3.2
Quality4.3
Difficulty56%
Would Retake113
Reviews56%
Would Retake
113
Reviews
Rating DistributionOfficial
5
27
4
29
3
21
2
21
1
15
What Students Say
“I loved his class but I have never worked that hard before”
1001 - 5.0 rating“he is all-knowing and he certainly has a "my way or highway" approach”
CHEM1070 - 5.0 ratingClass Info
Online Classes
100%
Attendance Mandatory
46%
Textbook Required
32%
Grade Predictor
Your expected effort level
Predicted Grade
B+
Grade Distribution
Common Tags
Rating Trend
Stable
+0.06 avg changeRatings by Course
1001
5.0
(1)CHEM1070
4.9
(10)CHEM1101
4.5
(2)CHEM1079
4.0
(1)CHEM1560
3.7
(3)Difficulty by Course
1001
5.0
CHEM206
5.0
CHEM1079
5.0
CHEM2070
4.6
CHEM1560
4.3
Reviews (113)
Chem prof, insane and fun, but tough material
Very enthusiastic, material complex but not too difficult
No Comments
Probably better for more advanced classes.
Great guy on a personal level, but not exactly in tune with what undergrads can REASONABLY handle academically.
Professor is totally insane (in a good way) but class is way too difficult.
he teaches waay over undergrads heads. don't take this class if you can help it because he doesnt really make any sense!
Lee is agreat prof. The material is hard, he doesn't always understand that the class completly does not understand anything, and the problem sets can be hard. But, he is a great guy, tries his best, and the material is very interesting, and he knows a lot about it. I would take more courses taught by Lee.
Professor Lee is incredibly intelligent, but I think at times he overestimates his freshmen class. I learned a lot though. The lecture notes he provided at the beginning of the semester were helpful.
beyond confusing. not clear at all. often distracted. lab isn't bad though.
This class is much more than any freshman needs. Unless you are a chemistry major and absolutely love chem, do not take this class. He can be quite confusing and there is no point to getting bad grades just so you can say you took an honors class.
He's not a good teacher. He's a good scientist...but not a teacher.
This man is crazy, but he's great at what he does and is dedicated to helping you understand it. He wrote the textbook--sure it's incredibly confusing and he really pushes you to think, but his exams are much more straight forward. Homework groups and weekly problem sessions highly recommended.
After Chirik, I had hopes that 216 would be just as interesting and Lee ruined it for me. His lectures are useless and his explanations incomprehensible. I was perpetually confused in this class and his problem sessions just made it worse. The tests are not an accurate portrayal of the class (which can be good or bad). Thank god for John Terry!
Lee definitely knows his stuff and is a great scientist. However, this class was definitely a let down after Chirik's Chem 215 class. I don't think I will ever use the stuff he taught us. We went so indepth that it became basically useless. Tests are fair though and you can do well in this class if you study. Go to problem session.
Absolutley Terrible.
Lectures were very confusing. He's very intelligent, but he doesn't realize the material can be difficult to understand. All the material in the semester centered around a basic idea taught in the first 4 weeks and if you don't get this, good luck. go to his extra help sessions and you may understand some of the material.
The material is very different from most other classes I've taken so far, but Lee does an excellent job going step by step through the process of learning it. I'd definitely recommend him.
This man is definitely on something. Brilliant, but his mind is on another planet.
The material is really hard and useless unless you're a chem major. But if you can get past being completely confused, it can be pretty interesting. Lee is brilliant and really cares about his students & tries his best to help. Go to problem session.
This class is modeled after him. He writes a textbook by hand and then lectures off of it. SL is incredibly smart and cares about his students, but is difficult to understand and the material is beyond even the TA's. Chem 2160 should be cross listed with Creative Writing, because that's what it seemed like. Lab is almost irrelevant to the material.
The class was extremely confusing, but Stephen Lee cares about his students and really wants everyone to understand the material. The problem sessions definitely help. His prelims were fair.
Amazing teaching style: exploratory and emphasizes self-discovery in a comfortable environment. Exactly what college courses should be like.
Go to class. Go to his office hours if you're confused on something from class. All will be fine.
Stephen Lee is a genius. However, this is not an indication of his ability at teaching. Sometimes, he expects a lot of students and goes by really fast. Don't take this course if you're a pre-med, it's incredibly pointless for y'all, seriously (just take 2080). Stephen Lee's second child, MO theory, is the basis of the class. Love it or hate it.
