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Prof. Hedstrom is the best professor I have ever had. He is incredibly engaging and entertaining. As someone who comes from no religious background or knowledge, I didn't think I would enjoy this class as much as I did. The beginning of the class is a lot of history and pretty boring but that quickly opens up into some very fascinating topics. I absolutely recommend this course to anyone.
I have mixed feelings about this class. I took Hedstrom's intro to American Studies class last semester and loved it. This class sometimes was great (talking about psychedelics, QAnon) but sometimes it was so boring and just historical. It's a pretty straightforward class - 2 papers, midterm, final (take home, open note). I wasn't particularly interested in the course material because I took the class for the professor. My TA was Kerwin Holmes and he was not great. I'm 0/2 on good TAs with Hedstrom, and I don't think my friends liked their TAs, so I don't think he picks the best TAs. The discussions are too big, so people don't talk much.
Hedstrom is a great lecturer and makes lecture easy to follow and interesting. He doesn't post notes so you HAVE to go unless you get them from someone else. Theres a lot of reading but you are able to skim and get the general idea and still do well on tests and essays. Super important who your TA is, mine was an easy grader so I did well on everything even though I didnt thoroughly read the books or readings. If you're a good skimmer and note taker this class is great!
I LOVED this class. I am a chemistry major and took this to fulfill some college requirements, and I loved it so much that I decided to minor in religious studies. The material is slow in the first part of the course, and the readings are tough because they're so old, but the entire class is fascinating overall. Hedstrom is a great professor, and he is obviously so knowledgable and passionate about his work. I was also lucky enough to have an equally amazing TA as well. The class requires plenty of reading, and the three papers aren't necessarily easy to write, but learning in this class seriously opened my eyes and changed how I think about the world. Highly recommend
I honestly kind of regret taking this class. I come from a technical background (CS major), so take this review with a grain of salt. I decided to take this class to fulfill a pre-requisite since it seemed pretty interesting. I will say, there were some brief parts of the class where you learn about interesting topics. But the vast majority of it is extremely dull, boring topics that really jump all over the place.
The course follows a chronological timeline - you start in the 1800s and move to the modern day as the semester goes on. The class is basically like a mix of literature and history into one terrible combination of a class. The readings assigned are unnecessarily long and you had to buy like 5 books for the class. Thankfully I didn't waste my money and found PDFs for every single one online. Huge waste of money to buy a book you'll look at for maybe a few days and never again. Lecture is boring and I lost focus most of the time because the topics were so boring. Then again I'm an atheist and found a lot of the topics irrelevant, so again take this with a grain of salt.
Another annoying part about the class is everything seems to be repeated throughout the semester over and over again. You'll either hear the same thing again from lecture, an assigned reading, or discussion over and over again. For me this was frustrating and a waste of time. Some of the readings were 30 pages of some dude telling you that having a positive mental state is beneficial. Like really? Is this what people do in the religious studies department?
Probably the worst part of the class is you really skim over a ton of topics and never really get to understand any of them. As I mentioned earlier there are tons of readings that basically no one did - probably >100 pages a week. I would skim 5-10 pages of the most important reading (there were multiple every week) the day before the discussion since most of the time you don't ever do anything with the readings. Which turned out to be ok. Either way because of this lack of depth you spend a lot of time learning what something is but then moving on immediately before being able to analyze it.
Grading/tests/essays were ok. it's graded like a typical humanities class - you do your best and get an A- because you missed something you didn't include. This is why I avoid these kinds of classes as grading is incredibly subjective.
Again my perspective may be skewed so please take this review with a grain of salt. But I imagine there will be people in the future from technical backgrounds who may want to take this class for the hell of it. I would recommend something else. This one kind of sucks.
Hedstrom is a little pretentious, but he is still one of my favorite professors at UVa. His lectures are exactly how I envisioned "college" would be. You learn a lot about things that seem "obvious" but hold deeper truths. The reading is not super necessary as long as you skim or read a little of it. The papers are doable (there were 3, but no more than 5 pages each total). Although the readings aren't completely necessary, they are mostly worth doing as they are pretty interesting. This is the class that I have thought the most about after having taken it of anything I have taken at UVa. Highly recommend it. The grading is fair--Jesse is an excellent TA.
Professor Hedstrom brought some really interesting material into the lectures and structured his arguments very well. I learned the most from just listening to his lectures and taking notes. Some of the stuff seems a little "out there" and tangental, but still interesting in my opinion. Some of the readings were better than others; definitely read the books and then just do what you can with the shorter pieces. Charlie was my TA and I agree with the commenter who said it seemed hard to pass the B+ mark with him--I got an 89 on my test with no explanation whatsoever as to what I missed (not complaining, just a fact).
tl;dr Interesting content. If you're looking for something good to knock out your humanities requirement or if SBNR is your thing, totally go for it.
I had high expectations for this class and it turned out to be the worst class I took this semester. The second half of the class sucks. The material isn't that great and the readings get long, boring, and seemingly irrelevant to my life (which the class is painted as relating to). The papers are irritating and not SHORT by any means... 5 pages three times gets old, particularly when the topics suck, which they did. The midterm wasn't too terrible, and the paper grading isn't attrocious, but it's all dependent on your TA. All of my paper criticism is "This is a great argument, strong evidence. Could've included this one other thing: B+." So overall it seems that with Charlie as TA at least it's difficult to pass the B+ grading barrier. OVERALL I would not recommend this class, it's turned into something I hate and now will avoid the department.
tl;dr: papers aren't short, grading is wonky, material gets boring fast, lots of reading, class sucks
This class is so interesting and so engaging! Hedstrom is an awesome lecturer and makes class so interesting. The first half of the semester is definitely more enjoyable than the second, but it's a fairly easy class, although there is a lot of reading that you need to read in order to complete the 3 papers throughout the class. Mae Speight is an amazing TA. Highly recommend!
Reviewer below is obviously very antagonistic about this class. The papers are short, 2-3 pages, and directly from the material. Not hard at all. For the tests, he gives you an ID bank to study and the terms are all from that, so it's not like they're obscure at all...Overall, fairly easy class. Hedstrom is an amazing professor, this is a great "real world" applicable class that challenges you to think about your own faith and American spirituality in general. Highly recommended.
I absolutely LOVE this class. Professor Hedstrom is one of the best professors I've had at UVA; he's engaging and enthusiastic about the material. The course is very interesting and opens your eyes to new perspectives. Lectures are definitely worth attending; Prof. Hedstrom pulls in lots of relevant examples and his slideshows are super helpful. I would recommend this class to anyone; I wish I could take it again! Grading is fair and the readings for the most part are interesting/helpful for doing well in the course.
Professor Hedstrom's lectures were always interesting and engaging. There was a lot of reading, but the TAs were all great about making discussions interesting (we watched YouTube and ate Oreos every class in addition to actual discussion of the texts). There are only 3 short papers throughout the semester.
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