Stan Schein
Department of Psychology
AD
3.3
Overall Rating
Based on 77 Users
Easiness 2.0 / 5 How easy the class is, 1 being extremely difficult and 5 being easy peasy.
Clarity 3.2 / 5 How clear the class is, 1 being extremely unclear and 5 being very clear.
Workload 2.2 / 5 How much workload the class is, 1 being extremely heavy and 5 being extremely light.
Helpfulness 3.1 / 5 How helpful the class is, 1 being not helpful at all and 5 being extremely helpful.

TOP TAGS

  • Tough Tests
  • Uses Slides
  • Is Podcasted
  • Engaging Lectures
GRADE DISTRIBUTIONS
24.0%
20.0%
16.0%
12.0%
8.0%
4.0%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

25.4%
21.2%
16.9%
12.7%
8.5%
4.2%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

23.9%
20.0%
16.0%
12.0%
8.0%
4.0%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

24.1%
20.1%
16.1%
12.1%
8.0%
4.0%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

24.9%
20.7%
16.6%
12.4%
8.3%
4.1%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

19.7%
16.4%
13.2%
9.9%
6.6%
3.3%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

22.4%
18.7%
14.9%
11.2%
7.5%
3.7%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

20.1%
16.8%
13.4%
10.1%
6.7%
3.4%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

24.7%
20.6%
16.5%
12.4%
8.2%
4.1%
0.0%
A+
A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F

Grade distributions are collected using data from the UCLA Registrar’s Office.

ENROLLMENT DISTRIBUTIONS
Clear marks

Sorry, no enrollment data is available.

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Reviews (68)

1 of 7
1 of 7
Add your review...
Quarter: Fall 2017
Grade: A
Dec. 24, 2017

Schein was an awesome professor! It’s clear he’s an expert (MD/PHD), especially with vision. The material is super interesting too.

What I did to get an A:
Go to lecture (but really, only to get clicker points). Schein goes through slides SO fast, it’s nearly impossible to understand the material or take notes.
Listen to the bruincast of every lecture. Take notes while watching (pause the video anytime he says anything that may be important, which is pretty much everything). I spent 2 hours rewatching the lecture, pausing, and taking notes for each bruincast lecture. His exams are based solely off of what he says (at least 95%)! Even if it’s not on a slide, he may test on it.
Make flash cards of every slide/notes before the quizzes. (I seriously made over 400 flash cards throughout the quarter. I used them to study for the quizzes and exams)
That’s it. :)

If you stay on top of the material, this class is very do-able.
Grade breakdown: (all multiple choice, 50q)
Midterm 1: 82 (average ~75)
Midterm 2: 92 (average ~80)
Final: 94 (average ~80)

Discussion:
The quizzes (basically every discussion) we’re not particularly difficult, and pretty similar to test questions.
The paper is really easy, kind of a joke (3 pages, double spaced)

I would definitely recommend schein! He was really funny and the class was not that difficult

Helpful?

8 1 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Spring 2019
Grade: A+
June 24, 2019

Schein is smart and really knows his stuff, but he tries to cram too much into just a few weeks. He would still be lecturing even the day before the exam, and speeds through lecture just to finish all the material. He also claims that you don't need to memorize, but please memorize. Several questions on the tests asks about small details that aren't necessarily "conceptual," and they can make/break your grade. The TAs also aren't the most helpful/knowledgeable so study hard on your own. There are three exams, discussion quizzes, one paper critique, and in-class clicker points that makeup your grade.

The workload isn't necessarily heavy, because he doesn't have too many things that are due. However, to do well you need to pace yourself and make sure you're staying on track with the material. Everyone has their own study methods, make sure to figure out yours early on and understand the material. Make sure to get as many points as possible outside of exams and they can really boost your grade.

Helpful?

3 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Fall 2015
Grade: A
Sept. 22, 2016

Schein was wonderful.

