took this it sucked!! i wouldn't say it was "hard" material wise, but the amount of work it took from week to week was just too much and the lectures are so hard to get through. by the end of the semester i had to watch them on 4x-5x speed to be able to get myself to pay attention. we had weekly homework assignments, daily quizzes, lab, lab prep video (around an hour), lecture videos (around an hour and a half), a lab project, and 3 exams throughout the semester. if you have to do this for a pre-req, you'll get through it, but otherwise i'd recommend taking 1601 or something.
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Sections
7The material is straightforward, but the rigid flipped format requires consistent independent study while class time is largely spent on repetitive group work and slow, redundant explanations. Exams are short but carry disproportionate weight, featuring tricky multiple-choice questions that heavily penalize careless mistakes, so drilling the provided practice tests is essential. Lab assignments are manageable if you follow the prep tutorials, but expect strict, nitpicky grading that quickly turns minor formatting errors into significant point deductions. Ultimately, success hinges on treating the course like structured self-study, prioritizing practice exams over in-person attendance, and meticulously adhering to lab rubrics to protect your grade.
69 Reviews
I took this class since I saw that a lot of pre-med students typically do. It was probably the easiest class I had this semester, very doable for a first-year student. During this online semester, Tuesdays were asynchronous and basically OH while Thursdays involved about a half-hour of group-work and then the rest of class was her going over the problems from said group work. The exams are fair and shouldn't be too challenging if you go over the slides and post-lecture "quizzes". Since our tests were open-note this semester, having a well-organized "cheat-sheet" on hand helped too. Labs are where students learn to use R for analysis. If you have any programming experience at all, it should be a breeze. And if you don't have programming/coding experience, it still shouldn't be too hard since Prof.Ferrara makes the instructions very clear.
I didn't go to OH at all so I didn't have much interaction with the professor, but she seems really nice. She was super prompt about responding to questions on Piazza, and I'm sure a lot of students appreciated that.
I recommend taking this if you're looking for an intro stats course and/or want to get some basic familiarity with using RStudio.
#tCFspring2021
I enjoyed this class. It was definitely challenging, even in covid, so don't take it unless you are willing to put a lot of work in. Maria is a very thorough lecturer and a nice person. She teaches you to code in labs, which I found to be very interesting. Maria is very much the professor who's syllabus is final. She does not round (even if you are 0.01 away) and her tests are challenging. That being said, getting an A level grade or even a B+ is very much achievable.
#tCFspring2021
Coming from someone who has never taken a statistics course, this class was very straightforward. You go over a chapter or two every week and there are three tests throughout the semester, including a final, which is not cumulative. The professor's lecture videos were informative and easy to follow. The labs were relatively simple as long as you watched the lab videos. If you put in a reasonable amount of work, you should get a good grade.
Maria is super nice! She dropped our worst grade on homework, lab, and quiz, also ignore three absence without reason. Should be easy A if you take good note watching the video, do homework and practice problems before exams. Don't have to do reading, video includes everything. Remember to be friend with your labmate.
If you're looking for an easy, pre-health related stats class this is it! It's basically an intro stat class with a sprinkle of biology-related problems and I enjoyed it as someone who'd never taken stats in high school. I will say that Maria assigns a TON of outside class work including 2 topic videos that are usually over the typical class time of an hour 15 and on top of that assigns an hour long lab video for your 50 min lab, weekly homework, 2 topic quizzes a week, and 1 synchronous lecture and lab on top of all this. In her topic videos she goes through everything extremely diligently and slowly and I don't know anyone who watched it at anything less than 2x speed. This class is very time consuming but I won't say it's too difficult. If you put moderate effort into every assignment, you'll end up with a decent grade in this class. She also provides practice exams which are super helpful for preparing for her 3 exams which aren't really cumulative either which is a nice bonus. Also, lab is a complete waste of time; you basically learn R but it's never used on an exam and I don't feel like it's a good use of a lab. TLDR; loooots of work, but easy. Maria is super nice and approachable. #tCF2020
The professor: Honestly I loved this class, and I thought Maria was truly an effective professor. She explains everything, and I mean everything (including every detail and method) very slowly, and I absolutely appreciated this!! I'm a snail when it comes to learning math/stats, so I really appreciated her explaining things that way. As the semester progressed, I started to increase the speed in which I watched her YouTube videos, and I highly recommend the following: go through the slides first and take notes on the writings etc., then watch her videos on 2x speed. It's a lot faster and more efficient than watching and copying her videos on 1x speed or pausing on 2x speed, and without pauses, you can learn things a lot better without breaks in them. Maria makes herself readily available literally every day of the week, multiple times a day. I've NEVER had a professor be this available before, and I appreciated that literally any student could have a chance to meet with her. She is kind, a bit quirky, and definitely helpful with her explanations. Loved her!!
