Professor

Matthew Fisher

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3.3
Overall Ratings
Based on 50 Users
Easiness 1.9 / 5 How easy the class is, 1 being extremely difficult and 5 being easy peasy.
Workload 2.0 / 5 How light the workload is, 1 being extremely heavy and 5 being extremely light.
Clarity 3.4 / 5 How clear the professor is, 1 being extremely unclear and 5 being very clear.
Helpfulness 3.3 / 5 How helpful the professor is, 1 being not helpful at all and 5 being extremely helpful.

Reviews (50)

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Dec. 30, 2016
Quarter: Fall 2016
Grade: A-

The course consists of two prompt-free essays, a Middle English translation quiz, participation in section, the final, and a "gallery project" (which was new to this quarter). The gallery project was a huge pain in the butt for three reasons: there wasn't a lot of direction so we didn't really know what was expected of us, he kept admonishing us to "have fun with it!", and because we were working on this post-thanksgiving and pre-finals -- while reading Paradise Lost. Tip: get a serious head start on PL during earlier weeks (yeah, I know) so you don't end up reading Milton for 4 hours the night before the final.

The final was not nearly as bad as I expected. It was three parts: ID, explication, and long essay. For the ID section, Fisher gave us 10 quotes, we had to write on 6 of them: title, author, original language, date written, and importance of the quote. They were from pretty obvious works and I easily recognized 9 of them. No sweat. The explication essay was straightforward too; we were presented with a poem and performed a close reading. The long essay afforded the most room for creativity. There were two open-ended prompts, we picked one, and answered it using three texts. Fisher required that Paradise Lost be one of those three. Both prompts were interesting, fit well with many of the texts we'd read, and I actually had a lot of fun writing this essay.

My advice for this class is to complete the readings *before* lecture. If you do this, you'll be able to more easily sift through his summary and take pointed notes on theme and meaning. While reviewing for the final, I realized that on days when I had followed my own advice, my notes were much more helpful than otherwise. Fisher spends a good portion of lecture giving historical background -- this is all useless. It helps to contextualize the readings and place them along a timeline, but it is unnecessary to know for the final or the essays. Pay a bit of attention to this - especially as it relates to framing the themes of works and common motifs - but don't bother writing taking notes on the English Civil War.

This may seem like a small thing, but it ended up really bugging me by the end of the quarter. Fisher consistently lectured for longer than the allotted 50 minutes -- never more than five minutes, but long enough that it made getting to my next class difficult.

Helpful?

2 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
March 17, 2012
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A

I thought Fisher was great! He came off a bit pretentious and I didn't like him at first, but somehow he won me over throughout the course. He has a way of making ancient themes very relatable. He definitely cares about student learning and wants to be liked by the students, so if you sit in the front he's likely to talk to you. I recommend speaking up in class because he loves questions and often got frustrated by my taciturn class. That said, this class was frustrating because of my horrible TA. If you can, get Megan as a TA. I would have been much happier with the course if I had a different TA or if Fisher himself was doing the grading.

Helpful?

1 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
March 31, 2012
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A

I agree that Professor Fisher seems pretentious at first, but over time you realize he uses big words like "ventriloquize" and "polysemy" and "postlapsarian" not because he's trying to rub his Oxford education in your face, but because he just talks like that. He is naturally brilliant, but not aloof or conceited. In some ways, he seems like a young nerd yearning for social approval, especially when he tries to crack jokes and banters with students before and after class about non-academic matters. His tendency to clutch his coffee for the entire lecture without drinking it seems to be a nervous habit and made him even more adorable to me. Also, he's a hopeless romantic: he told us about how he talked to his wife for the entire night when the power went out, and he was always going on about the simultaneously terrifying and amazing moment of saying "I love you" for the first time. Anyways, before I create the impression that I have a crush on Fisher, back to his teaching:

He had a tendency to ask a series of really big, sweeping questions about the texts like: "What is a king? What does it mean to be human? What is a 'true' song? What does it mean to be an angry horse?" I'm not kidding about that last one. I found these sort of annoying, especially because he expected very focused questions for the weekly reading responses. Speaking of these, they feel like a hassle, but if you really spend time on a couple, they can easily develop into your paper topics (both of my papers came out of reading responses).

