Skip to main content
Sponsored
CHEM 2410 Organic Chemistry I
Last taught: Fall 2026 Add to Schedule
☆ Rating
Difficulty
GPA
Instructor
Enjoyability
Difficulty
Recommend
Reading
Writing
Groupwork
Other
Total Hours

Grade Distribution

No grade data available

Average GPA
Students Measured
Review Summary Updated April 05, 2026

This course demands relentless daily work, requiring thorough textbook reading, consistent problem-solving practice, and heavy memorization before lectures even begin. While participation points and weekly assignments easily secure nearly half your grade, midterms are exceptionally challenging and rely on half-credit corrections to maintain a strong average. Do not let early midterm success distract you from the real hurdle, as the cumulative final is notoriously difficult and allows no point recovery. Lectures move rapidly and assume full preparation, making consistent daily review and active use of office hours or discussion sections absolutely essential. If you strictly follow the outlined study routine and refuse to fall behind, you will handle the intense stress and walk away with a genuinely strong grasp of the material.

53 Reviews

Add Review
Fall 2024
4.0
Average

Organic chemistry is difficult, and there's just no way around that. It takes effort and a new form of perception, but coming from someone who hated chemistry before college, and I enjoyed this class and the material. Dr. Frantz is very knowledgable about each and every topic, and she is very straight-forward with her expectations and responses to questions. There's a weekly homework, readings before lecture, in-class poll questions, adaptive warmups before lecture, and of course exams, but your lowest midterm is dropped, and there is built in room to miss questions on assignments and still perform well. The lecture slides also have all the information you need. Dr. Frantz's exams are difficult and sometimes out-of-the-box from other questions/format types, but she offers corrections, and they are a lifesaver. Absolutely do them, even if you score well. The workload of this course is very manageable, and I would definitely take Frantz again if I had to choose.

Instructor 5.0
Enjoyability 3.0
Recommend 4.0
Difficulty 4.0
Hours/Week 4.0
Fall 2023
3.0
Average

Orgo is one of the hardest classes you will take but there are many ways to succeed. I think Frantz gets a bad rep, but she in my opinion prepares you more as the information actually sticks and will help with the MCAT. The grading and how she teaches the class are honestly set up for you to at leat pass the class. The grading in this class is split into points. So in total, all assignments are worth 1000 points. Clicker questions are 140 points, warmup quizzes are 65 points, homework is 145 points, discussion is 100 points, midterms are 300 points, and the final is 250 points. I will discuss each individually.

Warmup/Homework: These are mainly practice problems related to each reading. Before each lecture, there is a warmup that is based on completion. You have to get a certain amount right to get full credit. These are easy points so make sure you aren't waiting till the last minute to do them. Homework sets are 15 questions due every week except for the week with exams. This is based on correctness. You have three attempts for each question so use them wisely. I do recommend that you lean on others for some problems as I felt some were difficult. Also, even if you do miss some points, you can still get full credit in these categories.
Lecture: During the lectures, she has clicker questions. These are based on completion so as long as you answer you can get credit. She makes it so that you can miss at most two weeks' worth of clicker questions and still get full credit.
Discussion: This is an opportunity to practice so I recommend going even though your lowest two grades from discussion get dropped. It is also mandatory. You can ask TAs for help on the questions given.
Exams: There are three exams, all worth around 150 points each. The lowest of the three gets dropped. One thing I like about her is that she allowed for test corrections which gave you back 50% of the points lost. This was a lifesaver as it allowed for me to get a higher grade in the course. With the test corrections, I had a B average for exams. To study for her exams, I recommend going over discussion questions, Friday practice questions, and questions from the textbook. I also recommend finding the answer key for the textbook as it is really helpful for assignments and studying. I will say exams are the category I lost the most points on. In my opinion, her tests are hard but not impossible.
Final Exam: This is the hardest test you will encounter from her. I will be quite clear her final was mainly exam 2 and 3 content with a sprinkle of acid base. I'm not saying don't study stuff on exam 1, but you mainly want to focus on exams 2 and 3 things, specifically addition, substitution, and elimination reactions.

In all, you are very capable of getting an A in the class. I had an A- in the class until the final which bumped me down to a B+. If you have a perfect score or a higher grade in all the categories and at least a high c average in the exams, you are very capable of getting a good grade. I cannot stress this enough, you need to PRACTICE. Practice until it feels like repetition. It might feel tedious but in the end it will work in your favor #tCFF23

Instructor 4.0
Enjoyability 2.0
Recommend 3.0
Difficulty 4.0
Hours/Week 14.0
Fall 2023
3.3
Average

The class is very easy to get a passing grade in, provided you complete all of the Clicker questions, online Homeworks and online Warm-ups. Frantz uses PollEverywhere for the Clicker questions and Warm-ups/HW assignments are assigned through WileyPLUS. You have to do these assignments quite often, but if you have a study group that communicates often, you shouldn't miss any of them.

