Phys 333 ubc reddit Physics heavy but has some chem and bio. WHERE TO GO FROM HERE: I know I need to go to a different spec and transfer in. Douglas Scott is a great professor too. For anyone who has taken PHYS 170 (especially those who took it last term), how bad was the final compared to the practice exams they gave you? For context, I'm aiming for 90%+ on the final. Canadian grad schools? Yes, I know, ANOTHER post from an undergrad needing advice I'm sorry. Students with credit for Physics 12 may not obtain credit for this course unless they took AP, IB, or A-level Physics and were offered advanced credit for PHYS 100. Doing this will invariably result in extending your degree by at least a year Physics 200 you get to learn cool stuff like relativity and quantum, if your definition of fun includes being utterly bamboozled in the learning process. Even math courses have more support (and imo were easier). Looking back on my first year at UBC, the things I really remember have nothing to do with the math or the physics or the chemistry. Mattison) as a starting point. UBC Psych js punishing about scaling. Does anyone have any tip to speed up while making sure every single detail is included? PHYS 157 midterm advice? Hi everyone, I am struggling a bit with phys157. I feel like all these first-year finals (specifically phys courses) encourage students to come to the conclusion that understanding the course material is less important than just grinding exam questions and knowing how to solve each of them in order to get good marks lol. ASTR_V 102 (3) Introduction to Stars and Galaxies Modern stellar and extragalactic astronomy. I didn’t even know how to practice for the exam bruhhh barely any practice materials. What are your thoughts on these courses? What did you like/dislike about them? EOSC_V 111 (1) Laboratory Exploration of Planet Earth An examination of the processes that shape and change the planet earth. Even if you're in physics, it counts as a science elective. Personally, it was way harder than previous finals. : r/UBC r/UBC r/UBC UBC Vancouver MembersOnline • ubc_mod_account ADMIN MOD Discover and learn about all the courses offered to both undergraduate and graduate students in the UBC Department of Philosophy. Sep 27, 2012 ยท PHYS 333: Energy and Climate is a new online distance education course that explores the fundamental physics behind the global issues of energy and climate change. As a science undergrad (physics/astronomy), these were the electives I took (3rd year or earlier): Science: ASTR 333: Exoplanets and Astrobiology. We have a total of 10 labs and everyone has to submit a lab at the end of class. Someone asked me about how to prepare for 3rd year ELEC courses today so I thought I'd share my experience: For ELEC 301, you have to rely on upper-year students who took the course in advance. I'd like to hear how interesting the course is, the workload, and the ease to get a good GPA? Thanks. We do not allow questions regarding admissions as separate/top-level posts on r/UBC. That is not the only thing I failed PHYS 170 and 158. The UBC Speech Sciences major program is an interdisciplinary program that focuses on courses in linguistics, speech, psychology, and audiology. The prof was okay but the material is so vastly wide and they expect you to have I'm a first-year student taking PHYS 119 this year and I am so angry at this course's grading system. Additionally, CPEN 333 doesn’t have as high of a workload as CPEN 311, and it could still be managed in term 1 if your other 3 courses are mostly electives. Much of the information on reddit is not up-to-date or current. Other classes the prof has office hours, help sessions (PHYS 170 has neither) or even something like the Learning Center for math. You just get three generic first year physics credits, which would be useful for fulfilling electives if you were in Science but not in Engineering. [3-2*-0] Prerequisite: One of PHYS 11, PHYS 12, PHYS 100. Posted by u/ZephyrSN - 7 votes and 4 comments PHYS tends to send out emails to students in the department a few months before each term about TA applications. A lot of work in labs, and pretty much grade 12 physics on absolute crack. However, in recent years, profs have gotten better at designing exams to be difficult enough to not need much scaling in the end. You will learn how to look at the world around you and evaluate human activities in terms of energy and waste. Especially, we need to listen to instructions, discuss with peers, and write all the notes in details. PHYS 117 is almost a complete replica of physics 12 (assuming you have done that) so all the kinematics/dynamics/circular motion stuff was a breeze. [3-0-0] Prerequisite: Either (a) one of MATH 101, MATH 103, MATH 105, MATH 121 and one of PHYS 101, PHYS 102, PHYS 106, PHYS 107, PHYS 108, PHYS 117, PHYS 118, PHYS 131, PHYS 153, PHYS 157, PHYS 158; or (b) SCIE 001. I'm not quite sure how they compare to 117 and 118, but apparently 107 and 108 give a better base for physics going forward. lukz hpgvmom fohpik jwddfk wmuh xypx fddt cegwl wsgikmyt kwofrsao lceo gufded jsnzm gvodcr foed