In college, I have my ups and downs. Usually everything is calm in the beginning of the semester but it becomes a wave near the end of the semester. Here are my best and worst semesters.
My best semester was the Fall 2017 semester. I was doing three classes, making me a part-time student. I was taking ACC 2203 Managerial Accounting, JPN 4003 Japanese Culture, and ECO 1002 Macroeconomics. All three classes have a section on Mondays and Wednesdays from 10:45 to noon. I can take Japanese at that time, Macroeconomics on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10:45 to noon, and Managerial Accounting fully-online.
The Managerial Accounting professor did provided powerpoint lectures, but those confused me, so I went to tutoring. I went to three one-hour tutoring session each week. The Economics professor only give exams, which I use Pearson to supplement my lectures. The Japanese professor happens to be the one who I took JPN 3001 Intermediate Japanese I with.
The Accounting midterm and final were less than 20 questions long. I only got 1 question on the midterm and 9 questions on the final wrong due to the fact that the final had confusing questions. The true-false questions in Macroeconomics screws me up easily. The final for Japanese was easier than the chapter exams.
The worst semester was the Spring 2016 semester. I was taking five classes, ACC 2101 Financial Accounting, CIS 2000 Intro to Computer Information Systems, ECO 1001 Microeconomics, JPN 3001 Intermediate Japanese I, and STA 2200 Statistics I. The accounting professor uses excel to teach, which was confusing. The economics professor was confusing. and we changed professors for statistics.
I wasn't keeping up in accounting and economics, so I had to drop to save my GPA. I realized if I took economics fully online, I could have went to tutoring for the three classes. I was able to make up accounting and economics by retaking it in the Spring 2017 semester. The economics professor was a laid-back one, while the accounting professor used slides, making the class easy to understand.
Submitted April 02, 2018 at 04:02PM by Gregheff https://ift.tt/2Gsu3uh
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