PHYSICS 1C
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Electrodynamics, Optics, and Special Relativity
Description: Lecture/demonstration, four hours; discussion, one hour. Enforced requisites: course 1A, 1B, Mathematics 32A, 32B. Enforced corequisite: Mathematics 33A. Magnetic fields, Ampere's law, Faraday's law, inductance, and alternating current circuits. Maxwell's equations, electromagnetic waves, light, geometrical optics, interference and diffraction. Special relativity. P/NP or letter grading.
Units: 5.0
Units: 5.0
Most Helpful Review
Winter 2022 - B-b-b-based?!?! Holy shit, this professor is probably one of the most based professors in the entire Physics department, no, in the entire school. Awesome lectures, chill TA, and most of all, hella based test format and dope test grading standards. This dude is a pure godsend. Extremely based, redpilled, and wholesome big chungus, which is impossibly rare for the Physics department lol. You get my point. You should take this class with this goat. You might not come out necessarily liking Physics (although he'll def pique your interest), but take it for the experience. Just imagine, a Physics class where you can actually understand the content and more than likely get an A, without literally having to expend your own physical and mental health!
Winter 2022 - B-b-b-based?!?! Holy shit, this professor is probably one of the most based professors in the entire Physics department, no, in the entire school. Awesome lectures, chill TA, and most of all, hella based test format and dope test grading standards. This dude is a pure godsend. Extremely based, redpilled, and wholesome big chungus, which is impossibly rare for the Physics department lol. You get my point. You should take this class with this goat. You might not come out necessarily liking Physics (although he'll def pique your interest), but take it for the experience. Just imagine, a Physics class where you can actually understand the content and more than likely get an A, without literally having to expend your own physical and mental health!
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Most Helpful Review
Spring 2021 - Great professor with clear lectures and interesting demos. He's quite understanding as well in case you can't take the test at the regular time. The class is well organized and the TAs and LAs did a great job at each discussion. The grading is fair--there's a straight scale with 5% for each grade, so 90%+ is A, 85-90% is A-, 80-85% is B+, etc. The pace of the class is roughly 1 chapter per week with 2 chapters a week near the last few weeks which was rough. Discussions are mandatory with a worksheet due at the end of discussion. There are three midterms, 2 worth 15% and the first worth 5%. They aren't too bad although you should expect double jeopardy in that if you get something wrong in part a, but is used in b, c, d, e, etc. you'll get marked off for all those parts so your grade can drop significantly over a small mistake. Workload is manageable--about 10 to 12 book problems each week assigned on Pearson due Monday night. Only thing I didn't like was that on Pearson, you immediately lost 20-50% of your grade if you got a MC question incorrect. This is different from free response questions where you get 6 tries and don't lose any points until you've used up all your attempts. Other than that, great class, would definitely take Professor Hauser again.
Spring 2021 - Great professor with clear lectures and interesting demos. He's quite understanding as well in case you can't take the test at the regular time. The class is well organized and the TAs and LAs did a great job at each discussion. The grading is fair--there's a straight scale with 5% for each grade, so 90%+ is A, 85-90% is A-, 80-85% is B+, etc. The pace of the class is roughly 1 chapter per week with 2 chapters a week near the last few weeks which was rough. Discussions are mandatory with a worksheet due at the end of discussion. There are three midterms, 2 worth 15% and the first worth 5%. They aren't too bad although you should expect double jeopardy in that if you get something wrong in part a, but is used in b, c, d, e, etc. you'll get marked off for all those parts so your grade can drop significantly over a small mistake. Workload is manageable--about 10 to 12 book problems each week assigned on Pearson due Monday night. Only thing I didn't like was that on Pearson, you immediately lost 20-50% of your grade if you got a MC question incorrect. This is different from free response questions where you get 6 tries and don't lose any points until you've used up all your attempts. Other than that, great class, would definitely take Professor Hauser again.
Most Helpful Review
Very hard and not concerned at all. not helpful at office hours,he trys to keep your stay at his office hour as short as possible. his way of grading is not fair as he penalize you for the same mistake as many times as possible on the same test. He expect you to memorize all the formulas and all the units. But,he is very quik at grading and submitting the grades. WHICH HE DOES ALL BY HIMSELF, and His office is the most organized Than any office I've seen at UCLA.
