Ubc first year reddit Rits is available to first years as well but does not include the meal plan (you don't even get it if you want it). The international foodcourt is cheaper and better than most other options on campus. I’m a first year eng student distance learning from an Asian country (but minus the asian smarts) and I’ve missed a number of assignments just due to being overwhelmed with the workload— 5 subjects this term. Your grades in first year will likely be a mix of how hard you work and how rigorous your highschool was. I know I can find general information on the English department website, but I just wanted some personal feedback from people that took ENGL110/111. It seems that’s a pretty common experience here. Hey everyone! I'm a first-year BBA Honours student at Trent University, just finished my first semester with a GPA of 4. Triple O’s Tuesday Tim Hortons is absolute garbage and I’d avoid spending money there I understand course difficulty depends on many factors, but i was wondering if someone would like to share their list of first year courses ranking them from most difficult to least difficulty with a couple sentences of reasoning. We were given a month an a half to do it. I remember I asked a question like this back when I was in first year and I was pretty tempted to get the M1 Mac when that was the newest one around, but I went with the Dell XPS 13. I know in high school there is usually an insane drop. On co-op now, but have completed 2nd year at UBC. I had a pretty good idea what I was getting into. I barely squeezed by the course with 53%. First preference for entry into third year of the honours specialization will be given to those students who have completed all prerequisites and who have achieved a cumulative 80% average for their first- and second-year required courses, including a minimum grade of 80% in the required biology and chemistry courses, and who have completed at I think your first priority should be to take care of yourself, consult a professional about your mental state and resolve issues. would def recommend them both. You still have wiggle room. Official UBC Engineering subreddit. The jump from the standard high school curriculum to UBC classes is enormous, and if you did not perform as well as you hoped you are not alone. When I started at UBC some papers were handed in on paper, but that seems to have changed since COVID with most profs accepting papers online now. Don't worry. From what I heard, the math course at UBC is so difficult that people felt the need to cheat in standard first year calculus test. Just pick whatever sounds cool, since they're all hard (no such thing as an easy elective). for wrds 150 i did it with dr. Looking back, I def wouldn't have taken my English courses in first year, since it dropped my average a bit. I have made a schedule and would love… Tbh I found the classes (other than upper-level accounting) to be pretty easy. Almost zero work outside. They build timetables for you each year. we had a group component and i know right now i barely passed the exam. arts is actually great because there’s quite a bit of flexibility in terms of first year courses. If the book is missing any worksheets, or they change it this year, it's pretty much useless to you. Im stressed out right now, i have been reading about english requirements for ubc first year. Sc and coop for year 2 you need CPSC 110, 121 and 210 done before summer 2023 (i believe, double check with advising and/or ubc science website). It helps you familiarize yourself with the post-secondary academic environment a bit better since the transition from high school to university can be quite large. This year (my second at UBC), I did 33 credits, and TAed 10 hours a week, and it was quite a bit. 3 years in now and I'm starting to dread finishing my degree in a couple years because these are the closest friends I've ever had It’s not the end of the world, I remember a first year prof told my class about how there was a guy who failed everything in his first year, 7 years later, he was in medical school. New comments cannot be posted. You get to know your profs and classmates way better in Science One and you learn a lot more as the curriculum is specially designed for the program, but it's intense. so OP would be in general arts, which is typically psych, linguistics, sociology, english, poli sci and the like. As you can imagine that would be quite difficult if there was like 100+ students haha! Last year was the first year it was used. I did EOSC 114 many years ago. University is an adjustment that’s easier for some and harder for others. Try your best with your remaining 90 credits and it will work out. The English requirement is just 1 first year English course by the beginning of 3rd year. I know that average drops do vary person from person but how hard realistically is first-year? For your first year you will need to take MATH 100, MATH 101, PHYS 111 or 112, COSC 111 or 123, COSC 121, and two English courses. psych is arts (unless behavioural neuroscience). It's essentially a standard timetable with a special name. I’ve never really liked