c0rpusdelicti wrote:Section 2/2A!
I was briefly souped for Warren, but oh well, I'll live.
Any word on Zittrain, Mnookin, Smith, and Greiner (totes sausage - fest)?
This will be Greiner's 4th year teaching Civ Pro. He uses a random number generator to come up with who he's going to call on in class. If you pass or horribly bomb, he increases the probability you'll be called on again. If you do anything from slightly mediocre to excellent, then your chances decrease of being called on again. He tries really hard to be well-liked by students and he can be a really nice guy. He can also unnecessarily complicate issues, so be sure you are keeping up with the Civ Pro E&E as you read for his class as well. He's got some sort of fascination with Harry Potter, so get ready to have your assignments and exam filled with names from HP (Severus Snape was one of the people on our issue spotter this past year, I believe).
Oh, you have three assignments in his class. The first one is "graded", but just to let you know how you did. The second and third are graded for real. You can get full credit (15 pts), partial credit (10 pts), or none if you don't turn it in on time. Each assignment is an issue spotter or policy question and designed to give you a flavor of what it's like to take a law school exam, but not nearly with the complexity of an exam. However, it kind of forces you to keep up to date on your notes and start outlining earlier than you might have intended.
His prior exams are basically worthless for figuring out what your exam will be like. His first year exam was unnecessarily complicated. Second year was totally easy. Last year he told us during reading period that the exam was a "stinker" (why he'd put that into our heads pre-exam, I have no clue) and true to his word, the exam sucked. Who knows what he'll do this year. There's just no consistency.
All that said, he's a nice guy. Go to office hours. He does try to explain things more. Fortuitously, a girl in my section asked him a question at an office hours I attended and the answer to it was basically everything that we needed for a policy question on our exam.