Your Discussion section TAs will answer every question you have and will check your work for you. As long as you engage them, it should be easy to get a good discussion grade overall.

The exams are the hardest part about Frantz's class. They are extremely difficult and require more application of advanced concepts than in anywhere else in the class. This makes it exceptionally difficult to ace them. Find an answer key for the textbook online, and run through all of the practice problems for each chapter that you're progressing through. If you do this, it will make your life much easier.

Thankfully, the lowest mid-term (of 3) is dropped, and you can get half points back through exam corrections after each mid-term. Even if you got a 50 on a midterm, you can still do exam corrections and end up with a 75.

Listen to Frantz, study every day, and try your best to understand the concepts. Memorization works until you get nervous, but understanding the concepts will assist your memory and will help you with those weird never-seen-before questions on the exam.

Instructor 5.0
Enjoyability 2.0
Recommend 3.0
Difficulty 5.0
Hours/Week 9.0
Fall 2023
4.3
Average

I would 100% recommend taking Orgo I with Frantz. Although this class is hard no matter what, she's an excellent professor who really knows her stuff. She makes homework and in-class clicker points a significant part of your grade, which is very helpful to balance out the exams. The corrections for half points back and the one dropped midterm are extremely useful and make the exams slightly less stressful since there's room for error. The best way to study for the exams is to really know the reagents, do the practice problems in the textbook, and memorize everything that she says to memorize (pKas, functional groups, solvents, etc). Orgo is a LOT, but you really bond with your classmates and discussion groupmates over getting through it. The TAs are incredibly helpful, especially when correcting exams. They really know their stuff and can often explain concepts in a more digestible manner in a one-on-one environment. Frantz goes FAST during lectures, and I almost always had to update my notes after class. The only way to make this teaching style work for you is to actually read the assigned sections and take detailed notes before class so that you can simply listen to her and add the few things she includes on her slides that you missed. This is not a class where you can come into lecture without taking notes beforehand. Orgo is one of the most difficult STEM classes, but it is 100% possible to be successful if you put in the effort and study/practice consistently. #tCFF23

Instructor 5.0
Enjoyability 4.0
Recommend 4.0
Difficulty 5.0
Hours/Week 7.0
Fall 2022
4.0
Average

Orgo is one of the hardest STEM classes, that is no lie. I got a B+ in this class and was at an A up until the final. It is true what everyone has said about Frantz's final, but I think people also give her too much hate. I'll start off with what I thought about her and then go into details about the class, plus some advice.
Frantz: I think she gets a lot of undeserved hate. This class is hard, and you know that coming in. She does tell you how to survive her class: do the readings, do many practice problems, do all the assigned work, ask her questions sooner rather than later, and focus on quality studying over quantity. That being said, you will put a lot of hours into this class. I took notes while I read and did many practice problems to study. Frantz's lectures go through content really fast because she expects you to have read/skimmed the reading. She will take the time to answer questions in class, and I felt she slowed down on more difficult topics. I loved how she took the time to get to know students who would introduce themselves to her, including myself. If you introduce yourself to her during office hours, she will remember your name. If you then ask/answer questions in class, she will call you by your name. It made the class feel more personal. Orgo will be hard no matter whom you take it with, but Frantz is more forgiving in points than others have made her out to be. There are a lot of opportunities for smaller points that you should do your best to get near perfect scores on.
Homework: There is a lot of homework, and a lot of studying. There is an assigned reading for each lecture, even right after exams. I recommend you take detailed notes while you read and add to them in lecture. There are many practice problems in the textbook. Get the Klein solution manual in some way. It is worth your money/web search to find a copy and get the practice answers. There is a warmup quiz every night before lecture. The number of questions will vary, as they are adaptive. The more you get right, the sooner you finish. At the end of each week, she has a weekly homework that is harder than the warmup quizzes. If you have the solutions manual, some of the answers are there if you know where to find the question in the textbook. But make sure you can do the homework problems without looking at the answer. I would only use the solutions manual to double check your work. Do not skimp on practice problems.
Discussion: Weekly, mandatory. Hope you get a good team. The TAs go over the answers to those problems, and as long as you have their answers, you're good to go. There is an extra credit opportunity each time. Try them, even if you aren't sure. Little points really add up in this class.
Lecture: She posts old recordings, but I always preferred going to in-person lecture. She has iClicker questions in class that are part of the participation grade. The questions she asks are super easy compared to literally any other orgo question you will encounter. Easy points, take advantage of them. She goes through content really fast on Mondays/Wednesdays. Fridays are practice.
Tests: Hard, but not unreasonable. Do many practice problems, and you should be able to apply it to the exam. Do integrated practice problems. Review the weekly homework and discussion problems because that is the closest you will get to her exam difficulty. Her exams can be challenging, but they aren't things you've never seen before in class. Like I said, she's more forgiving in points than others made her out to be. Out of three midterms, she drops the lowest exam score. She also gives the opportunity for half points back on each exam with test corrections. With her grading policy, she and the TAs give points where they can on the test. If you have perfect scores in the minor categories and average C's or higher on her midterms, you could get an A in this class. Her exams are cumulative in the sense that what you learn in
September will still apply later in the semester, though exam 1 content is not part of the focus in exam 2/3.
Office hours: I found them helpful. Ask her early when you get confused, as opposed to later. Everything builds on previous concepts in this class.
Final: Her final dropped my letter grade from an A/A- to a B+. However, it is the same style of questions as her midterms. There's nothing unreasonable, it's just a lot more questions that span the entire course content. Expect to do around the same/slightly worse than you averaged on your midterms before test corrections. It's a challenging final, but again, if you average C's or higher on the midterms and bring them up to B's/A's you could get an A.
Tips: Do a lot of practice. Study functional groups/pKas, anything she says to memorize. Create a reaction journal and add to it for every mechanism you learn. Know reagents and what they do to a compound. This is a hard class, but you can do it. (#tCFfall22)

