Finance class + academic advice
Add this video to favorites?
Login or Register to save your favorite videos
Login New member? Register hereVirtual Tours by Students
Rachel Hendricks
Tour GuideMost core classes in any major at TAMU are pretty huge. Classes can easily seat 200-300 kids. It is important to reach out to a TA or your professor if you feel like you are drowning in a sea of students.
The following is an computer-generated summary of the video transcript.
So I'm about to go into finance class in this journey. This is our health, and I think it is three hundred cans or something. So all show a shot of my finance professor doing here. This is like my least favorite class, right? Gives him a marketing major, but it's still okay, So it's definitely a huge, like student faculty gas. One of the sections She has office hours in the T. A s all have office hours. Our go Honestly, that's one of my biggest regrets in college because I should have spent more time getting to know my professors because you really like that really does help your great. So I'm still me all what? It's like inside finance class and say a few things afterwards. Years, then for the way I finished Susan, we're going. So I just come back from finance, and it took me about thirty minutes to get home and traffic, which really isn't too bad, typically fifteen minutes to walk to my car and then fifteen minutes to get home. I wanted to mention one more thing about classes, and that is that most classes here are pretty much lecture based, so you have to go to class almost every day. There are online classes that air fluffy and easy that people like to pad their schedules with, but everyone wants them, so they're super hard to get into and get to first. So juniors and seniors typically are the ones that have priority and choosing those ones there. Sometimes when I really need the extra time to work on something or there's something big going on. Most of the time, if I do, it's not just like you can blow it off and not do anything about it. You have to go back fine, No. Three of the textbook and make up for it somehow.