Out of all the professors I have had at Cornell, he is honestly the only one I have met that actually cares about his students. He takes so much time out of his out of class schedule to help kids understand the material. The class was definitely a challenge, but when you understand something it really feels amazing.
In the first few weeks this semester, people dropped the class like flies. I waited just to give him a chance but just didn't learn anything at all...My dreams of majoring in Chemistry came to an end after meeting this man.
Prof. Lee is a great guy. The first few weeks of the class were honestly bad. However, after having stuck with it I'm glad I did. The work ethic I have now is amazing and being forced to think in unique ways is definitely helping me in my other courses (ChemE). I Really recommend this, just be prepared to work hard and not always understand 100%.
As a ChemE, I was encouraged to take this course, but I must say that it has been a dreadful disappointment. Dr. Lee is a kind man and a genius, but he has absolutely no teaching ability. He thinks in a way that is not conducive to conveying information to others so lectures were a waste and I had to learn it all from the TA's/ other professors.
He is no doubt a brilliant man. However, he sometimes has trouble explaining things to the class. His homeworks were sometimes nearly impossible, so much so that the TA's couldn't do them. Prelims and final were tough but fair. This class included a lot of demos, which was cool, but very little textbook use. Great guy, not the best professor.
He is a smart man, this just was not the class for him. It was obviously his first time teaching the material because he could not understand and explain things well. He thinks in very complex, theoretical terms that have no place in a freshmen gen chem class. He was just not the right professor to teach this class and I feel like learned little.
If you want to take this class just to have something to look good on your transcript, don't. However, if you are prepared to work hard, devote a lot of time, and learn how to think differently, you have my highest recommendation. Professor Lee is brilliant, interesting, and caring; though you will not immediately understand everything, keep at it!
Since this class is no longer being offered, comments on the class will be omitted. Professor Lee is brilliant, however sometimes he has difficulties communicating his knowledge to you in a comprehensible way. His exams are very tough, but generally fair. He's great as a guy, but as a professor, not so much.
I would avoid any class taught by this man. Assumes you know much more than you actually do and gives the most incomprehensible proofs ever.
Stephen Lee is a very difficult professor and to be quite honeest, I did not enjoy my first semester with him. What I learned the 2nd semester however, was to roll with the punches. His class is a blast because he is such as character- I doubt there is any professor like him. Enjoy the dozens of entertaining stories he will provide you with.
By a long ways my favorite Cornell professor. In both 2160 and 4300 Lee blew my mind every class. He's clearly genius, although sometimes has a hard time communicating himself, but is willing to put the students before everything else if you need extra help or a 1 on 1 explanation. If you liked 2160 you will love 4300.Also tells the best stories
He is ABSOLUTELY BRILLIANT and he is willing to help you, but you have to put in the effort! I loved his class but I have never worked that hard before! Worth it, learned a lot!
This is a really good course. I learned a lot about what chemistry is. It tied together organic, inorganic, and quantum mechanics. Although it's a 4000 level class, the workload is much less &easier than that of a normal chemistry class cuz it's an elective. Take this class before taking inorganic (4100)!! It definitely helps create base knowledge!
If you put effort, you'll do fine. Wish I had done so earlier, dramatic increase in grades after I decided to.
Love Dr. Lee! The only reason I even liked chemistry at all this semester and passed Chem 2070 with Woz was because of this genius. He is a very enthusiastic professor who really pushes you to grasp even the most difficult concepts.
Dr. Lee cares immensely about his students & is incredibly intelligent. He expects a lot, but this type of diligence is what's needed to succeed in college & especially in chem2070 where grading is based off other students' performances. Definitely recommend. You will learn tons of chemistry & it'll put you ahead of the game in 2070.
HE IS AMAZING. His father won a nobel prize and he definitely inherited his genius but chooses to teach mostly freshmen. General chemistry students learn how to critically think and problem solve on a much higher level than their peers. I got an A+ in CHEM 2070 and it is definitely because I put so much effort into Dr. Lee's class.
DR LEE IS MY BOY. seriously the only professor on this campus you'll feel actually cares about you and your performance. he is all-knowing and he certainly has a "my way or highway" approach. but if you're riding in his car and place your trust in him, you'll certainly go where you want to.
