Oakbarrel
Member
I've also signed up for the General Chemistry and Chemistry of Beer courses. Very exciting stuff!
Now I'm starting to wonder if I should sign up for the General Chemistry course as well...
I wish I didn't work during the day! I'd take this in a heartbeat!
I wish I didn't work during the day! I'd take this in a heartbeat!
The course work is open access. The lectures are recorded and available at any time. I work during the week, and on weekends. Did most of my work during days off and managed to stay up with the course. There were about two weeks between each lesson, which gives plenty of time to go through the material a few times when needed.
I expect Dr Morvant to add the chemistry of water to the next course, I hope past graduates will be allowed to do that module as a standalone![]()
To those who have done the course - roughly how many hours did you dedicate each week to reading and any homework. What is the average commitmentView attachment 210625.
To those who have done the course - roughly how many hours did you dedicate each week to reading and any homework. What is the average commitmentView attachment 210625.
It's not easy, it will take time to go thru each area of the course....
Thanks. I get that it won't be easy and "will take time" but more interested in "how" long people put aside each week to achieve a pass result as this will help us all plan.
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It's hard to figure a time per week, as it is more of a 'time per lesson' with each lesson being either two or three weeks in length. For each lesson, I figured that it took me about 3-4 hours to go through the material, about an hour on the pretest, a couple of hours going back and correcting the missed answers, a couple of hours recapping the salient points of the lesson before taking the test and about an hour or two on the test, depending upon the section. Some sections were very demanding and others gave me a breather. I ended up with an 85.2 for a final grade.
So basically, figure on 10 to 14 hours per lesson.
It's hard to figure a time per week, as it is more of a 'time per lesson' with each lesson being either two or three weeks in length. For each lesson, I figured that it took me about 3-4 hours to go through the material, about an hour on the pretest, a couple of hours going back and correcting the missed answers, a couple of hours recapping the salient points of the lesson before taking the test and about an hour or two on the test, depending upon the section. Some sections were very demanding and others gave me a breather. I ended up with an 85.2 for a final grade.
So basically, figure on 10 to 14 hours per lesson.
The amount of time spent will be proportional to your chemistry and biochemistry knowledge. If you have little organic or biochem, you'll probably spend a lot of time learning the principles of chemistry before applying it to brewing. I spent maybe 4 to 5 hours per lesson section, but I also have a chemistry degree.
I agree with this. I also think you either 'get' the organic chemistry or you don't. If you don't then you will remember the same amount if you spend 3 hours a week as you do if you study for 10 hours, if you do get it then spending a bit more time 'gets' you more understanding....
either way - if you don't get organic chem, still do the course.
Is it the same course twice or will there be something different about them?