physics and never fully understood. If yes, you won’t have to take a lot of first year requirement courses at UBC. Posted by u/Any-Flower-5844 - 5 votes and 6 comments yeah so the title basically says it all. I also did PHIL 220 and didn't do well. Did work for another class during lecture. gpa 81. Took Psyc101/102 as an arts elective just to piss off a friend who insisted that psychology was a science. I heard UBC plans to add reading break for term 1 and because I took first year online, take it with a grain of salt! What are some advice or tips & tricks you would give to new students coming this september for getting though (or even preparing for) first year engineering at UBC? + also possibly getting into our desired majors in 2nd year. 2 is all I payed for first year (on top of the 500 deposit to claim my spot at UBC) Back in first year, I began with 4 and was planning on doing 5 in the second semester, but I ended up just doing 4 courses each semester in first year hahah. Friendships in first year are very come-and-go kinda basis so you really need to maintain them while also finding the right studying routine. i attend class, go to office hours, and stay on top of all the homework. kim richards and i cannot recommend her enough for the course. e. At a med school seminar, the speaker highly recommended spending your summers doing research or extracurricular things and I assumed that extended to grad school prospectives as well. I managed to get into UBC dental school with a 86% average. Same thing with physics. It is evidently quite common for people to take 223 in their first term of their second year (because they assume that you need integral calculus), but you should note that the prerequisites aren't strictly enforced, and I know of many people who have done 223 in term 2 of their first year otherwise. But then COVID hit so I got a second chance - but I didn’t really make friends until my third year and it felt like spending time with others wasn’t something I really understood I needed until second year since when I first went into uni I was hell bent on going balls to the wall with academics and negating a social life which cost me in 15 votes, 14 comments. Typically, cs students take CPSC 110 & 121 in first year. One of my classes last semester even had a midterm average of 47%. I would assume first year UBC costs are similar Tuition was about 10k total for second year. My first year average was similar to yours (~78%). I think this year they built 62 or 63 different combinations so you have lots to pick from and find what works for your English and elective requirement. CPSC 110, CHEM 121, WRDS150 and MATH 100 are all courses with high work load and difficulty. I wish you luck in your retry of first year. And while everyone else in your class is panicking and losing their will to live, stay optimistic, learn from your mistakes, and understand that it's going to be okay, and it will. I’ve heard that some terms of LING 100 have a group project component, but mine did not) Hey y’all, I applied to housing 3 days late as a first year (May 4th) and I was wondering what my chances are of getting first year Housing, and if anyone else has been or is in this situation. the thread about courses disappeared for me, but i committed to ubc and am on the look for some fun electives classes. Think about doing coop or exchange. I would be skipping MATH100, MATH101, first year English. WRDS 150 is such a mixed bag, the topics range from big data interpretation to Kpop and everything in between. Of courses it's still very possible to go anywhere in the world with a CS degree, I know tons of UBC grads go to the States every year. Third year courses are 1-credit (Chem 315/335, one experiment per week) or 2-credit (Chem 325/345, two experiments per week). my course had a midterm yesterday and half the people i talked to said it was easy. yet it’s still This is a reddit page for UBC BCS students - past, present, and future. However, the bundle is just selected chapters from Young and Freedman's University Physics. That said, I rarely ever take the elevators unless the elevator happens to be on the first floor when I enter the building. First year is a time when you should be exploring your interests and developing life skills so don't be too hard if you fall short of your goals. Not OP but I also had a 68 average first year (I’m also in science) and second year I brought it up to ~85. i’m a 2nd year cpsc + enviro student! (high 80s, idk what the average will be now though. 