9
edits
Willipedia is now back online as of 5/5/2019 |
It has been several years since Willipedia closed. Please help get it updated! |
Go to the Willipedia 2.0 Project to learn more. |
Changes
→Greek 101-102
[[Category:Guides]][[Category:Academics]]
Because some people just like a challenge.
Just to reiterate, Willipedia posts are *not* anonymous: contributors probably shouldn't say anything here that they wouldn't want to put their name on.
===Arth 101-102===
Unless you really like memorization, this class is quite hellish. The lectures are great, but the memorization -- five facts for each slide -- is a lot of work. Also, since virtually no one has written an art history paper before (at least no one who is taking 101-102) you just write the papers like regular papers, and it turns out that art history papers are supposed to be totally different, and since there are only two papers in the semester, it's hard to improve much. In contrast, for me the class is one of the most interesting at Williams (102 lecture was the highlight of my day, every day) and the quizzes really are not that hard. It only took me a couple hours of studying the images for the quizzes a night or two before the quiz, and I didn't miss any points on any of the quizzes. Also, I am not one of those people who can get A's in classes without studying, so don't think that. The exams do require a lot of preparation, though. I disagree with the other posts. I would say this is one of the '''easiest''' classes that I've taken at Williams, and one of the most interesting. Good bang for your buck--is a pretty awsome class and doesn't require that much work. I agree with the poster directly above me. The reading isn't that long and is much more interesting than your typical textbook chunks. The quizzes are a pain, but manageable--maybe 1 hr of studying per quiz. The papers aren't that bad either--sure, no one's ever written one before, but the conference profs realize that and it's fairly easy to get at least a B+. The final and midterm are brutal, though. :Estimated weekly workload: 5-10 hours ===Biology 202: Genetics=== If you're not a biology major, DO NOT TAKE THIS COURSE. More or less equivalent to 3 courses in one. This class combines a great deal of reading (about 2 hours worth per class) with two midterms and a final. Each only tests the material from the end of the previous midterm, however, although it would be humanly impossible to have them as cumulative anyway. There are also weekly labs with FULL WRITTEN LAB REPORTS FOR EACH and perhaps the strangest phenomenon for a biology lab course: PROBLEM SETS! Estimated workload: Lab: 3.5 hours (plus some night and weekend time); Problem Set: 4 hours approx every other week; Lab Reports: 3 hours weekly not counting the 50+ page fly lab report which averages at least 20 hours of work.Estimated weekly workload would be about 8 hours at a conservative level. I am a biology major, but I've talked to plenty of people who aren't and this class isn't as horrible as the above description makes it sound. The reading is mostly skimmable. The material, while voluminous and challenging, IS manageable if you take good lecture notes, use office hours, and study with some friends. The problem sets never struck me as strange--a lot of classical genetics is based on problems, so learning how to solve them makes sense. Plus, you get Quantitative credit for them, so maybe it's worth it. Finally, the fly lab doesn't have to be 50+ pages. Mine came in at just under 26 and no one I've talked to had above 30 pages. Really, the class isn't devilish or out to get you. It's challenging, but it was definitely one of my favorite classes here and I think the work is worth it. I'd also heard from a Bio major that Genetics, when he took it, was the hardest Bio sequence class in the major. From what I heard compared to the class I took, Genetics has changed quite a bit. I found it a wildly interesting class, with problem sets that were far more reasonable than those in any I've taken. Work was generally given only when necesary, as opposed to those classes whose profs think its their god-given right to take up your free time. Both the problem sets and tests were moderately challenging, but also fulfilling and downright original. The Fly lab, whether 25 or 50 pages, will suck. Going to the help session before it was due, everybody, including Dr. D, looked like death. Overall, besides that needlessly painful lab assignment, this class explains an incredible amount about biology and the world we see around us. It was my favorite class this semester and perhaps of my time at Williams. As far as work load--I spent a couple of hours on each problem set and spent the night studying before each test. Readings are fully optional, and I did not use them. Lecture attendence is necesary, but classes fly by to an extent I've never yet seen at Williams. On M/W/F this was the one class I always went to. ===Chem 155: Concepts of Modern Chemistry===At one point, I talked to Bingemann in office hours. Direct quote: "I would say organic chemistry is easier than 155." Nuff said. This class is not hard at all if you take good notes. No where orgo's level! ===Organic Chemistry=== It seems hard for me to imagine this page to be complete without listing one of William's most painful classes. Organic Chemistry takes two semesters to complete, and is taken the spring of one year, followed by the fall of the next. So, even stucturally the class is difficult, but I'll get to that in a bit.
This class is no joke. Estimated weekly workload: 10 hoursBut if you're willing to get your ass kicked for a semester the knowledge imparted upon you is vast and powerful...for you shall become an Organic Chem Lord...
