Re: Subject Reviews (PDF updated 17/01/09)
INFO1903 - Informatics (Advanced)
Ease: 7/10
This is a rigorous course, covering the basics of Unix, Python, SQL, HTML, Excel and dabbling in CGI, CSS and LaTeX. There is no assumed knowledge, but the course moves quite quickly and it certainly helps to have a background with some of these areas.
The labs certainly help with this aspect though. There are 2 1.5hr (that usually run over into 2hr) labs a week that supplement the 3hrs of lectures. The tutors are fantastic (especially Tim!) and are willing to help you with whatever issues you may be having.
Lecturer: 10/10
Dr James Curran is probably the best lecturer I had all semester. He delivers the content in an engaging manner with little anecdotes and stories on the side, and he puts the slides on the course website, each containing a summary of what we needed to know for the exam from each lecture.
Interest: 10/10
This course is about data - the management and processing of it by computers. If you're interested in programming, this course should suit you well.
Overall: 10/10
A challenging, but fantastic course.
ACCT1001 - Accounting IA
Ease: 7/10
IA covers mostly financial accounting - transactions, journals, GST, inventory, internal control. There's a fair amount of tutorial homework every week, but if you do that then most of the course becomes clearer.
Lecturer:
Sharron O'Neill/Abdul Rahzeed: 9/10 Fantastic lecturers, explained the content clearly and gave good examples. Abdul is a little harsh with crowd control though.
Peter Edwards: 6/10 He tries, he really does. But nothing really made all that much sense. (maybe it was the topics - internal control was especially boring and confusing)
Clarke/other guy week 2 history lecture: 4/10 What a useless lecture. The history of accounting - and we could barely hear one of the lecturers, making what they were saying also nonsensical. Yes, they might be smart, but this lecture was a bore.
Interest: 7/10
Is there anything to really be excited about? Debits, credits, inventory cards...
Overall: 7/10
It's an introduction to financial accounting. Having an essay for the mid-semester exam though was completely irrational.
MATH1901 - Differential Calculus (Advanced)
Ease: 6/10
The more you don't do the tutorial sheets, the more confusing the course gets. Also, the practice quizzes are diabolical.
Lecturer: 5/10
Chris Cosgrove was frequently talking to the board, while most of us looked on in confusion. He sure knows a lot, but whether that translates to good teaching, I'm not too sure.
The tutorials were very helpful though. (thanks Justin!)
Interest: 6/10
Eh, it's maths. It's a compulsory part of my degree.
Overall: 7/10
It scaled alright, so I'm not too fussed.
MATH1902 - Linear Algebra (Advanced)
Ease: 7/10
Slightly easier to grasp than differential calculus.
Lecturer: 8/10
David Easdown is a great lecturer. Although there were points where I was lost and confused, his teaching style is engaging and humorous. His review questions before the quizzes/exams, and the fact that he rand an additional class the week before was also extremely helpful.
Interest: 6/10
Same as above.
Overall: 8/10
It's better than Differential.
ENGG1805 - Professional Engineering and IT
Ease: 4/10
This course should have been a cakewalk. But when half your group drops out/never shows up, it can be hard. Also, I don't see how bridge building (specifically, the marking of said bridge) is relevant to IT students. The quizzes (which comprise most of the course's marks, as there is no final exam) contained trivial questions, and questions on lecture(r)s that didn't exist and lab content that we had not been through.
Lecturer(s): 3/10
One of the lecturers had a tendency to go 'ehhhhhhhmmmm' after every sentence, which I found hilarious. (probably because I had been driven into a state of insanity by the tenacity of the course) But other than that, the 2 hour lectures they delivered were unbelievably boring. Lecture attendance dwindled to below 20% by the end, and people were only really attending because they were assessing us on the trivial content of the guest lecturer's speeches. (eg. What was the role of X at X company?) Even most of the guest lecturers managed to be as boring as the standard lecturers.
Interest: 1/10
This is core unit, which apparently only exists due to the requirements for ACS accreditation. Having to build a bridge, write pointless reports and presentations, maintain a 'lab notebook' on trivial lab content and be tested on content that had nothing to do with anything - this course really only exists to frustrate you.
Overall: 0/10
This really is an abomination of a unit. If I knew how to make a formal complaint, I probably would. The only redeeming factor would be my tutor (thanks Aengus!) - and even so, it was initially so bad that I had to change labs (my previous tutor was incredibly condescending, and made the 2 hour lab feel like 2 years in Gitmo). I personally believe that the feedback sheets just get flushed down the Carslaw toilets, where they clog them up. They then remove them and then use them to paper mache a statue of a child slumped over his desk, having been abused by 13 weeks of grating, irrelevant torture.