2+9. im looking at marks around 63, 74, 81, and 79 but Im used to 90+ -first year🤮🤮 Locked post. You probably don’t need a printer because there are ones on campus that you can use in the libraries and residences for a small fee - can’t remember how much it is but it’s like a couple cents This is the unofficial subreddit for all things concerning the International Baccalaureate, an academic credential accorded to secondary students from around the world after two vigorous years of study, culminating in challenging exams. I have since found that coop is the most restricting and useless thing about my degree. PHYS 157 - If it hasn't changed from last year, it is a bundle of two books (another one for PHYS 158) plus an access code to MasteringPhysics. even though i wasnt interested in her topic that much she was still such an amazing guide, super helpful and The FYF timetable has 5 online courses that you share a cohort for. I transfered after first year, but am in engineering. Can anyone please let me know their experience with this course. i’m a first year science student who took physics because my desired specialization needs a course of it. Science admission average is like 93%, but the average first year Science student averages somewhere around 70%. Your first semester will add up to 17 credits. It was fun. It gets better for second-year lab courses, but worse in third-year labs. I'm going into 3rd year Kin and for the first 2 years I've been taking notes on paper by either writing my notes into a… Wᴇʟᴄᴏᴍᴇ ᴛᴏ ʀ/SGExᴀᴍs – the largest community on reddit discussing education and student life in Singapore! SGExams is also more than a subreddit - we're a registered nonprofit that organises initiatives supporting students' academics, career guidance, mental health and holistic development, such as webinars and mentorship programmes. You also only need 1 English course because every program has the 2nd English credit built into part of the program Looking through my requirements for first year engineering, I realised that i have to pick one non-science elective, but still unsure of which one should i pick. Is there a reason for that? I personally find writing to be easier than reading so i was planning to pick it. I know a lot of people struggle during their first year (I probably will too a bit), but does anyone have study tips that can help me as a first-year student? Brace yourselves, for first year season is coming! Instead of complaining about all the first year questions, let's build some of the main answers to that we can put it in the up-and-coming first year megathread. Go to office hours and speak with your professors. MATH 110 also has a minimum PREC 12 grade, which is 65% and a maximum grade, which I was in a sc unit in totem for my first year and honestly, it’s the best dorm out of all the first year residences. I totally got the logic and course material, but the software that came with the textbook back then was HORRID. If you're a first year, start with 100, 101 or 102 (get Anders Kraal or Bruno Guindon if you can, they're both great profs). UBC CS in terms of a job hunting perspective is 3rd in Canada. I was fresh (first year, first term) when I came across the course and stupidly left everything to the last minute. it seems the cutoff of transfer for dom & inter'l is similar, & is lower than year 2 specialization. It's very hard. Welcome to UBC!:) How hard is first-year engineering at UBC? Is it hard to score an average of about 85%? Some of the specializations I am interested in require averages from 80-85%. i would love to read some of yall’s experiences with specific electives, so if you could help a pre-first year out, that There are no kitchens in first year res, so unless you manage to sneak into Rits, a meal plan will be mandatory for you in your first year. Ubc med 1st year scedule year plan for first year med at UBC! into first year and 8-5 I am a UBC DMD graduate working in BC. There’s also the question, are you a morning person or night person? I have friends who take 10am classes every day in first year, while my classes start no earlier than 2pm. Thank you 29 votes, 27 comments. Don't buy it used. winter applications will open in the spring, I believe, and room assignments come out in the summer but most residences are year round so I would apply for YRH now and set your move-in day for next year because it may take a year to get your preferred res - but this does depends on your waitlist number so they'll give you whatever is available Hey everybody! I'm joining the science faculty at UBC and plan on majoring in computer science in my 2nd year. My intended major is Behavioural Neuroscience. I took both: 100 in first year, 101 in second. Well it will reflect on your transcripts but on the other hand you still have 2nd , 3rd and 4th year. But when I took the course, I understood the similar content straight away (of course also don’t forget to put in the effort outside of class). So my experience from ECON 101 and LING 101 is from one year ago, but my LING 100 experience is fresh. I studied 8-10 hours a day every single day and every chance I got. Keep in mind you don't have to do ALL your first year requirements in first year (and in fact probably shouldn't). 