Instructor 4.0
Enjoyability 4.0
Recommend 4.0
Difficulty 5.0
Hours/Week 16.0
Sponsored
Fall 2021
1.0
Average

RUN. I literally cannot emphasize how important it is that you turn around, pick literally any other professor and run away. If you are taking orgo you're either a) pre-med and taking it against your will or b) you are a chem major and should be placed on a watchlist. Whatever the reason, Frantz is not your girl I promise you that. Orgo is obviously a very hard class that covers very very hard concepts that will have you questioning your will to live on just about a daily basis. You do not need to take it with professor who enjoys torturing her students in order to meet her own satisfaction levels of understanding of complex (beyond intro level) concepts. I could quite literally write 5 more pages why this woman has single handedly put me into therapy, but I will just say do not let the retests fool you. You are much better off taking this course with any of the professors who do not spend their free time plotting how to make their students hate themselves. BFFR and do yourself a favor. #tCFfall22

Instructor 1.0
Enjoyability 1.0
Recommend 1.0
Difficulty 5.0
Hours/Week 14.0
Fall 2022
2.7
Average

Frantz gets a really bad rep, and I came into this class absolutely terrified. I did not do super well in my general chemistry classes, and was thinking I would do significantly worse in orgo because of it. However, I realized from the beginning that it takes a significant amount of work and dedication, and you'll be pretty much fine. She's a tough lecturer, but very straightforward in her explanations which works for me. Keeping up with weekly readings, doing homework with the intent of learning and practicing, attending all the lectures, going to her in person office hours, focusing during discussions, were all things that ended up making a difference as I studied for my midterms. I maintained a 95 overall throughout the semester, and was super proud of myself even though that was not my final grade! I did my absolute best while maintaining a balance with my life, and though I was extremely disappointed with the turnout, I know I did the best I could with what I had.
Even the final was not as bad as I anticipated. If I had gotten just a few more points in each category, I would have ended up with a 90. Unfortunately Frantz does not curve. So if you're me next year, do that one extra practice problem, do that one extra credit problem during discussion, give it your all, and it could end up being the difference between a B+ and an A-.

Instructor 3.0
Enjoyability 2.0
Recommend 3.0
Difficulty 4.0
Hours/Week 8.0
Fall 2022
3.3
Average

I am not going to lie, I cried a lot during this course lmfao.

This is what I wish I knew going in: This class really taught me how to study. Please start reading the chapters during syllabus week. I waited, and definitely was cramming for honestly the rest of the semester. Do the in-chapter problems WHILE reading to get a better understanding of the chapter, and do this before lecture (I was not perfect at this, and was stressed later-hence crying). Try to also do the practice problems just in general so that you are studying a little bit everyday. I wish I had done that this sem and will be attempting this better in Orgo 2 as I know I'd be less stressed if I had spaced out things a bit more. There is SO much content that you cannot just cram (or you will and not do super well).

