Are you just looking to brush up your knowledge or looking for actual credits?Does anyone know of any online organic chemistry courses that are self-paced, and that don't require proctors?
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Are you just looking to brush up your knowledge or looking for actual credits?Does anyone know of any online organic chemistry courses that are self-paced, and that don't require proctors?
Are you just looking to brush up your knowledge or looking for actual credits?
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I don't think there is anything reputable without a proctor or system of proctoring of some sort. They need to have some assurances of you doing your own work on order to give you credit.Retake for credits.
I don't think there is anything reputable without a proctor or system of proctoring of some sort. They need to have some assurances of you doing your own work on order to give you credit.
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I've seen a few people ask this question before but no one has really given an answer. I'm about to take the UNIT 2 Exam in Biochem, and I am doing the UNIT 2 Review (the bank of questions) over and over and getting every single question right every time. But are these the same questions that will be on the exam, or am I about to be blindsided?
I've seen a few people ask this question before but no one has really given an answer. I'm about to take the UNIT 2 Exam in Biochem, and I am doing the UNIT 2 Review (the bank of questions) over and over and getting every single question right every time. But are these the same questions that will be on the exam, or am I about to be blindsided?
I start this course on Wednesday and I am curious about any tips to succeed as well!
don't bother with the lectures they are almost completely worthless. Just read the book and do the book problems, and be super familiar with where all the information in the book is so that come exam time you know where to find those random details you remember reading--they will just happen to be on the test. the midterm and final questions are very similar to those found on the quizzes, so if you do well on the quizzes you should expect to do well on the exams. Good luck!Hey guys just starting Gen Chem II w/ Rowe. Any tips/advices for a fellow member?
Did you end up taking it? Thinking of starting this October myself, looking for any info on it. Almost no one talked about it.Thinking a bit taking physics I through UNE. Any input is appreciated.
Harvard has a physics where you do the work online then go to boston for like 10 days to do the labs.
If Harvard scares you, I believe BYU and UTx have online physics as well.
UNE is to be avoided for lots of reasons
does anyone have a link to the pdf for the biochem book? PM me if so! TYIA!
I don't know, check it out
UNEO is a ****show, the worst interaction with an educational institution I've had. Trust me, you're flushing your money down the toilet.
There's also UTex and BYU. I guarantee you neither would put their respectable academic reputations on line with the frequently disastrous quality that UNE is comfortable with.
To summarize UNE - disastrous lecture quality (often several order of magnitude inferior to khan academy), professors who are not terribly accessible or helpful, harsh and inconsistent grading - you will frequently be surprised by content on exams and there's no recourse, sometimes they curve and sometimes they don't, it is frowned upon by DO and shunned by MD, etc, etc, etc
Yep! Found it. Thanks for the response and for the feedback. I'm generally following your suggestions but have already found myself pretty focused on the objectives despite what you recommended. Ive taken 2 pre/post evaluations so far and every question seems like it is pretty much directly derived from an objective...You can easily find the older versions just by googling the title of the book and "PDF." I ended up not reading the book, but the diagrams are invaluable and required for success. The objectives reference the figure numbers in the current version. Old versions are numbered differently. You can almost always figure out what it is referring to, but for me it wasn't worth the hassle or risk that I got it wrong. I rented the current version from Amazon and don't regret it at all.
re UNE as an asinine entity, here is a sample quiz question:
So this question spans all of glycogenlysis, gluconeogenesis, glycolysis, including minor enzymes that catalyze intermediates. It also tests the effect of hormones on those systems.
It then tests you - on minor enzymes covering 3 gigantic, conditional pathways - whether these enzymes are activated or inactivated by phosphorylation.
There's not much intuition here - just brute force of wrote memorization of what's activated or inactivated by phosphorylation. On a series of interrelated pathways that cover about 100 products, intermediates, and enzymes.
This is about par for the course, and testing in this manner is completely - utterly - totally stupid. Unless you're trying to hand out a 2.5 in an attempt to gain credibility with medical schools, but doing so in a very underhanded way
If curved no big deal, but I heard they've stopped curving...lols
I just want to offer a somewhat different opinion for the benefit of prospective students (for biochem):
Lectures: They certainly don't win any awards for production quality. Poorly edited, boring, the professor talks painfully slowly. But, all the tested info comes from the lectures. Know the lectures and the diagrams she goes over in the lectures and you will get an A. You can also watch the lectures at 1.5 speed or greater (I typically used 1.8).