3rd and 4th year are about the same just depends on what courses you picked but generally easier than the first couple years Second year Engineering. Here are some thoughts I have: Since UBC eng is a general first year, I feel like having less courses in my timetable could either bring up or take down my GPA. I took ap calc in high school so math 100 was pretty easy. MATH 110 has a limited enrolment. According to my seniors, it's a different kind of workload! If it's too challenging to handle every course, it's always a great idea to do it in the summer. my prof for scie 113 was kinda trash but i still got an A and the workload for the course was not that heavy. But the prelab work you need to do for EACH lab session includes prelab quizzes (super hard if you do physical chem) and notebook preparations For context, I just finished my first year and I did the IB diploma in high school. My first year average was 72 (I had 4 classes w low 50s), so I retook classes and did some second year classes in the summer so that my work load would be easier this year, but I found that I was still behind so I took 4 classes first sem second year and 6 second sem cause I had the worst classes sign up slot and I had 8ams everyday but I found that I made such a great routine and I made sure No correlation. Would you recommend taking notes by hand or digitally? If digitally, would an iPad or Samsung Tablet be better? Side note: I usually study by rewriting notes. They dropped the first year. Hated it because it lacked ports. My other English course was ENGL 112, where i got 85% (second term). I'm a first year at UBC in Sciences and I've been hearing that in order to get into grad schools (and medical school), doing research is really, really helpful. 2, domestic, year 2 to cpsc year 3? gpa 84. If I were to give you a piece of advice, I’d recommend taking 5 as a starter with a lab optionally and taking more courses in term 1 than term 2. i took scie 113 and wrds 150b in my first year. The rooms are very nice, and its a 7 minute bike ride from the front door to the north end of campus. Another user mentioned that most Vanier buildings do not have elevators, but we do. FYF is 3-2 classes per semester (sections of regular courses), meet people, and choose some electives. ) honestly i only ended up in cpsc because i took cpsc 103 and absolutely loved it, much more than all my bio and chem courses in first year. i’d recommend you take a look at the ubc calendar and the course schedule for Instructors usually aim for a ~65-70% section average for required courses within first-year science. Coming forward with your experience and sharing that must have took real courage! I am really proud of you for going above and beyond the normal duties of a Reddit User. Each course being 3 credits plus tutorial sections, you have say 18 hours of lecture plus maybe an additional 7 hours worth of labs/tutorials. It's up to your study habits and the 'distribution' of your courses ( 7 course 1st term/ 3 2nd or 5 1st /5 2nd). Second year is actually the hardest year content wise for science students I’d say. it seems like they all just transfer to general 3 credits of first year English at UBC and I just finished first year so I don't know how second year is (still waiting for my 2nd year placement result). The top 95th percentile of Science students are averaging somewhere around 88-90% based on personal experience/what I've heard from friends, so you'd have to be literal cream of the crop of incoming students to be maintaining your average from HS->UBC. As right now, there are four choices that I have; ECON101(or ECON 102) , PSYC 101(or PSYC 102), SOCI 101, LING 101. There were typos throughout the book, so I would expect a new edition to be coming out this year. The goal is to apply for transfer to UBC Sauder for Winter 2025. OC is very overhyped compared to the Totem one. Meal plans are not included in the room fee. Critically evaluate what you think went wrong, and how you can improve. If you're over 19, you're more likely to be put into another residence, Gage, Rits, Marine, Fairview. It'll be a good introduction to the expectations of philosophical arguments and how to structure your answers to exam questions. I have mostly biology, chemistry, math, physics, and psychology classes. I am a science student who just finished the first year. Compare to other big Canadian schools like UofT / Waterloo whose math course are heavily proof based, how difficult really are UBC’s first year math View community ranking In the Top 5% of largest communities on Reddit. 100 was a bit more difficult because it's a broad course so you learn about a lot of linguistic concepts which may be overwhelming if you have absolutely no previous linguistics knowledge. (This mostly applies to first year textbooks only) Old textbook versions are usually fine, and unless your professor warns otherwise (i. There will be times when you fail an assignment or a mid-term, it's a part of the first-year experience. I took PHYS 101 with Jared Stang. it seems like the general consensus is take courses that seem interesting, not just GPA boosters (especially when you’re not interested in the subject). I know that I can use my IB courses as first year credits for certain courses, but I'm not 100% sure whether I should or not. I am going to be a first-year student at UBC this September and I want to do well during my first year. That said, most, if not all, new to UBC first year BA students who wish to take calculus find a seat by the end of the add/drop period in September (and usually before). In my opinion this is extremely tough for your first semester in university. i took the first class last year! the reason there’s so little seats is the prof interacts with each student at least once per class as he starts it off by asking each individual how they’re feeling that day. Self reflection is something that helped me immensely during my first 2 years at UBC, and it has helped me develop strong study habits/routines that enabled me to do well in later years. Upvote those you want to have answered. Don’t fuck up your grades in first year, you’ll have fourth year to do that. gpa 79. homework problems are only present in the newest version), don't hesitate to use older versions if you want to save money. 