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What is this component for? It's completely optional and that's why I was wondering...

2007-09-02 08:26:55 · 3 answers · asked by Eze 3 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

3 answers

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at many universities, calculus is taught by their doctoral students and not by experienced professors. this means the quality of your instructor may be questionable -- he or she could well be learning on the job and relying on their memories of what teaching methods worked for them [which is a bit unfair since they're the cream of the crop, aren't they?]

thus, open lab is when you can ask questions of grad students whose teaching style may be quite different from your instructor's and thus better suited to you actually learning.


ah :-)

2007-09-02 08:31:02 · answer #1 · answered by Spock (rhp) 7 · 0 0

nicely its stressful to declare. some classes do get harder on an identical time as others get greater handy. As you get by using further and extra classes the matters start to slender down consequently you have already got a superb variety of historic past information from the commencing up or maybe although the content textile of those classes is greater complicated they don't look as stressful. Eletromagnetism is complicated, in EE you're meant to take a Fields and Waves class that's plenty greater reliable than Physics 2 (a minimum of at my college). Mechanical and electric powered are the two stressful majors yet they're precious (as long as you do nicely), there is often a significant call for for those majors. EE is greater theoretical than ME which leads some human beings to declare that this is harder besides the undeniable fact that it relies upon on the guy. solid success with notwithstanding direction you go with.

2016-11-14 00:22:33 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It's very similar to open lab in the sciences. I'm a math major and biology minor so I've been to open labs. You can go to lab and it'll be open for you to come in and out as you please. There should be a professor or a tutor there to help anyone who needs it. You can do whatever you want as long as it pertains to the class. Normally open labs are offered before exams or quizzes. I would recommend going. Sometimes I attended open lab for 10 minutes, but it helped get my head in place for the upcoming exam. Once there was a professor who offered open lab hours but never said when the exams would be. After the first exam the students realized that the exams would be the class after open lab. This isn't usually the case, but open lab can be helpful. Some students work and have other classes so they can't get into lab during other lab hours and open lab is very helpful to them.

2007-09-02 10:23:04 · answer #3 · answered by Rockit 6 · 0 0

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