Guide to UGBA 10 and Econ 1

<p>A</a> Survival Manual: How to Survive Econ 1</p>

<p>A</a> Survival Manual: How to Survive UGBA 10</p>

<p>I apologize in advance for any grammatical errors. If you have specific comments or concerns please leave comments on the blog and not in this thread, as I am not likely to keep up with this thread. I welcome feedback.</p>

<p>This is a pretty cool idea. It'd be even cooler with more input and more classes. Though different professors run different classes so these guides would be useless in the long run.</p>

<p>how nice of you to post this envilsushi1, these guides should help many ppl</p>

<p>"This is a pretty cool idea. It'd be even cooler with more input and more classes. Though different professors run different classes so these guides would be useless in the long run."</p>

<p>I think having more guides to classes is a good idea. <b>If anyone would like to submit guides to classes they have taken and received an A or higher, let me know, and I will play with the permission settings and add you as a author.</b></p>

<p>It's true that in the long run theses guides may become obsolete, but I still think it's worth it. For example, Dr. Robinson's been teaching UGBA 10 for at least a decade.</p>

<p>you should mention ASUC lecture notes for Econ 1. . . $40-$50 for high quality notes. (those interested should google it) I still went to every class and took my own notes and it helped me a lot. I ended up setting the curve for my section on the final last fall. In addition, for me anyways, the textbook was no help whatsoever. waste of money IMO</p>