5%, international 1k Reply reply UBC Vancouver Members Online. Totem’s sc units are larger (so is the washroom) and look cleaner (green accent wall with wood furniture). Spent all of 2nd and 3rd year waiting to be a 4th year and get priority for course registration, but 4th years don't get priority this year :( upvotes · comments r/UBC I live in a single room in Vanier in one of the new buildings (Korea-UBC/Tec). There is no maximum, but as said above, probably best to take a gpa booster for your elective/one that doesnt take much time. The standard course load without taking AP/IB credits off is 6-7 courses per term. This is crazy to me, I’m transferring from a uni with engineering averages (especially first year) that are almost always below 70 and usually below 65. We have to do 16months of co-op. All 3 give 4 credits each so rather than ten 3 credit courses you can take three 4 credits and six 3 credits to get 30 credits in first year. Your money does roll over to next year, however, so if you don't spend it all, it doesn't vanish. Dear Reddit Poster, I am deeply sorry to hear that you failed your first year at the University of British Columbia. Even without FYF, you can still pretty easily register in the courses they offer, except that they're probably going to be in-person rather than online. Get the Reddit app Scan this QR code to download the app now Program First year Engineering, 91. Personally I would recommend finding a timetable that has APSC 160 in term 1 and PHYS 170 in T2. to be honest, I am trying to pick a course that wouldn't add too LING 100/101 have been mentioned. tbh I think exchange is the best res. :) If you're a first year student, and under the age of 19 you'll be stuck in either Totem or Vanier. You'd probably want to buy this at the UBC Bookstore or at Discount Textbooks at any time. There is one meal plan; UBC doesn't do levels. (Math100 a standard computation based differential calculus). My first physics midterm was a 63% in Physics followed by a 72% in my elective and most recently a 56% in my intro to engineering course topped off with a 25% in my most recent chem midterm. At first I applied for this program because I liked the idea of research and also thought that with coop I will gain valuable work experience. 33 (UBC scale). Therefore, most people have their worst grades in 1st year. 25 or so years ago, I was 18, started university, and failed 3 of my 7 first year science courses. Class average was average first year ~70%, my score, 94% Basically just had 4 courses both those terms. I’m a first year student who is going to be attending UBCO full-time starting September 7th. Any help would be greatly appreciated since calling/emailing housing hasn’t really been helpful! ^applause OP, I’m in my 40s, am a tenured prof with teaching and research awards, and a strong international reputation in my field. You will only be allowed to turn in the carbon copied page of the worksheet. 2 grand also includes the first payment of the housing contract, I don't remember exactly but looking at what I payed on the SSC, the 7. Also keep in mind that your experience could definitely differ by who’s teaching as well (I. Some things that helped me were organizing my time in a planner that listed what I need to do each day as well as due dates/test dates, trying really hard to stay caught up on assigned readings and problems, and going to access and diversity to get accommodations for a learning disability. 34/5 credits is totally do-able as long you are taking 5 1st/ 6 2nd or vice-versa, for first year I'd do more courses on 2nd term so you can get used to uni life during first term. Bought some chungus Legion a few months ago to upgrade and it's nice to have full sized USB ports and an HDMI. Fellow grad student here - It took me 3 months to start feeling like I was close-ish to being friends with a few people (I cried a lot in those first 3 months haha, very lonely and felt the same struggles as OP), and 1 year to have built a solid small friend group. I'm a 3rd year student, who's lived in Rez the past 3 years, this year I'm an RA. Sorry I think you're right, I believe the 7. It was great. Textbooks do change without indication but they usually use the same one for at least 2-3 years. I couldn't submit any of my quizzes, and even when I got t I'm a first year engineering student and it's pretty rough putting in a good amount of effort to study and not getting back the results I have wanted. i was going to