Very challengeig but itll help you become a better critical thinker. Overall, he is very caring and want everyone to do well just expect it to be difficult.
Can be challenging but really encourages critical thinking and really wants you to learn and understand the material. You wont regret having him!
The best lecturer ever! Dr. Lee seems like the only professor on campus who actually wants you to succeed with the highest grade possible. He makes you work but hes hands down the best teacher Ive ever had.
Dr. Lee is by far the most caring lecturer I've had in all my years of learning. He makes every student work to their highest potential. He acknowledges that some students have gaps in their math skills and does everything in his power to repair these gaps and improve their critical thinking. Overall, he is a great man and an excellent professor.
Took 1070 with Stephen and that was the only reason why I managed to get a decent grade in 2070. He genuinely cares about you and every single one of his students. If you follow everything he does and go through the hard problems he gives you, you will gain much better intuition. He is teaching 2070 next year- do take it with him!
Took 1070 & 1080 with him and he is genuinely my favorite professor here. Listen to him, he knows what he is talking about and he knows how to bridge high school thinking and college learning. It wont be easy and you will need a GROWTH MINDSET but take 2070 with him you will thank yourself later.
Wasn't sure if I'd like him from the first few weeks of chem lots of yelling but after sticking it out, I have grown to love him. He genuinely cares about his students and is willing to do whatever for them to succeed. Dr. Lee has a very specific way he wants his students to do things but if you put in the effort to learn, it's worth it.
When he taught my chem 2070 class, we didn't even touch the textbook once. And the lessons he gave were really weird. Let me tell you, I learned so much physics. Yes, physics in a chem class. He taught the right hand rule, the details of the photoelectric effect and particle wave duality and many more. He's a great teacher but follows his own ways.
Great teacher - so many resources to do well. He goes a little fast In lectures but OH clears up a good amount of the confusion. The textbook is useless - don't buy
He is an okay lecturer but not nearly all the material on the prelim is covered in lecture. There is no textbook reading so it can be hard to catch up if you don't understand something. He can be harsh in peer-led - tells people to erase their entire whiteboard or that they are gonna get a C on the prelim. He does care though I think. (Chem 2070)
Lots of work: lectures, pre/post-lecture HW, mandatory discussion, lab, "optional" 2-hour peer-led that's not really optional because lab quizzes and exams are based on it. AP chem doesn't help since Lee teaches stuff like physics/MO theory/particle-wave duality. Never used textbook. Fun demos in class. Can seem harsh at times but he truly cares!
Stephen Lee is an amazing professor who truly cares about his students. Although he offers a ton of resources to succeed in this class, you must put in a lot of work to succeed. Curved to a B-.
I went from being so scared of chem in high school to actually being good at it now. If you genuinely get to know him, you'll realize that you'll never have a professor who cares for his students as much as Prof. Lee. All his TAs also work really hard to help you succeed and put in so much extra work in so you can get a good grade.
I had Stephen Lee his first time teaching 2080. I liked his style of bringing in a lot of practice problems, but the TA to student ratio made these extra sessions not very effective. Doctor Lee is very intense and honest, and made many students cry, most likely without meaning to. He did bring grades up though, so his methods do work.
Dr. Lee is a very caring professor, but can at times be scary. Don't be surprised if you or people around you start crying in the first few lectures, because the level of difficulty might take you off guard. You really need to pay attention to lectures in order to get an A in this class. This class was the worst grade I got first semester.
One of the most chaotic classes I have ever taken. The professor does not care about the students whatsoever. He makes the students feel dumb if they answer a question wrong in class, and he never responds to his email. I had a personal issue where the professor essentially said too bad. Extremely rude and unprofessional.
Be prepared to use Khan Academy because youll learn very little otherwise. Learned more physics than chem tbh. He yelled at students for bad wifi or working (takes away from chem work time) in a pandemic. Told someone they should quit STEM bc he didnt like how they learned. Made ppl cry, too, and was shirtless on one occasion. 2070 is a wild ride
I took 1070 and have been a TA for 2070. He is by far the most caring professor I have ever had in college. It is not particularly prestigious to teach freshmen, but he chooses to because he wants to keep students from dropping out of STEM/pre-med. Material can be hard, but showing that you're trying will get you far in this class. I cried too lol
This class was so hard and Stephen Lee did not teach it well. The exams were extremely hard and didn't test on things that were taught in lecture. Do not take if you don't have to.
