Sem 1 2016
KRNS1621 - Korean 1
Ease: 10/10
I went into this course having already done about 1 year (on/off) study in my own time, and found it extremely easy, so don't take this at face value. Already knowing virtually all of the grammar and vocab was a massive advantage. I was able to basically do nothing for the first few weeks while we learnt spelling/pronunciation of the alphabet. The course was exceedingly easy for me, but I know this isn't the case for many people, I saw many people getting 15-20/55 in quizzes. I think I enjoyed this course a lot more because of this prior knowledge.
Lectures: 8/10
Lectures were 2 hours on grammar, taken by Park Duk-Soo. He knows his stuff, particularly about phonetics and morphology, as well as syntax. His lectures could get a bit rambly at times, and he had trouble using the mic/recording a few times, I sat front row to ensure I didn't miss anything. I'm personally interested in these areas as well, so I think that made me enjoy his lectures a lot more than I may have otherwise. He sometimes went through somewhat complicated concepts fairly quickly, losing some stuff in the process, and explained some concepts weirdly, but he was pretty good at answering any follow up clarification questions.
Tutor was Anna (안경자), was good but slow at times, didn't explain some concepts that well. Pretty good at answering questions though. Would have enjoyed more chances to practice speaking, as it's where most people are lacking most. I'd give her 6/10, mainly because they were boring as I already knew content. Other tutors were allegedly better, I don't personally know.
Interest: 8/10
This is for my major and I want to get good at the language, so I payed attention and tried to stay engaged. Tutorials were boring mostly, but I had to attend to hand in homework and do the weekly quizzes (8 of them, 10 words, pretty easy if you study). The lectures were great, but I enjoyed them a lot more because I knew most of the Korean and didn't have to pay that much attention.
Overall: 9/10
I loved it, only downside is rambles in lectures/boring tutes, but nothing big. I'm continuing Korean 2 next sem as it's my major. I haven't sat the final yet but I'll update with my marks when I get them. Also I think I got marked slightly harsher because I have prior knowledge, but that's fair enough.
CHNS1101 - Chinese 1A Beginners
Ease: 7/10
Listening, reading and writing is fine, pronunciation and remembering pinyin is the only issue. If you memorise the characters you won't have a problem for most of the course. I fell behind and suffered because of it, if you don't fall behind you'll enjoy it. It's a fun course, Chinese isn't as bad as it seems. I have no prior Chinese experience fyi.
Lectures: 7/10
1 hour of grammar by Linda Tsung (I think that's her) was pretty good, she knows her stuff, able to explain most concepts. Good practice for speaking in these, keeps it interesting with videos etc. Guest lecturer for two weeks in the middle, don't know her name, can't remember anything about her, she wasn't shit probably, was fine.
Tong Peiru was my tutor, she was fantastic. Really really helpful and willing to communicate via email outside of class. Did her best to answer from a native perspective about natural speech, and explaining some phonetic concepts nicely with diagrams. Kept classes fun and really engages with us. Forces you to speak, which is good. 9/10
Interest: 8/10
My interest dropped off late in the sem because I got lazy, lost some marks because of it. Work on your pronunciation and you'll be good.
Overall: 8/10
Pretty good teachers, interesting course and super fun with other beginners. Definitely recommend, but you have to stay on top or you'll get fucked over down the line, unless you go on exchange (I'll have to probably). They had two language exchange sessions arranged every week, I wasn't able to go but definitely do if you can, they're fantastic for putting these on, invaluable.
LNGS1001 - Structure of Language
Ease: 7/10
Not the easiest subject ever, nearly most all of the concepts make sense in the lec/tute, but it was hard to put some of them into practice in the assignments. A bunch of typos in assignments made it difficult, threw me off a bunch. Phonetics was pretty straightforward, it's easy to make small mistakes but they can cost you a bunch of marks. Phonology was pretty interesting, but again it's sometimes difficult to see patterns. Morphology is cool but combining this with phonology is annoying as fuck and usually tiring. Grammar and syntax were pretty straightforward, not many complaints. The cohort didn't perform that well this semester so they gave us an extra optional assignment and would count our best 4 of 6 instead of just the normal 5 for 50% of the course, but this 6th assignment had fucking arabic tri-consonants so I didn't bother submitting it, I knew it wouldn't be in my top 4. Make sure you make friends in your tute and work on assignments together, you will do much better (unless you already know everything), many people failed a few assignments before they worked this out.
Lectures: 10/10
Nick Enfield was fantastic, really engaging and good at explaining all the concepts. They were, in order, phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, grammar. Great powerpoints with diagrams/pictures/videos of his own research sometimes (and shitloads of examples). Some idiot in the lectures kept asking dumb questions which got annoying for everyone. Nick asks lots of questions to us in the audience which is great, and lots of homework for tutorials was good practice for assignments.
Tutor was Georgia Carr, really great at explaining stuff also. Helpful via email. If you contribute the tutes are 10x better, if you sit quiet it's just awkward and shit. 9/10.
Interest: 10/10
I went in with little linguistics knowledge and absolutely loved it. Super fun to learn about phonology and morphology. As someone learning two languages this stuff feels very practically applicable even if it isn't really, makes it a lot more engaging.
Overall: 8/10
Very interesting course, highly recommend to anyone doing languages. Taught well and interestingly, I'm taking two linguistics units next semester, that's how much I enjoyed it.
ASNS1601 - Introduction to Asian Cultures
Ease: 8/10
A pretty straightforward course, if you pay attention and take notes you'll be fine. Easy as shit 15% quiz, mid term was pretty easy, got 75%. Final was fine, questions not that hard, I passed the course before it and didn't study for it though. I'll update with marks when I get them.
Lectures: 6/10
Retarded mandatory online pre-recorded lectures were boring, and not-recorded mandatory Q&A live session was not bad, boring at times. The live sessions were loosely planned with some pre-prepared questions and then just questions from students, and so often were vary varied in terms of content they covered, some felt quite all over the place, little structure to be found.
China: Sean Moores (5/10). Not bad but 90 minutes of this soft-spoken Irish man's voice over a powerpoint would put anybody to sleep. Most interesting of the regions, agricultural shit was cool.
Korea: Su-Kyoung Hwang (7/10). Not bad, didn't watch all her online lectures though. Fairly interesting lectures, but not that good.
Japan: Matthew Stavros (9/10). Very enthusiastic guy, he took the online section only. Lionel Babiscz for the Q&A was pretty enthusiastic too, kind of rambly though (7/10).
South Asia/India: Mark Allon (6/10). Didn't watch his online stuff, didn't pay that much attention at live session. Kept talking about Buddhism which I don't care about so was kind of boring. Knows his shit though, just wasn't personally interested.
SEA: Adrian Vickers (8/10). Pretty good, interesting enough area and interesting enough guy.
Tutor was Tomoko Horikawa (6/10), nice but clearly didn't know that much about the regions other than Japan. Had some good resources some tutes, others was pretty boring. Some decent discussions, but she couldn't contribute that much.
Interest: 4/10
I didn't realise it was as much of a history subject as it is. Too much focus on religion/cultural beliefs for my liking, I don't care at all about that, the civilisational aspects are a lot more interesting, but you can't ignore either unfortunately. Interest severely dropped later on due to boring lectures/live sessions, not taking next semester unit.
Overall: 6/10
Not the worst but not that interesting. I don't like the online lecture component at all (everyone always says how online recorded lectures aren't substitute and then they go and make it fucking mandatory). Pretty straightforward course though, I just lost interest once I got 51%.
I'll update with my marks when I get them.