I am selling the class textbook Biological Psychology, 7th Edition. It was incredibly useful for me during the course. Please message me at (952)393-7369 for details!

Helpful?

3 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Fall 2017
Grade: A+
Jan. 9, 2018

Prof Schein is definitely passionate about the topic he teaches, especially vision. The class required a lot of memorization (although he thinks otherwise) and reading. I had to rewatch the Bruincast videos to take more detailed notes because he went over the material too fast during lecture. Watching the lectures again and reading the textbook helped me review the content and allowed the details to really stick. Most of his multiple choice questions were fair, but there were some questions that seemed to come out of nowhere and were totally unpredictable - I still did well regardless of these questions, though. The quizzes in discussion were most likely created by the TAs, and the TA that I had for the quarter was horrible and made really confusing, weirdly stated questions. I couldn't do much to do well on the quizzes, so I used most of my studying time to concentrate on my midterm and final exams. The paper was also a very short one, and as long as you pay attention to directions, it should be feasible.

Helpful?

5 1 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A
Dec. 8, 2011

Jedi Master in Neuroscience, particularly vision.
Recommended.

Helpful?

2 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Spring 2019
Grade: B+
June 14, 2019

Schein is a good professor although he is so smart that sometimes I think he isn't the best at making the concepts accessible to the rest of us who aren't geniuses. The test questions are hard, and nuanced. You need to KNOW the material. There are weekly quizzes and a paper, and a movie, and iclicker points. I earned the max iClicker points in week 7 so I stopped going to lecture, and wasn't penalized which was great. The time committment required to do well in this class is big. I have never had such a workload for one class. For me, this class was harder than 100B in terms of workload.

Schein recommends a certain way of studying, he says not to memorize but DO NOT FOLLOW HIS RECOMMENDATION. I followed it for the second exam and I earned a full letter grade lower than I did when I was memorizing, which cost me an A in the class. You have to figure out your own study method in this class which works, the sooner the better for your grade.

If you want to save some money you don't really NEED the textbook. I think throughout the whole quarter there were maybe only 3 questions on the quizzes that were straight from the book. It is helpful though and he follows the textbook pretty closely. A vast majority of what matters to know in this class are the things he SAYS. Even if not on the slides, or not in the book.

Helpful?

4 1 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Fall 2018
Grade: A+
March 20, 2019

Selling 100+ pages of typed and extremely detailed lecture notes for $20

Email psychnotesucla@gmail.com

Helpful?

4 1 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Fall 2016
Grade: B+
Jan. 2, 2018

Schein is not a nice person during office hours and has a tendency being condescending to his students when they try to reach out to him for help. With that said, he's a decent lecturer and know his stuff. Luckily, I had a good T.A. who was MUCH more approachable than Schein, so I just went to him instead. Definitely not an easy class, but definitely fair (for the most part). So as long as you study, you won't fail at least ;)

Helpful?

5 3 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Fall 2021
Grade: A-
Dec. 11, 2021

I personally really enjoyed the actual content of the class, but the workload can be heavy if you want to get that A. I took this class online, so live lectures were recorded on zoom and tests were taken using respondus. Lecture is always packed with information and Professor Schein often lectures past the 50 minutes (usually 10-15 minutes over time). Schein is a pretty good lecturer and it is obvious that he knows his stuff.

The textbook is online, so you don’t have to buy it. Schein recommended reading the textbook, but I personally didn’t. His tests mainly test you on what is on his slides, so I highly suggest watching lectures at least 2-3 times each before every test and reviewing the lecture slides well. Schein repeated many times not to memorize things, but his tests have questions that are about the smallest details like specific percentages. If you know the lecture slides well, you will do well on the test. I personally didn’t study enough before exams, so when I read the test questions, I recognized the content but didn’t know the slides well enough to select the right answer. The tests are not cumulative, so each exam has about 3 weeks worth of lecture.

