Revision as of 03:53, 28 January 2010 by Dfeltman (Talk | contribs)

Sure, even the basic math courses like calculus are cumulative... no wonder this course is cumulative. Although I don't like it going over what I even don't remember at the end of a semester, I think it helps in the long run because you may end up understanding the whole course thoroughly and feel like you really learnt something. Let's go for the cumulative final!

Most courses always tend to have the last part of the content on the final since they haven't given an offical exam for that content yet. I have had one class where the final exam was only on the material covered after the second exam in the class, and it helped to be able to concentrate on that area to study then many as opposed to cumulative exams. So in my opinion it helps when it comes to studying especally if you have alot of exams that week.

Having a non-cumulative final makes finals week a lot easier. There are things at the beginning of the semester that you never really use throughout the rest of it. By having a non-cumulative final, it allows you to study better. There is always too much information to all fit on the final, so not needing to study everything cuts down on time wasted during weeks when there is never enough time anyway.

Alumni Liaison

Ph.D. 2007, working on developing cool imaging technologies for digital cameras, camera phones, and video surveillance cameras.

Buyue Zhang