apply for biochem/microbi/etc and changed my mind like a week before we had to decide! honestly, i’m glad i made the change and i totally The BA degree does not require students to take calculus. Since you are an incoming first year, it may help to consider taking 4 courses for term 1. That leaves you with 3 electives. There aren’t that many comp sci courses to choose from in first year (or at least there weren’t online). For a lot of us who haven't gone to the top private schools or have taken IB classes, first year is tremendously difficult. First year grades don’t really mean anything so make this your year to build up good, efficient, and strong studying habits! If you do, you’ll do amazing in 2nd year - I promise! Depending on what u study, I found the most important part is doing practice (even before readings) and if I can’t logic it out I would try to read sections of I am starting my first year at UBC in September. Planning to wrap up my first year at Trent as I still need to complete the required math course. Definitely take advantage of clubs and case comps. In my first year, I didn't work and did 31 credits, and that was a lot busier than high school, although I could've handled more. When applying to jobs it is a bit harder being from Canada and many companies based in the US will not want to hire you due to visa issues. I definitely agree with the others though--I too recommend trying 4 to get a feel for it in your first sem and then add on another if you feel comfy with it. I was wondering if the overall average of the first year students would be lower or higher than past years? I have a specific major in mind and the cutoff last year was apparently high 70s. I noticed nobody ever chooses engl 109. Though you are not entirely wrong, there are a number other goals we have with the expansion of SCIE 113. It's mandatory for first years in one of the three main first year residences (totem, vanier, and OC). last year the lowest one from a post was gpa 79, domestic, 81 CPSC average. PSYC courses are surpingly the hardest I've ever taken at UBC sinple because of how the exams are worded and the extreme lack of time to complete the massive exam. true. The most common elective by far was first year economics, but I've also heard people taking psychology, linguistics, sociology, and geography. Honestly, UBC really needs to redefine the In my year, we had a term paper that we needed to be done. It is the flagship first year science at UBC. I was pretty shocked my first year coming from Langara College. We will be hosting online AMAs to answer prospective student questions. 6, international, from UBCO. Don’t do it Fourth year Honors in Biotechnology student here. However, the 850$/mo you pay can be a bit steep considering you don't have a kitchen (each floor has one communal kitchen) and very little space. I liked it because everything was convenient — I could attend club meetings at night, have my own study spaces and invite friends over, instead of commuting for 2 hours. I had a severe, untreated mental health issue from first year through the pandemic; there were classes that I would hardly show up to and only study 1-2 days in advance and still be far from failing. kinda late, but if youre aiming for CS in B. The class I did the best in and found the easiest and most interesting during my first year was a 4th year course (not just 400-level, every other person in it was 3rd/4th/grad school), from a discipline I also took a first year course in. First year is hard. I lived at the MBA House in Wesbrook village in my first year 3 years ago when it first opened. This is particularly true with first year, as your core courses are gonna need to cover pretty much the same material no matter where you go to school. With it, every student in Science will get a small class experience in first year where we can not only introduce norms in scientific reasoning and science communication, but also tell people about important policy, degree progression rules, expectations for academic integrity, advising . 5, domestic, third-year eng to second-year science. I spent about another 700-1000 on books that couldn't be found online, and other mandatory materials. It's okay to take less than five courses a term. Your first-year grades have a small influence on your job prospects, as acceptance into a second-year major is determined by your first-year average (of course, more competitive majors such as CAPS, Pharmacology, and Computer Science have 80% For sure, first year can seem daunting and I know coming into it there can be a lot of uncertainty I don't know about SFU courses specifically, but I can't see them being that much more difficult. I wasn’t aware until just recently that students needed to apply for a UBC Card so today I went online, completed the application process, and gained access to my Digital UBC Card via the website. I also took a second year psyc course that was the same difficulty as the first year psyc course I took. I found AP physics (2) to prepare me for first year physics, even though it was enriched. selpri rzou begnr iuipyl bcxmk hdz cxywumg ttjscl fvcnmdm gbqmtt