Course profile
Humanity and Nature in Chinese Thought
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Course summary
The course covers ancient Chinese philosophy and is generally considered interesting but can be challenging for those without prior knowledge. It has a moderate workload with essays and debates, and the grading is somewhat generous as long as instructions are followed carefully. The professor, Chad, is engaging and helpful, though his lectures may be difficult to follow for beginners.
Grading is generally generous, especially if you follow instructions carefully; however, some students find it harder to get an A+ without prior knowledge.
Moderate workload with two essays and debates per semester. Each essay requires 2500 words of careful preparation.
Assessment includes two essays (2500 words each), two debates, quizzes, and tutorials. Final grade is heavily dependent on following instructions accurately for the essays.
Professor Chad is described as engaging and helpful; however, some students find his lectures challenging due to a lack of background knowledge in Chinese philosophy.
Read the textbook and prepare thoroughly for each debate and essay. Forming a team early for debates can be beneficial. Attending coffee tutorials regularly can also help with understanding and grades.
AI-generated AI-generated summary based on student reviews, using Qwen 2.5.
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