The weekly discussion quizzes test you on the past 3 lectures before your section. Review lecture slides before your discussion section because you need to know the content to do well on the quizzes. Also, since this class is a point system, try to get as many points as possible on the quizzes.

The course has 420 points (300 + 112 + 3+ 5)
Each of the 3 exams has 50 multiple-choice questions and counts for 100 points, equally a total of 300 points.
The discussion sections count for 112 points. (made up of discussion quizzes (12 points) and attendance (2 points) with your lowest scores in both dropped). We had 9 discussion sections (b/c of thanksgiving break), so my top 8 scores + 8 weeks of discussion attendance made up my discussion grade.
The practice tryout with Respondus (3 points).
An Inconvenient Truth, 5 points : Professor held two Monday night showings of the movie and you got the 5 points if you joined the Zoom.

I got a raw score of 82.8% in the class, which was curved to an A-. The grading in the class is very curved (roughly) : A > 85%, ​A- >83%, B+ >80%.
My scores:
Midterm 1: 78 (avg 72)
Midterm 2: 86 (avg 80)
Final: 84 (avg 82)
Discussion: 79% for quizzes —> 82% (including 16 attendance points)
Respondus & Movie: full points (8/8)

Helpful?

1 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Spring 2021
Grade: A
COVID-19 This review was submitted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Your experience may vary.
June 19, 2021

COURSE DESCRIPTION: I took 4 upper div classes this quarter and devoted more than half of my study time just to this class. The reality is that while this class is not difficult per se, there is a lot of material covered and you really need to understand how course concepts connect in order to do well. The (asynchronous version) class is structured as follows: 45-1hr lecture every M/W/F, released on CCLE for each two week unit, so you could theoretically watch all 6 lectures at once (don't). Weeks 3,5,7,9 and finals week, we had a 30 question MC exam covering that last unit's material. These exams weren't particularly hard for me, but I can imagine that they are tricky for other students.
Each week you have discussion, which covers a review and 6 question MC quiz covering the material from the last 3 lectures (based on your discussion day). You also needed to be on the zoom to get attendance credit, but you don't need to do any activities or speak up which was nice. After each exam, Schein held a live Wednesday lecture to go over the previous exam's answers and take questions. He then releases grades a few hours after. Each Friday he held another live lecture where he reviews the weeks lecture content, thought I thought these were redundant so I stopped going.
Lectures themselves were interesting but hard to follow at times. He has around 100 slides a week and each of them is packed with details and images that you should know, because anything may show up on exams and quizzes. He was good at incorporating real life examples and entertaining stories to make concepts more clear, though he sometimes said contradicting things so make sure to pay attention and resort to looking at the textbook if needed.

HOW DID I STUDY: For the first two exams, I took notes by hand (pencil and paper), made a quizlet, and read the textbook thoroughly. Don't do this. I ended up scoring my lowest grades on these exams because I missed details that Schein said outloud (not on the slides), and ended up learning details that I didn't need. For exams 3-5 I changed my study habits, taking typed notes, and solely rewatching lectures each 3 times. This really helped me remember small details and understand things better, and I got higher quiz and exam grades as a result.

GRADE BREAKDOWN: The class is graded out of 434 points. (5 exams x 60 points each =) 300 points + 126 quiz/attendance points + 3 points for a course survey + 5 points for attending a movie screening. My grades were as follows:
- EXAM 1: 83 (avg 85, inflated because Schein forgot to use respondus)
- EXAM 2: 76 (avg 68)
- EXAM 3: 93 (avg 71)
- EXAM 4: 97 (avg 73)
- EXAM 5: 93 (avg 85)
- QUIZZES: I got a mix of 12s (6/6), 10s (5/6), and 8s, so I ended up getting an 86% discussion average (lowest quiz+attendance dropped)
- MISC: I did the course survey and went to the movie - 8 pts
- My final course percent was an 88.5, which was bumped up to a solid A. He grades based on percentile, with 35% of the class getting a grade in the A range, 30% B range, 30% C range. The "curve" is made after all points are added up so even if you're below average for any one exam you can still finish with a good grade if you do well on the others. A lot of students switched to p/np after exam 4 which I would be careful with because the curve is more helpful than you may think.

