英语作文,大学里令我印象最深刻的课程
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英语作文,大学里令我印象最深刻的课程
全文共3篇示例,供读者参考
篇1
The Best Class Ever!
Hi there! My name is Timmy and I'm 8 years old. Today I want to tell you about the most awesome, super cool, and just plain amazing class I took when I was in university a few years back. Yeah, that's right - university! I know I'm just a kid but I'm really smart. I even skipped a few grades because regular school was just too easy for me.
Anyway, let me tell you about this crazy great class. It was called "Intro to Coding and Computer Programming" and it was taught by the funniest, nicest professor ever - Professor Jackie Codemaster. I'll never forget the first day I walked into that giant lecture hall. There must have been like a million students in there! Okay, maybe not a million, but definitely a few hundred at least.
Professor Codemaster came bounding into the room full of energy. She had these really wild pink and blue streaks in her hair and was wearing ripped jeans with cool patterns all over them. I could tell right away this wasn't going to be a boring, lame class.
The professor started cracking jokes from the very beginning to get everyone loosened up and laughing.
Then she mind-blew all of us by writing some computer code up on the overhead projector. It looked like a total jumble of numbers, letters, and symbols to me at first. But Professor Codemaster explained it all in a way that actually made sense! She broke it down step-by-step and before I knew it, I was understanding the basic logic behind coding and programming. It was like learning a brand new language, but one that gave instructions to computers instead of humans. So cool!
Over the next few months, we learned all sorts of programming languages like Python, Java, C++, and more. At first it was really hard and frustrating. I'll admit there were times I got mad and wanted to give up because I just couldn't get the hang of it. Professor Codemaster must have sensed my struggles because she went out of her way to meet with me one-on-one during office hours. She was super patient, encouraging, and didn't make me feel dumb at all for asking tons of questions. Gradually, it started to click and I was writing basic programs and making my computer do all kinds of neat tricks!
The hands-on coding assignments and projects were my favorite part of the class. We made simple games, apps, and even
programming driving little robots to collect things and navigate mazes. Professor Codemaster turned it all into fun competitions and gave out prizes to the most creative and innovative projects. I'll never forget my proud smile when I won a Codemaster Medal for my "Mathinator 3000" program that could solve big math problems lickety-split.
Towards the end of the semester, we had a huge interactive showcase day where we presented our final projects to the whole class, professors, tech company reps, and even our families. My little sister Susie couldn't believe her eyes when my program made the computer talk out loud with funny jokes and sound effects! Mom and Dad were bursting with pride, even though they didn't really understand any of the code stuff going on.
I learned so much in that intro coding course, and it totally inspired me to keep studying computer science through school. In fact, I just accepted an internship this summer at a major tech company here in Silicon Valley! Pretty great for an 8-year-old, right?
More than all the programming knowledge though, Professor Codemaster taught me valuable lessons about having a positive attitude, never giving up when things get hard, and using creativity to solve problems in fun new ways. Thanks to her
awesomeness, I discovered my passion for tech and innovation. Who knows, maybe someday I'll be a professor myself, inspiring the next generation of kid coders and programmers! But for now, I've got to get back to working on my latest app idea - a fart sound board. Yo, coding is the best!
篇2
The Most Awesome Class Ever!
You'll never guess what was the coolest, most fun, and straight up amazing class I took in college! It was Intro to Quantum Physics 201. I know, I know, you're probably thinking "Whoa, that sounds crazy hard and boring." But believe me, it was the total opposite of boring. It was mind-blowing!
The very first day of class, Professor Everett came bouncing in with this giant smile on his face. He had crazy curly hair that stuck out in every direction, like he just rolled out of bed. Instead of just droning on about the syllabus like most professors, he started talking about how nothing is really solid - everything is made up of these tiny subatomic particles whizzing around. It's all just empty space and energy!
Then he grabbed a baseball off his desk and yelled "Think fast!" and chucked it straight at my head! I flinched, but the ball
just passed right through me. The whole class gasped. Turns out, it was just a hologram! Professor Everett cackled and said "You see? There's nothing really there! Your eyes were playing tricks on you."
From that moment on, I was hooked. Every class was filled with demonstrations and experiments that scrambled your brain. Like the time we calculated that if you cooled a object to absolute zero, it would exist in every possible state at once! Or when we proved that a particle can somehow be in two places at the same time. Woah!
My favorite was the double slit experiment. Professor Everett set up this big vacuum chamber with a laser shooting a beam of light particles at these tiny slits. You'd think the particles would just make two lines on the other side where the slits were. But the crazy thing is, they created this trippy interference pattern, like waves rippling on water!
Professor Everett explained that's because the particles were behaving like waves, but also like particles at the same time. They were interfering with themselves, which is nuts! It totally shattered my assumptions about how the universe works on the smallest scales.
After class, I went up to the professor and asked "But how can a particle act like a wave? And be in multiple places? It doesn't make any sense!" You know what he said? He smiled real big and said "Jeremy, if you think that's weird, you're not ready for what comes next!"
No joke, this guy lived and breathed quantum physics. During exams, he'd walk around the room with a cat sealed in a box. He claimed that until somebody opened the box, the cat was both alive AND dead at the same time because of something called quantum superposition. My mind was blown every single class!
It wasn't all fun and games though. The math and problem sets were no joke. Things like wave functions, Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle, and Schrödinger's equation made my head spin. I spent long nights in the library with my study group, going over practice problems until 2am. Pulling all-nighters before tests was pretty common.
The lowest grade on the midterm was a 12%. Seeing that soul-crushing number in red ink practically gave me a heart attack. I thought I was brilliant at first when I got a 63%, until Professor Everett handed them back wearing afdisappointed frown, saying "I expected better from you all."
