[12-13; 27-29; 33] This semester started off pretty good because the school year starts off kind of easy like homeworks and it’s no tests. I’m taking two human factors classes. One is an introduction to human factors, and one is ergonomics. I’m also taking engineering economics, senior design, one graduate level class, and controls.
[37-42] The classroom experience for Intro to human factors is very, like it’s a PowerPoint. It’s very few words on the PowerPoint, sometimes it’s just a picture and then he talks about it for maybe 20 minutes for each picture. It’s very difficult to take notes since he’s talking. I usually always take notes but in this class I don’t because it’s very difficult to keep notes for someone that’s only talking, and you don’t really know what is important and what is not important of what he’s saying.
[246-253] Now, I think human factors is so much easier. It doesn’t require us much time to study because nothing is hard to get. I think it’s a lot of common sense, so you just memorize words they want to use. Now the design process is memorizing the steps or something, what are all the steps that make some kind of sense. In the classroom experience, I think there are a lot of stupid students compared to what I’m used to. I’m used to being surrounded by smart people that know some kind of general knowledge that can think outside the box. A lot of students in my human factors class can’t do that. They can ask stupid questions which sometimes can annoy me because it takes so much time for him to answer something that’s so obvious.
[255-262] But the hard part with it was that when you were studying for a test it was a bit difficult to know what was going to be on it because as I said before a PowerPoint can just consist of a picture. So, when we’re trying to study for it you didn’t really know what it said on that picture that was important that you should remember. And then I think some questions that in my opinion is very irrelevant to the topic that he can put on there. I don’t know the reason for it. Maybe it’s to see if you paid attention. But it has to have some kind of relevance or like knowledge. I’m used to only having questions that would show that we have learned something while they can have questions that doesn’t have to show anything that we learned.