WARNING: The midterm is easy. The final is not. Do not become complacent after Week 5 if you did well both on paper 1 and the midterm, because the second half of the quarter has WAY more reading. Keep up, or else you'll have to cram three plays, countless sonnets, some dense prose, and the terrifying Paradise Lost into your brain a week before the final— not possible, and I learned this the hard way when I got to the essay and had nothing to say about Milton...

For your papers, go to office hours. I never went to Fisher, because my TA, Megan Smith, was awesome and gave me great direction. I actually enjoyed writing my papers, because Fisher allows you to choose your own topic.

Overall, 10A is a decent introductory English course, but it seems ridiculous that Middle English, Donne, Milton, and other very daunting texts begin the undergrad's English career at UCLA. Fisher was frustrated with us sometimes for our reticence in class, but honestly, I didn't feel comfortable talking about texts that I barely understood the plot of after a cursory homework reading. For my essays, I read my chosen texts at least four times to get to a good level of analysis. I still learned a lot from Fisher and Megan, though, and feel confident going into 10B.

Helpful?

1 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
ENGL 10A
COVID-19 This review was submitted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Your experience may vary.
Jan. 8, 2022
Quarter: Fall 2021
Grade: N/A

I'll be honest, the entire time I was taking this class I took comfort in continually drafting a scathing review of this class. Yet the distance of hindsight has made me much more inclined to be a bit kinder. Professor Fisher is not everyone's cup of tea, yet his self-awareness and callous humor are endearing in a weird sort of way. Everything else you've heard is true, the fact that he talks fast and always reaches for coffee (lately, a phantom cup of coffee because of masks). There is passion behind that rapid-fire speech though which is enough to make me forgive him that. There were many times where he would hit upon a topic of discussion and be so swept up by it that you were too. A symptom of this, however, is that race to synthesize and scribble something down because the way he talks evokes a lot but not in a clear-cut manner. Unfortunately, if he grades your paper he will give you borderline rude and vague feedback and i gotta admit, that was not fun. But he ultimately does believe in you and reassured us he isn't "out to get us" when discussing our final. Which actually turned out to be true. If you read and go to class, you will do fine on the midterm/final. I ultimately am grateful for how this class shaped me, and I still remember/enjoy some of the themes Professor Fisher discussed.

Helpful?

1 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Dec. 31, 2010
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A

Fisher is one of the most entertaining and engaging professors I've had at UCLA. He has the miraculous ability to take texts that might initially seem too convoluted or bland/straight-forward and extract really interesting, broad themes, which he makes applicable and relatable through occasional anecdotes and brief history lessons. Certainly, he lectures fairly rapidly, and for some texts, he throws out a string of quotes and only fragments of analysis, which you then have to construct into a coherent opinion on the text, but that exactly what an English lecturer should do. His grading is fair — the midterm is passage ID & analysis, with extra credit, and the final only covers the second half of the quarter (but is an hour of quote ID, an hour of poetry explication, and an hour of essay writing on one of the theses he supplies on the final). There are also two take-home essays. The texts are all fairly interesting (or usually are after hearing his thoughts). He is definitely pretentious, which some might find annoying, but I think it just added to the entertainment value of the lectures.

Also, yes, he does carry around his coffee religiously (yet never actually drinks out of it), but so what? Again, it's mildly entertaining, but you don't focus on it because the ideas coming out of his mouth are so intriguing.

Helpful?

1 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Dec. 17, 2019
Quarter: Winter 2017
Grade: A-

Matthew Fisher is hands down the worst professor I have ever had. He seems incredibly arrogant and does not care at all about how engaged his students are. The guy seems to have a huge ego and really seems to feed off of these freshman/sophomore girls fangirling off of him. Honestly, this class is pretty easy, so it's not hard to pass/get an A, but it's really not worth the amount that you are disregarded as a student. I can't believe a professor this young has ascended to arrogance + apathy this quickly but was very disappointed by his treatment of this class. I get that no one /really/ wants to be teaching 10A, but I still think students deserve respect. This was a real bummer because I was actually really excited about this material.