The first test is (arguably) the easiest, so please try your best to score as high as you can on it, as for me it was the thing that really held my grade over, as the other exams tend to have a lower trend as they progress (bc they get harder). Try and anki everything she says to memorize, and review content often. Orgo is really a marathon of a class if you are going for the A.

Reviewing old tests, integrated problems, office hours, going over practices in class and discussion questions are very good (and all needed) ways to study to succeed. Try not to cram for this class please, I regret my exam 2 very much because I was not keeping up with content and crammed near the end. This being said!! I obviously was not perfect with my studying and had harder dips with my exams, but I still ended up with an A in the class, so perfection is not needed, just conscious effort. This class did end up messing with my mental health this semester, and I will say with her 50% back corrections and cushion grades a B+/A- is very very do-able even if you are scoring B/Cs on her exams. The final is the big one as it has no corrections, and that can make or break your grade.

Honestly, doing practice problems AND understanding the conceptual elements of this class is the what you need to succeed. You do not have to be perfect in every exam or in studying or whatever, as there are many ways for the grades to be cushioned, but studying every day will decrease your stress by so. so. much, rather than cramming (like I did).

Me and my friends had actual nightmares about the final afterwards though hahahhahaa.
#tCFfall22

Instructor 4.0
Enjoyability 3.0
Recommend 3.0
Difficulty 5.0
Hours/Week 11.0
Fall 2022
2.3
Average

TLDR: It's organic chemistry so of course it's hard. But you will survive! I did! (barely).

Okay, let me start off by clarifying that chemistry is most definitely NOT my strong-suit. I came into this class very doubtful in my own abilities to succeed in this course, especially due to the reputation that surrounds it. I see some other reviews provided a nice breakdown of the course, so I'll skip that part. I ended this course with a B-, close to a flat out B, which I was honestly fine with. On the midterms, my grades got worse over time. I got a B on the first one with corrections, but that slowly dropped with each exam. My biggest bone to pick with this course is the drastic difference between the problems we are given to practice on, and the exams. All of the warm-up quizzes, homework, and even textbook practice problems don't really come close to the open-ended problems on the exams. The only ones that get sort of close are in Friday practices and discussions. I do think that Dr. Frantz is a good lecturer, and attending those often helped to clarify confusing topics. Many people have less appealing opinions of her teaching style, but to be honest I didn't really mind her. My advice would be to get 100's in all the other categories (homework, discussions, warm-up quizzes...) because it does offer a nice cushion. The final is nasty. The other reviews don't lie. However, it is not impossible. I spent many, many, many hours studying for it (probably like 30 hours total) because I needed to do well relatively well in order to not drop a letter grade. I succeeded in my goal, and kept my B. While taking the final, I did not feel completely helpless, but it was definitely very difficult due to the immense amount of material it covered. I do feel like if you have to take orgo 2 with Franz, you'll be better off having taken it with her first semester. It would be a culture shock to come into her class from another professor. Good luck! Orgo is just hard in general so just do your best.

Instructor 3.0
Enjoyability 2.0
Recommend 2.0
Difficulty 4.0
Hours/Week 13.0
Fall 2022
2.0
Average

I got an A in this course and I wanted to share some helpful information for those going into it. I just want to start by saying don't panic. It will all work out. I broke up the review into the course and the instructor.

The Course:
Grade breakdown:
- Clicker Questions (15%), Warmup Quizzes (5%), Homework Questions (15%), and Discussion (10%)
- 3 Midterms (30%) and Final (25%)

My advice:
- I would definitely agree that if you follow her advice that she gives you at the beginning of the semester you will do well.
- Midterms: Practice explaining why (there was typically always a question that required you to explain), do the questions at the end of the chapter, and re-do discussion questions and understand them
- Final: The final is comprehensive and covers almost every chapter from the course. I was really afraid for this final, but it turned out okay.

The Instructor:
The big question... should you take Orgo 1 with Frantz? I would say yes for Orgo 1 specifically.
She's not perfect and has flaws like every professor, but she also has a lot of buffer grades that helps you get at least a C+/B-. The warmup quizzes are graded on completion, the clicker questions are only graded on attendance, you have drops on attendance and warmup quizzes, and they give us the answers at the end of the discussion. Also, you take 3 midterms and get 1 drop. She is a bit intimidating as a professor, but she's intelligent. Orgo 1 is the foundational course for Orgo 2 and in case you can't get Samonina in the Spring it helps to start with Frantz.

Instructor 3.0
Enjoyability 2.0
Recommend 1.0
Difficulty 4.0
Hours/Week 7.0
Sponsored