The class: There's asynchronous days to watch her videos on Tuesdays, and live classes on Thursdays. I had to do this class during COVID. She used Teams instead of Zoom, and we would get assigned to random groups on Thursdays to do the class problems/participation. If your group mates slack, absolutely don't put their name on the work and let Maria know. I wish I was more vigilant about this during my time taking the class. We also had labs on Tuesdays, which were fine. If you have 4 people in your group, you can easily get the labs done in 25 minutes tops. However, if you have 3 people, it can take most of the time. If you have questions about the labs, I'd say to ask once during lab and then to go during a lab OH and double confirm. Sometimes it can be really easy to lose points on labs, which make up 20% of our overall grades. My group would often ask a TA to check things, and he would say they're right, and then we'd get them marked wrong by our grader. Labs can be an easy grade if you let it, but you just have to make sure that your stuff is right! Homeworks, we have them weekly and we get 2 attempts on each problem. If you have any issues with understanding a homework, just go to OH and Maria will gladly clarify them (same with the YouTube video grade scope quizzes). Finally, you'll have 3 exams (2 exams and a final, which is just an exam 3). I'd say make sure you read every detail carefully, including the fine print to make sure you don't miss any points. The exams are timed, and they can be kind of difficult to take with poor or spotty internet.
Grading: I think the grading is fair, but because this is such a large class and it's online, mistakes may be made at times. Definitely make sure you check your quizzes and your exams and labs to make sure no mistakes were made. Besides that, I thought it was pretty lax and fair (for exams). I would say this class is an easy A- for sure. If you put in the work, an A would be attainable absolutely!
Professor Ferrara's class is a great class to take as a beginner Statistics class. Although she does tend to overexplain concepts— which can deem to be a little much, does help to reinforce test prep in the long run. This class was online when I took it and I really liked the concept that the lecture were asynchronous with a "discussion section" being one of the lecture days to go over practice problems. Labs were slightly relevant to the topics and also provided a background with using R. Overall really great class and an easy A.
I took AP stats in high school and stats always seemed fairly straight forward and easy to me so I'm not sure if this review will be applicable to everyone. I thought this was the easiest 4 credits of my life. The labs were annoying to go to but a joke for the most part if you watch the lab videos. The exams had some tricky multiple choice questions but there were not many at all. The homework can also be annoying but they weren't bad. Every week there was a synchronous lecture which also sucked to go to but only a little over 2 hours a week for synchronous sessions (lab+class) for a good grade is worth it. Maria was also very nice and approachable.
For a stats class, I would say this one was pretty good. Maria is a good professor, although at some points I found lectures to be a drag because she would over-explain some concepts. I went to every lecture even if there was a pre-recorded topic video, but you could get away with not going if you understand the concepts in those videos (certain topics she will post a video of her going through the power-point and then in class she reviews the major concepts). The sapling homework can be time consuming, but you do have two chances to answer questions correctly. Labs are pretty easy and you can go to office hours and they will tell you exactly what they are looking for. Make sure to fully explain your answers though because, depending on the TA, they may nit-pick and take off points. I would recommend this class if you need to fulfill the stat requirement for pre-med or just need to take a math class; the work isn't too bad, but make sure you put in the effort.