I hope that Matthew Fisher can continue to grow as a professor, but as he is now, you will not feel like you have gained anything/been treated as a serious student by the end of this class.

Helpful?

1 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Dec. 25, 2018
Quarter: Fall 2018
Grade: A

This class had drastically improved my critical reading and writing skills. All feedback I recieved on my essays were very helpful (and it was cool to learn that all the TAs and the professor grade essays together; they're able to establish a standardized criteria or A papers, B papers, etc...). In regards to the class readings, they can really get away from you if you're not disciplined. Try your best to stay on top of readings. But if you don't finish an assigned set before lecture, that's okay; make sure to finish it eventually, though. There's also an online gallery project that's super fun. Start it early if you can, trying to finish it the day that it's do is not. Fun. Other than that I really enjoyed this class, Professor Fisher says at least 4-5 iconic quotes a lecture. It's great.

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Jan. 10, 2019
Quarter: Fall 2018
Grade: A

His hair looks like a bird's nest, he is as beautiful as he is enigmatic, and I will forever remember the profound wisdoms with which he has left me, both those quantified in mere mortal English and those that transcend any spoken language.

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Jan. 10, 2019
Quarter: Fall 2018
Grade: B+

Right off the bat, I have to say that Fisher is a very harsh grader. My TA gave me As or A-s for all my assignments, including the first essay, "gallery assignment" (which is basically choosing and explaining a series of images), and final, but because Fisher graded my second paper and gave it a C, my final grade in the class became a B+.

That said, he's a very enigmatic and very intelligent professor. His lectures aren't boring even though he does go off on tangents at times, you learn a lot. I cannot stress enough that going to class is essential. Everything in the final exam requires that you understand what Fisher has said about the readings.

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
Jan. 1, 2009
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A

The absolute worst of the worst. His addiction to coffee took priority over his professorial responsibilities and obligations. As if the course's incomprehensibly complex concepts weren't strenuous enough, his embracement of caffeine preceded his writing any of the discussed terms or ideologies. Upon the one rare incident he placed his beverage down, he interrupted lecture in dire search of it. This made the class all the more painful when the subject material predates Shakespeare & friends and is in all but modern English. To top it all off, he lectured at an insanely rapid speech rate.

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
ENGL 10A
Quarter: Fall 2016
Grade: A-
Dec. 30, 2016

The course consists of two prompt-free essays, a Middle English translation quiz, participation in section, the final, and a "gallery project" (which was new to this quarter). The gallery project was a huge pain in the butt for three reasons: there wasn't a lot of direction so we didn't really know what was expected of us, he kept admonishing us to "have fun with it!", and because we were working on this post-thanksgiving and pre-finals -- while reading Paradise Lost. Tip: get a serious head start on PL during earlier weeks (yeah, I know) so you don't end up reading Milton for 4 hours the night before the final.

The final was not nearly as bad as I expected. It was three parts: ID, explication, and long essay. For the ID section, Fisher gave us 10 quotes, we had to write on 6 of them: title, author, original language, date written, and importance of the quote. They were from pretty obvious works and I easily recognized 9 of them. No sweat. The explication essay was straightforward too; we were presented with a poem and performed a close reading. The long essay afforded the most room for creativity. There were two open-ended prompts, we picked one, and answered it using three texts. Fisher required that Paradise Lost be one of those three. Both prompts were interesting, fit well with many of the texts we'd read, and I actually had a lot of fun writing this essay.

My advice for this class is to complete the readings *before* lecture. If you do this, you'll be able to more easily sift through his summary and take pointed notes on theme and meaning. While reviewing for the final, I realized that on days when I had followed my own advice, my notes were much more helpful than otherwise. Fisher spends a good portion of lecture giving historical background -- this is all useless. It helps to contextualize the readings and place them along a timeline, but it is unnecessary to know for the final or the essays. Pay a bit of attention to this - especially as it relates to framing the themes of works and common motifs - but don't bother writing taking notes on the English Civil War.

This may seem like a small thing, but it ended up really bugging me by the end of the quarter. Fisher consistently lectured for longer than the allotted 50 minutes -- never more than five minutes, but long enough that it made getting to my next class difficult.

Helpful?

