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50 Ratings
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Extremely difficult and extremely rewarding. You will learn a lot and make terrible grades. However, there is an extremely generous curve at the end, so don't worry about your grade; everyone basically makes it out with A/B. You'll have to invest a fair amount of time into the problem sets. Midterm/Final are designed to have a few near-impossible problems, but if you try your best and write something down, your final grade ends up okay. I averaged 80's/90's on the problem sets, got a near-average score on the midterm, and probably did terribly on the final, but ended up okay. I highly recommend this course for the amount of economics knowledge that you'll learn, and Engers is a great professor. Very good experience.
Definitely one of the best professors I had so far. Class at first might be intimidating, but bear with it and you will learn so much. Professor Engers is a great at explaining the concepts and he keeps the pace reasonably fast so that you are forced to pay attention in class. Homework given by Dan (the TA) is tough and takes a lot of hours at first (hw seems to get easier as the course goes along tho). Be sure that you're comfortable with Calc 3 level math, although I don't think we used that much math in class. He posts all of his lecture slides that are very detailed so no note taking required (just sit and pay attention). I definitely will miss this class next semester.
Engers is so wonderful- if you enjoy math and plan to continue with econ especially, I highly recommend pushing yourself and taking this course. It is more about understanding the concepts (math and econ) behind what you're doing than about memorizing random stuff (which I really enjoyed), and his lectures are so so interesting, and very clear. Office hours with the TA are a must to really reinforce the concepts, and also, office hours with Engers are enjoyable.
Maxim is so awesome as an Econ Professor! Yes this is a hard course but his course design makes everything so clear and easy to follow. Taking this course is definitely my best decision at UVA(however beware if you really have difficulty in calculus). The class is much smaller than 301 which makes it easier to discuss and ask questions whenever you have trouble to follow along, and your classmates are all very smart people. Strongly recommend!!
Easily my favorite class of the semester — Engers does a really great job organizing the material (and all the slides are uploaded) and presenting it in class, and since the class size is pretty small there's plenty of opportunities to ask questions during lecture if you don't get anything. I almost never did any of the assigned textbooks readings but was still fine from just studying the lecture slides + my notes. The class name "Mathematical" might sound scary when compared to the more standard 3010, but from my experience comparing workloads with a friend who took 3010 at the same time, there isn't too much of a difference in terms of the actual mathematical difficulty of the assigned homework problems. You only really need basic understanding of derivatives anyways — the entire class revolves around optimizing functions, so there's basically zero integration needed. It sometimes helps if you know Lagrangians, but everything can be done by simply maximizing functions in the normal way. I think what makes the class "mathematical" is that we probably spent more time in lecture going over the math that derives the various economic concepts — stuff like demand curves, etc. If you're not into that this class might not be for you, but I think it really helps with understanding the underlying reasoning of *why* you're doing what you're doing.
The exams are quite tricky, especially compared to 3010, but Engers curves the class quite generously. I scored around a B average percentage between the midterm/final and I ended up with an A in the class.
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