Your feedback has been sent to our team.
18 Ratings
Hours/Week
No grades found
— Students
Meliza revamped the class this semester and added a bunch of homework assignments and a semester long group project. It isn't hard necessarily, but it is just a lot of bullshit work and the TAs graded kind of harshly. The lectures are decently interesting, or at least as interesting as possible given the material. I would recommend this class for a psych major trying to avoid neural basis, but if you are looking for an interesting psych class, pick something else.
Yes, the class is difficult but it does not deserve the criticism that most people are giving it. There are readings almost everyday but it slows down towards the end of the semester. The project is really annoying and he doesn't give us enough details to work with. It's Meliza's first time teaching the class so he's still experimenting with it. I agree that the homework can be difficult at times but the TAs grade it pretty leniently. Also there are a lot of extra credit in the class. All in all, I don't think the class is that bad and I do recommend it for CogSci majors to satisfy their neuroscience requirement. If you put in enough effort for the homework and readings, you should do relatively well in the class!
He's a new teacher. Very set on not posting slides so that we make our own notes. Which ironically made me (and other students I noticed were doing the same thing) frantically copy everything on each slide before he sped through to the next one. Didn't have time to even listen to what he said because the material on each slide was dense. What were we supposed to do? Too many reading quizzes, a pointless group project, only one midterm and final which apparently aren't curved. Material is a weird mix of soft science psychology, math, and neurobiology (explained poorly, I only got it because I've taken neurobiology.) Lot's of homework assignments which are fortunately graded easily. That and the group project should be grade padders. Lastly, the TAs, although very nice, were pretty incompetent and didn't seem to know what they were talking about. I'm sure this class will gradually improve, but for now if you want something more worthwhile, take neural basis.
I would NOT recommend this class. PSYC majors: take neural instead. I know "Animal Behavior" sounds more fun and interesting, but it is not. This class is basically neuroscience anyways, with a lot of statistics/math, and useless talk about experiments and control groups and stimuli, etc. I was surprised at how boring and dry this class was. If for whatever reason you're interested in why a rat presses a lever or what to do to get a pigeon to stop pecking something or how to tell if an animal learned the difference between an apple and an orange, maybe you'd like the class, I don't know. The readings are awfully boring, and quizzes are due (for the most part) by 9 am the morning of every class. You get weird grades on them too (like 12.67 out of 14; points are taken away on written answers simply because it isn't "creative" enough or "insightful" enough). There were several other homework assignments (usually packets or long PDFs) that weren't helpful in the slightest but were incredibly time consuming, and graded harshly. The only good thing I can really say about the class is that extra credit was offered (in the form of, again, pointless, time consuming assignments). Unfortunately, I don't really feel like I learned anything in this class. Professor Meliza doesn't post PowerPoint slides online, which forces students to write as fast as possible in lecture and not really listen because everyone is panicking about getting all the information down. When I went through my notes to study, I had a bunch of notes, but I had a hard time putting it altogether. He should ABSOLUTELY put the slides online for students to revisit to try to grasp an understanding; he goes too fast in lecture to get it from the get-go. The group project was a stressful waste of time and personally, I think asking students to make a video when some people have ZERO editing skills is unfair. I won't even say much about the exams: incredibly difficult midterm & cumulative final. Professor Meliza is clearly passionate about animals (especially birds) and animal behavior, and that's great. He's obviously a very smart guy. Unfortunately, I'm not sure that translated into a great professor or a great class.
Get us started by writing a question!
It looks like you've already submitted a answer for this question! If you'd like, you may edit your original response.
No course sections viewed yet.