0708-1300/Questionnaire

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My Questions

1. Rate this class on the following scale:

Pathetic 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Superb

2. Unless you rated the class "superb", be kind and offer suggestion(s) for improvement. You may also use this space for comments like "X is good, keep it the same way".

Announcements go here

Your Answers

In Preparation

The information below is preliminary and cannot be trusted! (v)

1. Here's a histogram of the responses to question 1:

No Answer | XX
    4     | X
    5     | X
    6     | X
    7     | XXXXX (one was marked a bit above 7)
    8     | XXXXXXX (one was halfway to 9)
    9     | XXXXXX
  Superb  | XXXX

2. And here's a summary of the responses to question 2:

  • As a whole people like the class but find it difficult. Some even say "scary".
  • As a whole people like my teaching style.
  • Some find that I skip too many details.

Some quotes:

  • "I need constant reminders of definitions ... what we're doing, where we're trying to get to".
  • "I find lectures more confusing than the book".
  • "Pictures are nice but they aren't helpful if it's not clear what a picture is supposed to be representing".
  • "[Too] many things are taken for granted".
  • "Need more examples [at least one example/exercise per 2 weeks]". (Repeated).
  • "Class homepage is excellent".
  • "More office hours".
  • "More details".
  • "Good mix of examples and theorems".
  • "Class is interesting but difficult". (Repeated often, at different wording).
  • "A good pace...". (Repeated).
  • "You are very motivating!". (Repeated often, at different wording).
  • "Keep drawing pictures".
  • "The number of definitions is overwhelming".
  • "[Move more slowly]".
  • "Lectures are wonderful". (Repeated often, at different wording, some not as strong...).
  • "I like how you suppress the technical details...".
  • "Fascinating stuff".
  • "Bredon's notation a bit unappealing".
  • "Faster please".

A larger issue quoted from a student:

"We need a rigor agreement. I mean, the rigor is always an agreement between the writer and the reader. In lectures, you are the writer and we are the readers but in exams and homeworks the situation is reversed. (TBC)