2 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
ENGL 10A
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A
March 17, 2012

I thought Fisher was great! He came off a bit pretentious and I didn't like him at first, but somehow he won me over throughout the course. He has a way of making ancient themes very relatable. He definitely cares about student learning and wants to be liked by the students, so if you sit in the front he's likely to talk to you. I recommend speaking up in class because he loves questions and often got frustrated by my taciturn class. That said, this class was frustrating because of my horrible TA. If you can, get Megan as a TA. I would have been much happier with the course if I had a different TA or if Fisher himself was doing the grading.

Helpful?

1 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
ENGL 10A
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A
March 31, 2012

I agree that Professor Fisher seems pretentious at first, but over time you realize he uses big words like "ventriloquize" and "polysemy" and "postlapsarian" not because he's trying to rub his Oxford education in your face, but because he just talks like that. He is naturally brilliant, but not aloof or conceited. In some ways, he seems like a young nerd yearning for social approval, especially when he tries to crack jokes and banters with students before and after class about non-academic matters. His tendency to clutch his coffee for the entire lecture without drinking it seems to be a nervous habit and made him even more adorable to me. Also, he's a hopeless romantic: he told us about how he talked to his wife for the entire night when the power went out, and he was always going on about the simultaneously terrifying and amazing moment of saying "I love you" for the first time. Anyways, before I create the impression that I have a crush on Fisher, back to his teaching:

He had a tendency to ask a series of really big, sweeping questions about the texts like: "What is a king? What does it mean to be human? What is a 'true' song? What does it mean to be an angry horse?" I'm not kidding about that last one. I found these sort of annoying, especially because he expected very focused questions for the weekly reading responses. Speaking of these, they feel like a hassle, but if you really spend time on a couple, they can easily develop into your paper topics (both of my papers came out of reading responses).

WARNING: The midterm is easy. The final is not. Do not become complacent after Week 5 if you did well both on paper 1 and the midterm, because the second half of the quarter has WAY more reading. Keep up, or else you'll have to cram three plays, countless sonnets, some dense prose, and the terrifying Paradise Lost into your brain a week before the final— not possible, and I learned this the hard way when I got to the essay and had nothing to say about Milton...

For your papers, go to office hours. I never went to Fisher, because my TA, Megan Smith, was awesome and gave me great direction. I actually enjoyed writing my papers, because Fisher allows you to choose your own topic.

Overall, 10A is a decent introductory English course, but it seems ridiculous that Middle English, Donne, Milton, and other very daunting texts begin the undergrad's English career at UCLA. Fisher was frustrated with us sometimes for our reticence in class, but honestly, I didn't feel comfortable talking about texts that I barely understood the plot of after a cursory homework reading. For my essays, I read my chosen texts at least four times to get to a good level of analysis. I still learned a lot from Fisher and Megan, though, and feel confident going into 10B.

Helpful?

1 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
ENGL 10A
COVID-19 This review was submitted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Your experience may vary.
Quarter: Fall 2021
Grade: N/A
Jan. 8, 2022

I'll be honest, the entire time I was taking this class I took comfort in continually drafting a scathing review of this class. Yet the distance of hindsight has made me much more inclined to be a bit kinder. Professor Fisher is not everyone's cup of tea, yet his self-awareness and callous humor are endearing in a weird sort of way. Everything else you've heard is true, the fact that he talks fast and always reaches for coffee (lately, a phantom cup of coffee because of masks). There is passion behind that rapid-fire speech though which is enough to make me forgive him that. There were many times where he would hit upon a topic of discussion and be so swept up by it that you were too. A symptom of this, however, is that race to synthesize and scribble something down because the way he talks evokes a lot but not in a clear-cut manner. Unfortunately, if he grades your paper he will give you borderline rude and vague feedback and i gotta admit, that was not fun. But he ultimately does believe in you and reassured us he isn't "out to get us" when discussing our final. Which actually turned out to be true. If you read and go to class, you will do fine on the midterm/final. I ultimately am grateful for how this class shaped me, and I still remember/enjoy some of the themes Professor Fisher discussed.

Helpful?