Didnt handle pandemic well. Tests were hard last year, and this year is even harder. Were tested on things we didnt learn . I can say I learned a lot but what I learned isnt tested very fairly in the online. Try to take this class when its available in person, it will save your life
chem 2070 is really hard (from a freshman perspective), but sets you up to do well in later STEM classes. so many resources to help you too, big contrast to no help in 2080. Dr. Lee is the only professor I've seen so far who puts this much work into helping us succeed/improve.
Did by far the worst job adjusting to online classes of all my professors. Tested us in prelims on things we never learned. Extremely rude, he is well know for singling people out for minor errors. Avoid his class if it is not required.
Dr. Lee often comes off as very aggressive during office hours or lecture but I think he really wants students to succeed. He creates so many resources for students but you have to take advantage of them. Go to lecture, office hours, peer led, and maybe take the support course (CHEM 1007) and you will find this course much more bearable.
Professor Lee cares about his students. His lectures always have snippets of stories from his father , childhood, and his life in general. He has many resources for you to practice and improve. The TA's are helpful and there's tons of them. This class is hard, but if you're willing to use the resources given, no reason to fail.
the content is hard, but prof built so much support into the class (ex office hours, peerled, pre and post lec quizzes) that with hard work in the right direction, one could definitely do well. lectures took me a bit to get use to, but it's obvious that prof truly cares about the students' learning and curriculum. my brain grew exponentially! :)
The amount of actual homework is little, but there are alot of extra "classes" outside of lecture that you are expected to attend which makes this class take up alot of your time. His prelims/ exams are set up so the class average is around 50-60%. He doesn't curve after tests but rather at the end of the year. His lectures also dont make sense.
Class is organized well. The homework and discussions help to reinforce the ideas. Sadly, Dr. Lee isn't a supportive teacher. The lectures are rushed, and he gets mad when students don't know the answer to his questions immediately. This condescending attitude discourages students from participation, which makes for a terrible learning environment.
Yes, CHEM 2070 is tough, but it is clear that Dr. Lee cares about his students. Even though he gets loud at times, coming from a kid with Asian parents, that's just kind of how it works. If you get over the loudness, you'll find someone who is genuinely excited about chemistry and he definitely helped me found an excitement for chemistry!
At first, I didn't Dr. Lee because I thought he was too aggressive in the optional weekend review sessions. However, he seemed to be largely worried about COVID and chilled out as the semester went on. He really wants to see everyone succeed in his class, he and the TAs have created a lot of different ways to get help and learn the content.
You wont like him at first but it gets better and you get to know him more, he actually cares about you.
Dr. Lee is definitely an interesting man. He wants each student to succeed and teaches entertaining lectures. With that being said, CHEM 2070 is probably the hardest class I've ever taken. The way the curriculum is designed makes it very hard to utilize outside-of-cornell resources (ex: khan academy). GO TO PEERLED (and on-ramp/1007 class) to pass!
Chemistry is not a fun class but Professor Lee is a cool guy. He really wants you to be able to succeed but you have to put in a lot of work.
Dr. Lee's the kind of guy who truly cares about his students but ends up being intimidating, mostly because he wants to get his message through (the material is hard). You can totally do well if you do the work, and he uses his own time to help when he doesn't have to, like writing an answer key at 2 am. You'll be glad you took the class with him.
He gets a bad rap because the class is hard, but tbf 2070 being a weed-out class isn't his fault. I can tell he genuinely cares about students and pushes everyone to succeed. Can be slightly too aggressive with his methods (don't do in-person peerled if you don't want to be yelled at). Homework is not too bad but lab reports are intense. Moves fast
At first, I hated Prof Lee,, he yells at mult students for nothing and has made a lot of us cry (me included lol) but he structures it so that he gives you so much practice that you are very prepared for exams. Peerled rrly helps. Class is rrly structured to help you succeed. Overall: Prof is mean but cares about the class & students
Though the material is hard, he actually cares about your learning. In a peer-led review of about 60 students with 4 TA's which he didn't have to attended, he went out of his way to make sure I understood something. With a good bit of work, you can get an A in 2070.