All in all, be prepared to dedicate time for the class and don't be discouraged if you aren't getting perfect grades. Follow my study suggestions, and take time on the MC exams because they may be tricky (all of the above, A and B, none of the above-type questions show up often). I would give the class an overall 7.5/10. You got this!

Helpful?

1 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Fall 2017
Grade: A
Dec. 24, 2017

Schein was an awesome professor! It’s clear he’s an expert (MD/PHD), especially with vision. The material is super interesting too.

What I did to get an A:
Go to lecture (but really, only to get clicker points). Schein goes through slides SO fast, it’s nearly impossible to understand the material or take notes.
Listen to the bruincast of every lecture. Take notes while watching (pause the video anytime he says anything that may be important, which is pretty much everything). I spent 2 hours rewatching the lecture, pausing, and taking notes for each bruincast lecture. His exams are based solely off of what he says (at least 95%)! Even if it’s not on a slide, he may test on it.
Make flash cards of every slide/notes before the quizzes. (I seriously made over 400 flash cards throughout the quarter. I used them to study for the quizzes and exams)
That’s it. :)

If you stay on top of the material, this class is very do-able.
Grade breakdown: (all multiple choice, 50q)
Midterm 1: 82 (average ~75)
Midterm 2: 92 (average ~80)
Final: 94 (average ~80)

Discussion:
The quizzes (basically every discussion) we’re not particularly difficult, and pretty similar to test questions.
The paper is really easy, kind of a joke (3 pages, double spaced)

I would definitely recommend schein! He was really funny and the class was not that difficult

Helpful?

8 1 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Spring 2019
Grade: A+
June 24, 2019

Schein is smart and really knows his stuff, but he tries to cram too much into just a few weeks. He would still be lecturing even the day before the exam, and speeds through lecture just to finish all the material. He also claims that you don't need to memorize, but please memorize. Several questions on the tests asks about small details that aren't necessarily "conceptual," and they can make/break your grade. The TAs also aren't the most helpful/knowledgeable so study hard on your own. There are three exams, discussion quizzes, one paper critique, and in-class clicker points that makeup your grade.

The workload isn't necessarily heavy, because he doesn't have too many things that are due. However, to do well you need to pace yourself and make sure you're staying on track with the material. Everyone has their own study methods, make sure to figure out yours early on and understand the material. Make sure to get as many points as possible outside of exams and they can really boost your grade.

Helpful?

3 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Fall 2015
Grade: A
Sept. 22, 2016

Schein was wonderful.

I am selling the class textbook Biological Psychology, 7th Edition. It was incredibly useful for me during the course. Please message me at (952)393-7369 for details!

Helpful?

3 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Fall 2017
Grade: A+
Jan. 9, 2018

Prof Schein is definitely passionate about the topic he teaches, especially vision. The class required a lot of memorization (although he thinks otherwise) and reading. I had to rewatch the Bruincast videos to take more detailed notes because he went over the material too fast during lecture. Watching the lectures again and reading the textbook helped me review the content and allowed the details to really stick. Most of his multiple choice questions were fair, but there were some questions that seemed to come out of nowhere and were totally unpredictable - I still did well regardless of these questions, though. The quizzes in discussion were most likely created by the TAs, and the TA that I had for the quarter was horrible and made really confusing, weirdly stated questions. I couldn't do much to do well on the quizzes, so I used most of my studying time to concentrate on my midterm and final exams. The paper was also a very short one, and as long as you pay attention to directions, it should be feasible.

Helpful?

5 1 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A
Dec. 8, 2011

Jedi Master in Neuroscience, particularly vision.
Recommended.

Helpful?

