jd12345 said:
Okay I know it is meant as a practice for us. And I do realize that, but the college has strict deadlines and weightage for the assignments. Whats the point of that?
I believe primary and secondary schools have deadlines as well. Most of my junior high and senior high school courses had weekly assignments or project assignments with deadlines. Humanities courses had reading and writing assignments, as well as tests. Math and science courses has weekly homework assignments, and sometimes several times a week, with periodic, sometimes weekly, tests/quizzes.
University should prepare one for the professional world, and the professional world has deadlines. If one does research, one usually has requirements of milestones, monthly progress reports, quarterly progress reports, and end of the year reports. In business or industry, one has a specified period to accomplish a piece of work. A client would expect results at the end of some period.
I plan to study something and I realize that oh! I have to do this assignment so unwillingly I have to study that subject instead of what I planned.
They make me study what they want and not what I wish to do. I suppose most colleges give a lot of homework, so what is the point?
Since one registered for a course, one is expected to study based on the curriculum/syllabus for that course. If there is no syllabus, one should be able to ask the professor/lecturer about what is expected.
One can certainly study what one wishes, but first take care of the required topics.
I did a lot of personal study outside of the course work, but I made sure to do what was required - most of the time.
During my first year of university, I did a self-paced course in modern physics (relativity and intro to QM). Some students rapidly completed the required sections in a couple of months. Others procrastinated. Some did quite well, and others struggled. The TAs were always available, and sometimes were frustrated with those who procrastinated.