Ill be honest; I hated this class with a passion. I took Chem 2070 (along w Bio) to see if I wanted to pursue Pre-Med, and I have decided to weed myself out The material and the prelims are very difficult, and his lectures are pretty surface-level. He does provide many resources, but it is truly a HUGE time commitment.
Your typical pre-med weed out class on steroids. Chem 2070 probably took up 75% of time among all classes as a freshman. You'll need to not only work during the week, but will have peer-led (optional but not really) on the weekend which will completely destroy whatever day you choose to have it on. Get ready to panic on the prelims...
Class is super difficult
He is a very passionate man. He will put you to work and expects a lot out of his students. I wasnt sure if I was going to do well in his class. But he went out of his way to help students and actually wanted them to succeed in his class. His class is a huge time commitment but if you do the work youll do just fine.
Dr. Lee is a brilliant man but he has a challenging personality. There have been multiple instances when he has disrespected a student or belittled them. I don't find him to be kind or approachable despite his intense level of knowledge in the material. The lab and the course content are not strongly linked. Material is focused around his interests
Sorry to say but this was my worst prof at Cornell. Weekly exam prep sessions led to prof yelling at students, and sometimes erasing entire whiteboards worth of work. I've seen too many students cry after interactions with Dr. Lee. I could say A LOT more but word limit and guidelines wouldn't allow me to. Don't let anyone compromise your self worth
this class is incredibly difficult, especially as you bridge the gap between high school and college. dr lee is very intense, and this class will probably be one of the hardest classes you take at Cornell, but he really cares about student learning and is more concerned with instilling a growth mindset and desire to learn than an enjoyable class
Lee is... a phenomenon. 2070 will break you, but that's kind of the point. Expect to spend 10-20 hours a week outside of class just to score a 50 on every prelim. The course is well-designed, but Lee is his own beast. He is incredibly passionate about his subject, unfortunately at the cost of his students' mental health. Have fun!
In order to pass this class you have to attend 3-4 hours of additional class time (some of which are on the weekend) that is not made aware to students when you sign up for the class. If you don't have time for this, oops. Lee is extremely mean and I do not understand how people say he wants his students to succeed- he is cruel and condescending.
Dr Lee is horrible. In addition to being extremely rude to students, his lectures are not helpful at all and he just rants about his personal life stories instead of time. The course is organized terribly and the lab does not relate to lecture material at all. Pre and post lectures are often useless and uninformative, but time consuming nonetheless
I honestly didn't even try all the material is so so uselessly difficult and time consuming. I didn't go to peer led ever and still got a b- so idk. Stephen lee has no sympathy whatsoever. he is selfish and teaches MOs just cause he likes them. they literally have no other use. I fully did not bother to learn them for the final exam.
Worst class I've taken at Cornell. In-class lectures quite useless, if you want to actually perform well you must attend workshops outside of class requiring extra 10-15 hours/week. Lee is arrogant, entitled, and rude. no prereqs but you're expected to know copious amounts of chemistry before taking the class & if you don't you're treated dumb!
Dr. Stephen Lee is one of the most infamously abrasive professors at Cornell. He has regular outbursts, makes students scared when he comes into a discussion, and generally treats students with little respect. Yes, he is dedicated to pedagogy, but his attitude when interacting with students is completely unacceptable.
I went into this class scared for my life, but honestly it is not a terrible class. The lectures can be confusing and Dr. Lee is also extremely intimidating, but all in all the class is doable. There is so much resources there to help you. Put in the work, keep going, and you will get there. Trust.
Difficult but mostly fair
Stephen Lee is such an icon. Will all of your waking hours be consumed by 2070? Yes. Will Stephen Lee scream at you after you make a minor mistake in peer-led? Yes. But would you really have the Cornell experience without taking 2070? I would say no. In hindsight, I realize that I should be grateful for having this experience. I did that.
Is Chem2070 difficult and time consuming? Yes. Is Chem2070 impossible to get an A in? No. You have to learn how to study and think critically in a new way. There is a gap between what is presented in lecture and what is asked on exams. However, they give you plenty of resources to bridge that gap. Go to office hours, peer led, and flipped class.
The class is very difficult, but offers many out-of-lecture resources that are somewhat disorganized. The professor comes across as rude, heartless, and discouraging. This makes learning very hard and the outside resources unbearable. The TAs sometimes do not know what is going on either.