Despite being one of the hardest classes I've ever taken, it was also one of the most rewarding. Sure, I didn't understand half the crazy concepts we learned about like quantum entanglement, quantum tunneling, or the multiverse theory. But it opened my eyes to this strange, bizarre realm operating by rules that seem to defy logic and common sense.
On the last day of class, Professor Everett brought in this gigantic mainframe computer that filled the entire lecture hall. He told us it could simulate incredibly complex quantum interactions using quantum bits or "qubits." As a demonstration, he showed us two particles that became "entangled" - whatever happened to one would instantly affect the other, even if they were billions of miles apart. My jaw hit the floor.
Then the professor said something I'll never forget. He looked out at all of us and said in this peaceful, reassuring voice: "The universe is not only stranger than you imagine... it is stranger than you can imagine. Quantum physics is showing us that reality itself is vastly more wondrous and mystifying than our everyday experiences suggest."
As I walked out of that last lecture, it felt like someone had re-adjusted how my brain perceived everything in existence. Solid objects, light, gravity, time...none of it was as real or
concrete as I thought. It was all fuzzy at the subatomic level, made up of weird quantum probabilities and uncertainties. Things I took for granted, like causality, suddenly seemed up for debate in the quantum realm.
While it didn't give me any definite answers, Intro to Quantum Physics 201 exposed me to the deliciously
mind-bending mysteries buried in the deepest fabric of our universe. It shattered my assumptions about how reality works at the fundamental level. More importantly, it filled me with a sense of awe about the bizarre, unintuitive behavior of the quantum world that our human minds struggle to fully grasp.
Since that class, I've had a constant feeling of amazement and curiosity about the true nature of our existence. Like there are Hidden realities and dimensions peeking through the cracks of our surface-level experience, bizarre quantum effects leaking into the macroscopic world. It awakened a burning inquisitiveness in me about all the secrets and strangeness lurking in the universe that we've barely begun to glimpse.
So if I could say one thing to anyone considering taking Intro to Quantum Physics 201, it would be: get ready to have your mind completely blown away! Be prepared to question everything you think you know about reality. Because studying
quantum physics is like taking a journey through a psychedelic, logic-defying alternate dimension. It's batty, insane, and utterly captivating!
篇3
The Bestest Class Ever!
Wow, you want to hear about the coolest class I took in college? It was seriously awesome sauce! I'll never forget that class for as long as I live.
It was called "Unicorns and Rainbows 101" and it was taught by the most magical professor of all time, Professor Twinkleberry. She was this tiny little lady with bright purple hair and stars painted all over her face. I'm not even kidding!
On the very first day, she came prancing into the room on her tippy-toes, wearing a rainbow tutu and giant fuzzy slippers shaped like unicorn heads. "Welcome, my little stardust buddies!" she bellowed in a super high-pitched voice. "Who's ready to go on a journey to the most whimsical place of all?"
We were all like "Uhh...what?" because none of us nerdy college kids had any idea what this crazy lady was talking about. But then she told us that for the whole semester, we'd be
learning all about the magic of unicorns, rainbows, and friendship! Yeah, for real.
At first, I kind of thought the class would be a total snoozefest. I only signed up because I needed one more elective to graduate. But after that first bonkers day, I was hooked!
Pretty much every class was insane in the most wonderful way. Sometimes Professor Twinkleberry would make us all put on paper bag puppet unicorn horns and act out stories from her favorite unicorn fable books. Other times, we'd have to dance around passing a rainbow ribbon and humming made-up unicorn songs.
My personal favorite was when we all got to make unicorn frap smoothies! Professor Twinkleberry gave us all these crazy ingredients like edible glitter, gummy worms, and bottles of sprinkle magic dust. We got to blend up our own smoothies and add whatever wild toppings we wanted. I literally drank a sunshiny glittery smoothie through a crazy straw shaped like a unicorn horn's spiral. It was so sugary and silly, but absolutely delicious!
The assignments were just as ridiculous and wonderful. One time, we had to write a short story from the perspective of a grumpy fairy who was sick of dodging pooped rainbows.
Another paper needed to be a haiku poem about why best friends are more awesome than ice cream sundaes.
Then there was the big group project, which pretty much every other class dreads. But leave it to Professor Twinkleberry to make it magically delightful! We had to break into teams and come up with a brand new unicorn fairy tale book to read to elementary schoolers. My team's book was called "Sir Sparklelips Poots a Party"...it was about a unicorn who couldn't stop farting rainbows and stink clouds. Everybody thought it was so dumb and hysterical!
On the last day of class, Professor Twinkleberry told us the whole unicorn and rainbows thing was just her extraordinary way to teach bigger life lessons with whimsy. "You see, my stardust angels, unicorns represent purity, bravery, and individualism. Rainbows symbolize diversity, optimism, and finding the bright side to any storm clouds. And friendship...well, that's the rarest, most magical element of all!"
As cheesy as it sounds, that class honestly did make me look at the world a little differently. I started to appreciate the simple pops of color and magic that are all around us, if you just take a second to scout them out. I tried to stop sweating the small stuff and be more positive, the way unicorns and rainbows are. And I
made some of the grooviest friends from my smoothie-making team!
So yeah, Unicorns and Rainbows 101 was hands down, no contest, the most amazingly absurd yet wholeheartedly impactful class I'll never forget. If you ever get the chance to take it, do it! Your inner child's mind will get blown to rainbow dust. Thanks a million, Professor Twinkleberry, for helping this student see the magic in the day-to-day. I'll never look at a unicorn or double rainbow the same way again!。