, and his lectures are very theoretical to the point where you will have a hard time understanding them. Your discussion is not a discussion, it's another lecture. So you'll have five hours of lecture a week plus his homework. To give you an idea, he writes his own homework and they're fairly hard. You'll see a lot of people in his office hours since he gives out the answers on how to do them. </p>

<p>I'll probably be taking CHE 104B, CHE 106, and CHE 113 (hah only 2 people will be taking this class and I'm one of them) in Fall. </p>

<p>Hicks teaches 101 series. I hated Hicks at first, but now I love him. He's actually a great professor. He truly does care. He's a fast grader too. We had our 101C final today, in 3 hours he got everybody's quarter grades out. The 101 series is NOT easy, a lot of us hate it because the textbook is a literal piece of junk. It's entitled, "Transport Phenemona" by BSL, a graduate level CHE book. Go to office hours, if he likes you and you show him you work your ass off, you're pretty much guaranteed an A. He has a wicked sense of humor and for a professor, he's pretty good at surfing. </p>

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<li>TB54</li>
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