Very hard and not concerned at all. not helpful at office hours,he trys to keep your stay at his office hour as short as possible. his way of grading is not fair as he penalize you for the same mistake as many times as possible on the same test. He expect you to memorize all the formulas and all the units. But,he is very quik at grading and submitting the grades. WHICH HE DOES ALL BY HIMSELF, and His office is the most organized Than any office I've seen at UCLA.
Most Helpful Review
Winter 2020 - Professor Kang is considered to be one of the best physics professors I have taken at UCLA. He is engaging and very helpful with students. He is great at explaining his view and the subject well but you need to go to his office hours. His office hours are very helpful. Use that time to talk about the subject and HW. His TA Reddy is extremely helpful as well for he doesn't rest with Professor Kang to provide the best quality teaching for the students. Professor Kang is constantly developing to be a better professor for all students alike. Here are the stats: Midterms: 20% each. There are two midterms. Evaluation: 1% Discussion Worksheet: 3% HW Mastering Physics: 16% Final: 40% All these stats can change due to the survey he does throughout the quarter. Depend on that survey he will work towards benefiting you as much as he can. So don't be rude when you get a bad midterm grade. Just make sure to work hard and do your best. Oh and he takes efforts into your grade. Good luck!
Winter 2020 - Professor Kang is considered to be one of the best physics professors I have taken at UCLA. He is engaging and very helpful with students. He is great at explaining his view and the subject well but you need to go to his office hours. His office hours are very helpful. Use that time to talk about the subject and HW. His TA Reddy is extremely helpful as well for he doesn't rest with Professor Kang to provide the best quality teaching for the students. Professor Kang is constantly developing to be a better professor for all students alike. Here are the stats: Midterms: 20% each. There are two midterms. Evaluation: 1% Discussion Worksheet: 3% HW Mastering Physics: 16% Final: 40% All these stats can change due to the survey he does throughout the quarter. Depend on that survey he will work towards benefiting you as much as he can. So don't be rude when you get a bad midterm grade. Just make sure to work hard and do your best. Oh and he takes efforts into your grade. Good luck!
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Most Helpful Review
His lectures are pretty good and I loved that he put the notes online for us. He's a lot more clear, organized, and comprehensible than other physics professors at UCLA. The homework was MasteringPhysics. It was difficult and sometimes kind of long, but the real problem was that the homework looked nothing like the tests. In order to do well on the tests, make sure you study the lecture notes and go to the review sessions, because studying the book and the homework problems does not prepare you well. Going to class every day and trying to understand the concepts he lectures on is a lot more helpful than trying to get good grades on the homework, so don't worry about it too much. The midterms and final were pretty difficult, but he's not a hard grader.
His lectures are pretty good and I loved that he put the notes online for us. He's a lot more clear, organized, and comprehensible than other physics professors at UCLA. The homework was MasteringPhysics. It was difficult and sometimes kind of long, but the real problem was that the homework looked nothing like the tests. In order to do well on the tests, make sure you study the lecture notes and go to the review sessions, because studying the book and the homework problems does not prepare you well. Going to class every day and trying to understand the concepts he lectures on is a lot more helpful than trying to get good grades on the homework, so don't worry about it too much. The midterms and final were pretty difficult, but he's not a hard grader.
Most Helpful Review
Summer 2017 - Great class, amazing and helpful teacher. The homework was from the book, and his office hours were very helpful. However, the exams were super hard. The class was time consuming simply because the concepts really had to be ingrained in your brain to do well on exams. Overall great class. 10/10 with rice
Summer 2017 - Great class, amazing and helpful teacher. The homework was from the book, and his office hours were very helpful. However, the exams were super hard. The class was time consuming simply because the concepts really had to be ingrained in your brain to do well on exams. Overall great class. 10/10 with rice
Most Helpful Review
His course is not particularly difficult until the second half of the material, for Diffraction and Interference. He knows what he is talking about, but for these sections specifically, it is hard to grasp what he is saying and his pictures suck. Otherwise, his midterms are straightforward, but again, by the second half of the course, it's hard to know what formulas are relevant.
His course is not particularly difficult until the second half of the material, for Diffraction and Interference. He knows what he is talking about, but for these sections specifically, it is hard to grasp what he is saying and his pictures suck. Otherwise, his midterms are straightforward, but again, by the second half of the course, it's hard to know what formulas are relevant.