I would recommend going Greek while at Case. Many professors reuse previous exam questions in difficult classes. EBME 306 and EBME 310 are prime examples. If you go greek you can access a test bank that contains old midterms, homework assignments, and code. You can plug in old coding assignments into ENGR 131 and EBME 358 & 359. Just make sure you change your variables enough you don’t get caught. (honest note- you are only cheating yourself and you should get caught)
Then when EBME 310 and EBME 306 are graded on a curve, you will do better then the average student because you saw the question for EBME 306 on last year’s midterm. That means you get an A or a B instead of a C.
Professors don’t release the last couple years exams because that would mean they have to write new questions. So use your networking skills and greekness to succeed in these difficult curved classes. The TAs for EBME 306 even recommend finding the old exams to students.
This is one of the most frustrating things about Case School of Engineering.
@spartanblue Would you like to tell us how EECS 245 is completely rigged by old exams? Heard some interesting things about your first exam…
@marbles321 This is true at MIT too, all fraternities have old answer books. One just needs to find a boyfriend at a frat to cheat one’s way through ANY engineering curriculum! However, how about study groups or tutoring or just plain doing the homework as a way to learn instead of copying answers off of a frat boy’s so called answer book?
Posting and suggesting high school students or young college students CHEAT is really a bad way to go. Lots of high school students read CC, please do not cheat on your homework, it gets you exactly no where, and if you have a conscience, and believe cheating is wrong, it may harm you to cheat. Try to do the coding assignments. If you copy them, just don’t bother, because as soon as you leave college, there is no one to copy from anymore. If you don’t like coding, find a major that excites you. The way marbles suggests will not be a good way to live your college life. Sarcasm is dangerous, so battle it with honesty.