===Greek 101-102===
It's not the work itself that's hard, it's the sheer amount of it for a 101 language course. You have to learn enough grammar to read Xenophon and Euripides by spring (which is, by the way, totally worth it).
101 is kind of a nightmare, but it pretty much settles down for 102. ^I would say that if anything 102 is the harder course as in 101 you get through half of the main book, and in 102 you are expected to finish the book and THEN do Xenophon and Euripides - who, by the way, is immensely hard to translate! ===Any physics tutorialMath 324=== Topology (with Professor Morgan) is hard. And the final exam is really hard, definitely nothing like what is in class. Since the textbook (Munkres -- pretty much the only topology textbook in existence) is created for a two-semester course, and this class covers it in one semester as a 300-level course, you have to skip a lot, so it's hard to know what to review in the textbook. Also, there are very few examples, and a lot of long proofs, and almost no illustrations. There are also no solutions for any of the problems in the book. Estimated weekly workload: 10-20 hours (if you need less then 10 hours, you should go see a doctor. If it takes you more than 20 hours for three weeks in a row, consider dropping it.) ===Math 401=== a.k.a Functional Analysis With Applications to Mathematical Physics Functional Analysis (FUN henceforth) is like Topology (MATH 324 –see above for description) on steroids. This is to say that if you have taken Topology, FUN is relatively manageable, since you build on the knowledge obtained. If you have not taken Topology before taking FUN, let’s just say that you are in for an interesting experience. Of course, a question emerges: if Topology and FUN are so hard, why bother taking them? Well, I guess that one needs to have a certain masochistic streak in himself/herself to take these classes; that, and it really counts a lot for Math/Econ/Physics grad schools. On the plus side, Functional Analysis has been known, in the Budapest math program, to be called Fun Anal. It is rumored that this abbreviation alone is reason enough to take the course. :Estimated weekly workload: 12+ hours
Goodbye weekend, hello problem set. Estimated weekly workload: 12-15 hoursFor the masochistic physics major in all of us. Other highlights include getting to make a fool of yourself in front of one of your favorite physics profs once a week!
:Estimated weekly workload: 12-15 hours ===Organic ChemistryJapanese 101-102=== Many will enter, few will get through 102. Japanese 101-102 would easily be the biggest weeder on campus, except that the upper-level classes don't exactly get easier. For the first two years, the class is two classes' worth of scheduled meetings, and even thereafter it holds two classes' worth of homework time. Skills required include rote memorization, ability to quickly adapt to deeply bizarre material, the ability to not snicker at conversation videos, and the ability to assimilate grammar without ever having it explained. (Part of this class is called the "lecture" section. Despite this, there will never be a lecture.) On the plus side, if you can survive it, the Japanese language courses will teach you a lot, and every other department will seem easy in comparison.
===Computer Networks 336T===Few will enter, fewer will survive. This course makes the microcoded CS237 look simple in comparison. The first semester of Organic (Shortend to orgo here, and ohomeworks are okay--chem or at most other schools)is basically learning the bareleast you feel--bones basics of organic chemistry, analogous to learning the alphabet of a new language, until you get your marks back with circles and logically the second semester builds crosses on the knowledge creating paragraphs everything, and papers of you will wonder "why was this alphabet (, why was that wrong?" Of course, Professor Tom Murtagh always explains stuff when you go to continue the analogy)him, but you won't get a clear explanation until you are marked wrong. Exams are hard. Now notice how I made the jump On a scale from alpha1-bet to papers over a summer; this 10, the midterm is basically how it feels. And7, of course, this and the final is 10. There are things not to say at all ever discussed before, or those that learning hide in obscure places of the basics of organic chemistry is easytextbook. In short, exams are like 24-hour take-homes squeezed into 2 and a half hours. Quite On the contrarypositive side, the basics are very memorization basedyou get to learn a lot about Tom's methodology not only as a computer scientist, there is no way around itbut as a scholar. This memorization becomes even more of a hinderance when you arive He penetrates into the fall impenetrable depth of the next semester every reading he assigns and realize that you have forgotten everything. Of course, there is hardly being a day of reviewskeptic himself, it would be impossible though to review morefinds fault in there, there is far to much material to get into the semesterjust as he finds faults on your homeworks and exams. Thus the first month of that second semester of orgo is really In other words, he treats you like a blindmature scientist, frantic scramble giving you the same weight as he will give to remember what the previous semester intailedprofessionals. If you are confident with your physics and computer science, take it. :Estimated weekly workload: The author spends at least 12 hours each week, while trying to to understand complex reaction mechanisms which apear to happen almost by magicbut he has seen someone spent less time and done better.PS: Tom can shoot a fly with a rubber band.
===Computer Science 337T===