1 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
ENGL 10A
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A
Dec. 31, 2010

Fisher is one of the most entertaining and engaging professors I've had at UCLA. He has the miraculous ability to take texts that might initially seem too convoluted or bland/straight-forward and extract really interesting, broad themes, which he makes applicable and relatable through occasional anecdotes and brief history lessons. Certainly, he lectures fairly rapidly, and for some texts, he throws out a string of quotes and only fragments of analysis, which you then have to construct into a coherent opinion on the text, but that exactly what an English lecturer should do. His grading is fair — the midterm is passage ID & analysis, with extra credit, and the final only covers the second half of the quarter (but is an hour of quote ID, an hour of poetry explication, and an hour of essay writing on one of the theses he supplies on the final). There are also two take-home essays. The texts are all fairly interesting (or usually are after hearing his thoughts). He is definitely pretentious, which some might find annoying, but I think it just added to the entertainment value of the lectures.

Also, yes, he does carry around his coffee religiously (yet never actually drinks out of it), but so what? Again, it's mildly entertaining, but you don't focus on it because the ideas coming out of his mouth are so intriguing.

Helpful?

1 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
ENGL 10A
Quarter: Winter 2017
Grade: A-
Dec. 17, 2019

Matthew Fisher is hands down the worst professor I have ever had. He seems incredibly arrogant and does not care at all about how engaged his students are. The guy seems to have a huge ego and really seems to feed off of these freshman/sophomore girls fangirling off of him. Honestly, this class is pretty easy, so it's not hard to pass/get an A, but it's really not worth the amount that you are disregarded as a student. I can't believe a professor this young has ascended to arrogance + apathy this quickly but was very disappointed by his treatment of this class. I get that no one /really/ wants to be teaching 10A, but I still think students deserve respect. This was a real bummer because I was actually really excited about this material.

I hope that Matthew Fisher can continue to grow as a professor, but as he is now, you will not feel like you have gained anything/been treated as a serious student by the end of this class.

Helpful?

1 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
ENGL 10A
Quarter: Fall 2018
Grade: A
Dec. 25, 2018

This class had drastically improved my critical reading and writing skills. All feedback I recieved on my essays were very helpful (and it was cool to learn that all the TAs and the professor grade essays together; they're able to establish a standardized criteria or A papers, B papers, etc...). In regards to the class readings, they can really get away from you if you're not disciplined. Try your best to stay on top of readings. But if you don't finish an assigned set before lecture, that's okay; make sure to finish it eventually, though. There's also an online gallery project that's super fun. Start it early if you can, trying to finish it the day that it's do is not. Fun. Other than that I really enjoyed this class, Professor Fisher says at least 4-5 iconic quotes a lecture. It's great.

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
ENGL 10A
Quarter: Fall 2018
Grade: A
Jan. 10, 2019

His hair looks like a bird's nest, he is as beautiful as he is enigmatic, and I will forever remember the profound wisdoms with which he has left me, both those quantified in mere mortal English and those that transcend any spoken language.

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
ENGL 10A
Quarter: Fall 2018
Grade: B+
Jan. 10, 2019

Right off the bat, I have to say that Fisher is a very harsh grader. My TA gave me As or A-s for all my assignments, including the first essay, "gallery assignment" (which is basically choosing and explaining a series of images), and final, but because Fisher graded my second paper and gave it a C, my final grade in the class became a B+.

That said, he's a very enigmatic and very intelligent professor. His lectures aren't boring even though he does go off on tangents at times, you learn a lot. I cannot stress enough that going to class is essential. Everything in the final exam requires that you understand what Fisher has said about the readings.

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
ENGL 10A
Quarter: N/A
Grade: N/A
Jan. 1, 2009

The absolute worst of the worst. His addiction to coffee took priority over his professorial responsibilities and obligations. As if the course's incomprehensibly complex concepts weren't strenuous enough, his embracement of caffeine preceded his writing any of the discussed terms or ideologies. Upon the one rare incident he placed his beverage down, he interrupted lecture in dire search of it. This made the class all the more painful when the subject material predates Shakespeare & friends and is in all but modern English. To top it all off, he lectured at an insanely rapid speech rate.

Helpful?

0 0 Please log in to provide feedback.
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