2 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Spring 2019
Grade: B+
June 14, 2019

Schein is a good professor although he is so smart that sometimes I think he isn't the best at making the concepts accessible to the rest of us who aren't geniuses. The test questions are hard, and nuanced. You need to KNOW the material. There are weekly quizzes and a paper, and a movie, and iclicker points. I earned the max iClicker points in week 7 so I stopped going to lecture, and wasn't penalized which was great. The time committment required to do well in this class is big. I have never had such a workload for one class. For me, this class was harder than 100B in terms of workload.

Schein recommends a certain way of studying, he says not to memorize but DO NOT FOLLOW HIS RECOMMENDATION. I followed it for the second exam and I earned a full letter grade lower than I did when I was memorizing, which cost me an A in the class. You have to figure out your own study method in this class which works, the sooner the better for your grade.

If you want to save some money you don't really NEED the textbook. I think throughout the whole quarter there were maybe only 3 questions on the quizzes that were straight from the book. It is helpful though and he follows the textbook pretty closely. A vast majority of what matters to know in this class are the things he SAYS. Even if not on the slides, or not in the book.

Helpful?

4 1 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Fall 2018
Grade: A+
March 20, 2019

Selling 100+ pages of typed and extremely detailed lecture notes for $20

Email psychnotesucla@gmail.com

Helpful?

4 1 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Fall 2016
Grade: B+
Jan. 2, 2018

Schein is not a nice person during office hours and has a tendency being condescending to his students when they try to reach out to him for help. With that said, he's a decent lecturer and know his stuff. Luckily, I had a good T.A. who was MUCH more approachable than Schein, so I just went to him instead. Definitely not an easy class, but definitely fair (for the most part). So as long as you study, you won't fail at least ;)

Helpful?

5 3 Please log in to provide feedback.
Quarter: Fall 2021
Grade: A-
Dec. 11, 2021

I personally really enjoyed the actual content of the class, but the workload can be heavy if you want to get that A. I took this class online, so live lectures were recorded on zoom and tests were taken using respondus. Lecture is always packed with information and Professor Schein often lectures past the 50 minutes (usually 10-15 minutes over time). Schein is a pretty good lecturer and it is obvious that he knows his stuff.

The textbook is online, so you don’t have to buy it. Schein recommended reading the textbook, but I personally didn’t. His tests mainly test you on what is on his slides, so I highly suggest watching lectures at least 2-3 times each before every test and reviewing the lecture slides well. Schein repeated many times not to memorize things, but his tests have questions that are about the smallest details like specific percentages. If you know the lecture slides well, you will do well on the test. I personally didn’t study enough before exams, so when I read the test questions, I recognized the content but didn’t know the slides well enough to select the right answer. The tests are not cumulative, so each exam has about 3 weeks worth of lecture.

The weekly discussion quizzes test you on the past 3 lectures before your section. Review lecture slides before your discussion section because you need to know the content to do well on the quizzes. Also, since this class is a point system, try to get as many points as possible on the quizzes.

The course has 420 points (300 + 112 + 3+ 5)
Each of the 3 exams has 50 multiple-choice questions and counts for 100 points, equally a total of 300 points.
The discussion sections count for 112 points. (made up of discussion quizzes (12 points) and attendance (2 points) with your lowest scores in both dropped). We had 9 discussion sections (b/c of thanksgiving break), so my top 8 scores + 8 weeks of discussion attendance made up my discussion grade.
The practice tryout with Respondus (3 points).
An Inconvenient Truth, 5 points : Professor held two Monday night showings of the movie and you got the 5 points if you joined the Zoom.

I got a raw score of 82.8% in the class, which was curved to an A-. The grading in the class is very curved (roughly) : A > 85%, ​A- >83%, B+ >80%.
My scores:
Midterm 1: 78 (avg 72)
Midterm 2: 86 (avg 80)
Final: 84 (avg 82)
Discussion: 79% for quizzes —> 82% (including 16 attendance points)
Respondus & Movie: full points (8/8)

Helpful?