Professor: I had Dr. Spicer. He responded within 24 hours to every one of my questions with well written substantive answers.
Grading: It's all multiple choice, so nothing is harsh or inconsistent (compared, for example, to the Berkeley extension course that requires written projects that many SDN posters feel are arbitrarily graded). The multiple choice questions are not tricky. I was not surprised by anything. Moreover, it's not conceptually hard at all. It's just a lot of volume.
Respectability of Course: I called every Texas medical school and about 10 non-TX MD schools (that state they accept online coursework on MSAR). Every school said that UNE Biochem was accepted. None had any reservations.
Overall I think online courses suck, but sometimes you don't have a choice. As far as online courses go, there was nothing particularly bad about this one. Having now started MCAT prep, I feel like this course gave me all the biochem content I need and hit on many biology topics as well.
Did any of UNE's people write a reference letter?
Were you admitted DO or MD?
Are you URM or otherwise apply disadvantaged?
Also, I do not think they are bad in terms of the signaling value of grades assigned, particularly in their BC - if you can swim in their Hurricane Katrina of disorganization and sloppy delivery, that has clear positive signaling value - although its mitigated by the fact that cheating is likely rampant on their stuff. I think they are unspeakably bad in terms of course content, delivery, organization.
Thanks! I actually don't think I watched the UNE biochem lectures in depth, but relied heavily on AK lectures and Khan.I think this is the lone intrinsic value of the course but I found myself watching outside videos for both of the courses I took with them. And my bc instructor referred me to Khan academy on one occasion.
Also congratulations on your admit
Those lectures aren't very helpful - I didn't watch them. However, the notes and outlines were very helpful and I didn't find this course to be overly challenging.I have a question about Microbiology. Noticed really bad reviews for one of the instructors Fisradi, but the one I'm taking it with now, Farrell, has pretty good reviews. However, it seems she's recycling Fisradis online lectures- should I be worried about the exams?
If you took the practice test and scored well on your first shot, you're probably in good shape. If you took it numerous times, with each time 90% of the questions being the same, and now you have every answer memorized, that doesn't really mean you understand the material.
To answer your question directly, the questions from the test bank are NOT on the exam. But it is a safe bet that if the test bank asks a question, a closely related question will appear on the exam.
Well, I did end up being pretty blindsided, hah! I've taken exams 1, 2, and 3 now and have found that the quiz questions and review questions are SO MUCH easier than the actual exam questions. I wish the quizzes were harder if only to prepare us better. The quizzes are so cut and dry and obvious and then the exam pulls out random things in so much DETAIL that we didn't really focus on. Oh well. I'm taking the final tomorrow night and just really hoping to do okay on it. I understand all the material, and I actually really think it's cool, and enjoy learning it, but the exams stress me out so much. At least it will be over!
No more of these awful lectures. Never again. You'd think they could improve on that, I can literally hear her EATING while recording lol!
Do you have a reference for 1/3 get an A or A-? Even if truewith C's and D's the GPA is very probably sub 3.0, which is aggressive grade deflation
And yes, the way to do well is to sink ungodly amounts of time into reviewing obscure details about, for example cofactors of unregulated intermediates
Quantitative point:
1/3 A's + 1/3 B's + 1/6 C's + 1/12D+1/12F = (1.33+1+.33+.08+0) = 2.7
And I presume this data was from when they were curving? They've stopped curving. They were uniformly adding 6% (2/3rds of a letter grade to each score). This would drop the GPA to around 2.2 to 2.3, which if the stuff of farce.
For reference in the wake of Princeton's revision of their grade deflation regime, the lowest GPA in the top 50 is around a 3.2. A 3.7 would be fantastic grade inflation, while a 2.7 is very substantial grade deflation. Dropping to 2.2 is crazy.
Re bad experience, yes. The course is not well designed, is terribly organized, testing was unfair, and I want back the 150 hours or so of life I spent pouring over obscure pathways that aren't on the MCAT and that I'll never see again.
As to my beef with grading personally, I'm not an A- student. I got one in ochem because I didn't study enough. I followed with an A+, A, A+ and A+ in my next courses. Then I encountered this absolute **** show of a course, where the quality of instruction can only be described as "purely disastrous" where testing is random and where they cut off A at 94.