I'll be honest: my success in this class was inversely proportional to the amount of time I spent with Dr. Lee. Go to peer-led and discussion, do the pre/post-lecture content---free points---but Dr. Lee himself is rude, demeaning, and stressful. Avoid him unless it's review session time. TAs carry this class and peer-led is necessary to succeed.
I honestly believe Dr. Lee cares about the students in his class, but he does a poor job actually teaching. Lectures only make sense once the TAs go over it in peer led. Take the resources he gives you but know that the course will require extra work from you to understand.
Dr. Lee is a genuine, caring teacher who only seeks the best for his students. Although sometimes there may have been confusion in lectures, Dr. Lee does not hesitate to address a situation and fix a problem. This is a tough class, but it is worth the pain. Good luck students!
This class is life-changing. You will learn the key to forming good study habits and thinking outside the box. Yes, this is a very time-consuming class and Dr.Lee will probably yell at you, but you will come out a different kind of thinker. Dr.Lee is also an extremely entertaining person.
He was entertaining. I found the class interesting
Professor Lee's second prelim actually made me cry. I don't think he is an awful professor but definitely not a good lecturer. I mean, things he taught relate poorly to what's actually on the test and he changes the prelim structure every year by making prelims harder and harder. If I were ever to take his class I would drop out of Cornell FR!
Professor Lee put it best with his legendary quote during a lecture, "I am not a teacher, so my job is not to 'teach' chemistry. I am a professor, my job is to 'profess' my love for chemistry". He is a genuinely brilliant man but jumping the gap to be on his level of understanding can be very challenging. Work very hard and an A is possible.
This class is HARD. Exams are chaos, make sure you go to peer-led (optional side lessons) because those are the only times you'll have questions that resemble those on the test. Watch his online lectures to prep for exams, I would encourage also going to lecture but the videos are extremely similar. He's crazy, but he is dedicated.
He genuinely cares about undergraduate teaching because he provides a lot of help for students outside of class (PPIP, peer-led, On Ramp, flipped class, LSC tutoring, TA OH, 1007, etc.) Make sure to attend these workshops to do well. I highly recommend peer-led and LSC tutoring. Your grades mainly depend on your tests scores.
The lectures do not help much to what you are tested on the prelims. He cares about his students and wants the best for them but has an odd way of showing it. Best advice is to attend discussion, GO TO PEER-LED, and get a tutor. Do the pre-semester math quiz so you can get into On-Ramp before the first prelim. Extremely time consuming class. GL
Dr. Lee is one of those professors where you either love or hate him. After taking 2070 in the fall, I've continued to work with him as a TA. It may not seem like it, but he cares about his students more than I've seen any other professor. He just has an odd, old-fashioned way of showing it. He gives his students a variety of resources. Use them.
I struggled with Chemistry, but he slowed down and helped me out. He is a distracted professor, but his TA's and assistant professors majorly keep the course on track. He understands how difficult classes are and is doing his best to minimize any negatives. Really a lot of self-study and lecture review though if you didn't take AP Chemistry in HS.
Dr. Lee has a bad reputation, but he made this class because he saw an opportunity to help students succeed at an academically rigorous school. He cares about his students SO much. This class is easy if you attend everything offered (class, workshop) and follow his instructions on how to succeed.
While it is true that you can tell how much he cares about his students, and the class itself is an amazing help and made me a much better math student, the classroom environment was nearly always very toxic. Everyone, including the TAs, is scared of him. He frequently became explosive and has no problem belittling you in front of a class.
Professor Lee has a unique teaching style, but engaging with his resources like peer-led sessions and tutoring can really help. unstuck study was a game-changer for my study prep.
everyone is in fear in his class. He will embarrass you and scream at you almost every class. You will be targeted if you get a question wrong. Class everyday...and you will be judged if you "only go 6 days a week" and are not doing well.
Class Info
Online Classes
100%
Attendance Mandatory
46%
Textbook Required
32%
Grade Predictor
Your expected effort level
Predicted Grade
B+
Grade Distribution
Common Tags
Rating Trend
Stable
+0.06 avg changeRatings by Course
1001
5.0
(1)CHEM1070
4.9
(10)CHEM1101
4.5
(2)CHEM1079
4.0
(1)CHEM1560
3.7
(3)Difficulty by Course
1001
5.0
CHEM206
5.0
CHEM1079
5.0
CHEM2070
4.6
CHEM1560
4.3