Kane Starkiller wrote:So that is about 340 hours per semester for first two years. Which translates into five and a half year of his "lofty" 10-hours-per-week, 122-hours-per-semester program. What a fucking joke.
Believe it or not engineers, arts and science majors have a schedule like this. The biggest pain is all the classes aren't together though, so some days you have one hour of class. Ten hours a week is standard shit, even for a physics or math major. The problem isn't that it's abnormal: of course it is, to anybody with a brain. Engineering is eight hours a day, five days a week of classes and anybody who knows anything about engineering knows this, while arts and science is ten hours the whole week. It's hairball's claim of superiority that makes it a big joke.
SCRawl wrote:I have to assume that the 10 hours/week he's talking about is for one course, as in for one of his five (or so) courses.
That's for work. Kane is talking about classes, which is right. At his university, 90 semester hours is fourth year. So assume thirty semester hours per year, and if there's two semesters per year that's 15 semester hours per semester. Which means,
15 hours of class a week.
This is standard stuff for arts and science students.
It is actually not all terrible. The theoretical mathematicians, physicists and such need a schedule like this, because most of their learning happens outside the class. At the very top, it is very high, very difficult, more than engineering, because it is all theoretical. I would argue that even a very good historian needs a schedule like this, because most of the learning comes from reading.
But most arts and science students are either dishonest about their education or don't figure out what all that extra time is for until it's too late. That is the real problem, not that there's not enough classes. Of course if someone claims like hairball does that he's three times better well, he obviously can't point to this spare time and expect people to take his word for it that he spent it on great things.