I want back the 150 hours or so of life I spent pouring over obscure pathways that aren't on the MCAT and that I'll never see again.
Pitbul posted the distribution on 6.10. It was curved when I finished, which was late spring. Summer appears to have been the cutoff for stopping the curve.
How did he have good data on the post-curve distribution 1o days after the apparent implementation of the policy?
Nope, I spent exactly what they suggested:
And I scored 780/740/5.5 on the old GRE.
Even if they are at 1/3rd A, 1/3rd B, and 1/3rd grades immediately fatal to careers in medicine, that's still sub 3.0 and nobody - nobody - is giving out a sub 3.0. And it looks like they're deflating from there.
Except the heroes of UNE Online.
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This is aggravated by extremely low instructional quality (nom, nom, nom, what were we talking about again), poor course organization, and a professor who referred me to Khan Academy for questions.
In summary, UNE Online is engaging in educational ruffianism to extract rents from poor, nontraditional, rural, or military students who lack the resources to attend conventional classroom settings or who are in remote areas of the world serving our country. They're doing this by charging more than almost any community college or extension school while delivering instructional quality and professor accessibility that would be a source of embarrassment to any community college, and while aggressively grade deflating.
Good to know they're not designed for me, because they have logical gaps in them you could drive a truck through
The course has a level of organization that is about on par New Orleans in the aftermath of hurricane Katrina, or with Bogota after dark...take your pick.
The instructional quality is adequately summarized in one sentence: "Nom, nom, nom where were we : phone rings: oh yes, back to the cofactors of this unregulated intermediate you will never see again"
My professor referred me to Khan academy when I asked him questions.
They're assigning a 2.2-2.7 GPA average, which is either grade deflation or extremely aggressive grade deflation.
Your A is certainly a considerable achievement in the course, but any kind of positive appraisal of UNE online would emanate from Stockholm syndrome.
Quantitative point:
1/3 A's + 1/3 B's + 1/6 C's + 1/12D+1/12F = (1.33+1+.33+.08+0) = 2.7
Hi guys, I'm looking to take General Chemistry 2 through either UNE or DCCD. Anyone having experience with either can you please give me a quick review of how the course went? I took Chemistry 1 through DCCD but the class structure is different than Chem 2 - Chem 1 had an at home lab kit to work through, I believe Chem 2 doesn't Really need some advice...
Will you be working and/or taking other classes or will this be the only thing you need to focus on?Does anyone have any experiences with UNE's Biology 2? I'm looking to complete it in under 10 weeks. Is it doable? What is mostly covered in this course, i.e. mostly biological chem, evolution, biodiversity/ecology crap?
Will you be working and/or taking other classes or will this be the only thing you need to focus on?
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I'm removing my face from my palm because this goes in favor of my argument: they're giving almost no flat "A's", a small number of A-'s, and from there probably a normal distribution.
Biology 2 can be done in 10 weeks. Any of their courses can.
Fischer spent 3/4ths of her time on evolution, biodiversity, and ecology. Very little MCAT relevance. But I can tell you about the nervous systems of nematodes. The final was largely unrelated to course content but heavily curved. The lab barely referenced the actual lab and instead reiterated course content.
As with all of their stuff: its as expense as Harvard Extension in return for almost no instructor time, their grading is harsh and weird, the content doesn't really relate to the MCAT, the lectures are awful, there are lots of opportunities to engage in academic misconduct. Adcoms know all this and look askance at their stuff accordingly: even when they take them, they do so with mild contempt.
Looking for feedback from how difficult and how long it took you to take the following courses via UNECOM:
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY I w/ lab
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY II w/ lab
PHYSICS I w/ lab
Would it be too difficult to finish each course in 4 to 6 weeks, one at a time.
Organic 1 is difficult through UNE since it's pretty much organic 1 and all of organic 2. I really can't imagine taking physics through UNE. I took physics 1 and 2 in-class, and did okay thanks to partial credit for showing work. I can't imagine doing calculations, and having to select an answer from a multiple choice test.
Yeah. Thanks for the heads up about Organic I being a combination of Organic I and II in one course. How long did it take you to finish? what did you end up getting for an organic I grade?
Fortunately, these classes would be for my boyfriend, and I have already taken all 4 of these classes through my university, so I plan to help him out with studying and reviewing! It'll be good review for the MCAT haha.