1 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
COVID-19 This review was submitted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Your experience may vary.
Quarter: Spring 2021
Grade: A
June 19, 2021

COURSE DESCRIPTION: I took 4 upper div classes this quarter and devoted more than half of my study time just to this class. The reality is that while this class is not difficult per se, there is a lot of material covered and you really need to understand how course concepts connect in order to do well. The (asynchronous version) class is structured as follows: 45-1hr lecture every M/W/F, released on CCLE for each two week unit, so you could theoretically watch all 6 lectures at once (don't). Weeks 3,5,7,9 and finals week, we had a 30 question MC exam covering that last unit's material. These exams weren't particularly hard for me, but I can imagine that they are tricky for other students.
Each week you have discussion, which covers a review and 6 question MC quiz covering the material from the last 3 lectures (based on your discussion day). You also needed to be on the zoom to get attendance credit, but you don't need to do any activities or speak up which was nice. After each exam, Schein held a live Wednesday lecture to go over the previous exam's answers and take questions. He then releases grades a few hours after. Each Friday he held another live lecture where he reviews the weeks lecture content, thought I thought these were redundant so I stopped going.
Lectures themselves were interesting but hard to follow at times. He has around 100 slides a week and each of them is packed with details and images that you should know, because anything may show up on exams and quizzes. He was good at incorporating real life examples and entertaining stories to make concepts more clear, though he sometimes said contradicting things so make sure to pay attention and resort to looking at the textbook if needed.

HOW DID I STUDY: For the first two exams, I took notes by hand (pencil and paper), made a quizlet, and read the textbook thoroughly. Don't do this. I ended up scoring my lowest grades on these exams because I missed details that Schein said outloud (not on the slides), and ended up learning details that I didn't need. For exams 3-5 I changed my study habits, taking typed notes, and solely rewatching lectures each 3 times. This really helped me remember small details and understand things better, and I got higher quiz and exam grades as a result.

GRADE BREAKDOWN: The class is graded out of 434 points. (5 exams x 60 points each =) 300 points + 126 quiz/attendance points + 3 points for a course survey + 5 points for attending a movie screening. My grades were as follows:
- EXAM 1: 83 (avg 85, inflated because Schein forgot to use respondus)
- EXAM 2: 76 (avg 68)
- EXAM 3: 93 (avg 71)
- EXAM 4: 97 (avg 73)
- EXAM 5: 93 (avg 85)
- QUIZZES: I got a mix of 12s (6/6), 10s (5/6), and 8s, so I ended up getting an 86% discussion average (lowest quiz+attendance dropped)
- MISC: I did the course survey and went to the movie - 8 pts
- My final course percent was an 88.5, which was bumped up to a solid A. He grades based on percentile, with 35% of the class getting a grade in the A range, 30% B range, 30% C range. The "curve" is made after all points are added up so even if you're below average for any one exam you can still finish with a good grade if you do well on the others. A lot of students switched to p/np after exam 4 which I would be careful with because the curve is more helpful than you may think.

All in all, be prepared to dedicate time for the class and don't be discouraged if you aren't getting perfect grades. Follow my study suggestions, and take time on the MC exams because they may be tricky (all of the above, A and B, none of the above-type questions show up often). I would give the class an overall 7.5/10. You got this!

Helpful?

1 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
1 of 7
3.3
Overall Rating
Based on 77 Users
Easiness 2.0 / 5 How easy the class is, 1 being extremely difficult and 5 being easy peasy.
Clarity 3.2 / 5 How clear the class is, 1 being extremely unclear and 5 being very clear.
Workload 2.2 / 5 How much workload the class is, 1 being extremely heavy and 5 being extremely light.
Helpfulness 3.1 / 5 How helpful the class is, 1 being not helpful at all and 5 being extremely helpful.

TOP TAGS

  • Tough Tests
    (18)
  • Uses Slides
    (15)
  • Is Podcasted
    (15)
  • Engaging Lectures
    (12)
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