Generally, we were meant to read a particular chapter from the textbook say each week. The lecturer will list the chapters that have to be read for each week assigned in the course outline sheet. I found it hard to find time to read the chapters, as assignments take up most of your time (and some of the content can be quite boring), in the end it didn’t really matter to not read all the chapters, as exam questions tended to draw more from lecture material.
The course which was a bit different was PLAN1011 Urban Society, where you had assessable assigned weekly readings, ie. a journal article or a chapter from a book and each week you had to hand in a 1 page summary of the text plus make up some questions which could be used in a tutorial. Urban Society was the only course which had tutorials, and we were split into groups of approx 15 people, and the tute would go for approx 30 mins.
Apart from tutorials we did have labs and a design studio for PLAN1101 Understanding Design. For GEOS1701 Environmental Systems, which was in a science lab, we learnt how to interpret maps and aerial photographs etc. In second semester, we had two computer labs for PLAN1052 Quant Methods, learning how to use a statistics package called SPSS and GEOH2801 Geographical Information Systems, which was how to generate maps on the computer using geographic information.
These were the textbooks and their costs (they were so expensive as they had these CDs with them) that I bought last year:
Semester 1:
- Road from Coorain (a book from the Urban Society weekly reading list) $22.50
- Elemental Geosystems $84.11
- Lab book for GEOS1701 $5.00
Semester 2:
- Getting Started with GIS $94.46
- The Practice of Social Research (I think was about $85)
Yes, first semester last year was quite hectic, second semester was better as we had Fridays off. I think the timetable you have is pretty much the same as mine last year, going on the fbe website. Monday was definitely the busiest, especially if your tute for Urban Society finished at 1pm, and you had to race up that big hill of the uni to get to Matthews on the upper campus for GEOS1701 in time. I found that if a lecture is meant to finish at 6pm, it always finished by 5ish but one particular course PLAN1122 Development Processes in second semester, the lecturer liked to finish at 3:30pm instead of finishing at 6pm!