Thursday, August 13, 2020

Second Day of Class

Second Day of Class I dont make schedules or use planners. In fact, I dont even use Google Calendar. It is slightly amusing to see fellow classmates toting multicolored, multi-ringed, colorful planning books complete with enough pens to double the colors of the rainbow. In a class that I was in today, a classmate next to me opened up her Google Calendar (complete with tabbed events in 10 different colors) and I realized that if I cross my eyes slightly, her calendar almost resembles the pointillist works of Seurat. Pretty cool actually. I realized in college over the last two years that this lack of organization was partly due to never getting used to having a planner (I jot it down and never open the planner again), but mainly due to apathy and laziness. Ive realized that the philosophy which works the best for me is, well, if I cant remember the event, then it must not be important enough in the first place. And thus Ive mentally justified my use of not using schedulers or planners. :P (dont worry this just means i have to prioritize earlier) I do keep a Post-It pad with me on my desk and in my backpack. When I have to remember really important events (like where my classes are meeting or my advisers phone number), I usually write them down on a Post-It note, and then stick it somewhere where Ill remember to look at (like on the wall, or in my pocket most of the timehaha). In defense of not using a schedule, I think my primary reason is that I enjoy the feeling of spontaneity in a day. I enjoy not having everything laid out in a regimented fashion on a sheet of paper or on a screen. Theres a certain peace of mind about thinking that right now Im living in THIS moment, without thinking about the classes, the meetings, and other events that Ill need to be rushing off to later. Which is also sometimes why I slip off and just amble along the Charles during the pauses in my days since getting back to Boston (the river is beautiful now). Theres a certain serenity and peace about grasping on to those little pauses during the day something that I know will be much harder to do once I enter The Real World after the next two years. I shall stop beginning my paragraphs with the letter I. But ANYWHOO that was a long explanation on why I dont ever have any of those cool visual schedules to tell you what my scheduling looks like for the upcoming semester. =p So these two days of class has been pretty intense. Well, so for everyone non-frosh, this Tuesday was Reg Day, where we go meet with our advisers and register for the classes that weve pre-reged for and which we will be taking for the upcoming semester. Well, the thing is, now that having finished most of the biology core requirements, I have a lot of space for electives, and deciding which exactly to take is hard! (yes, once you finish the GIRs and many of your major requirements, course selection does become difficult) Thus, pretty much my adviser signed off on the litany of classes I initially put on my schedule and I set off to explore the classes that Ive signed up for (but also many others which I didnt initially anticipate). Yesterday, I attended a total of EIGHT hours of class (one three-hour class, one two-hour class, two 1.5-hour classes). This makes for my most productive day ever since coming to MIT (I didnt even have eight hours of class in one day during high school, lol). This was what it looked like: 9:30 AM 11 AM (7.06 Cell Biology) For me, this is my last Course 7 requirement in the 7.0x string, beginning from 7.01, going through 7.02, 7.03, and 7.05). As customary with the biology core requirements, its a very full class, with many familiar faces from 7.03 and 7.05. The best thing I got out of the first class Prof. Lodish: Biology IS History. (he was trying to tie in how biology is a chain of evolutionary events, just like history is a chronicle of past events). This was really interesting because Im seriously looking into declaring a 21H (history) double major during my remaining semesters here Im going to be taking probably two history courses this semester to explore the department and then making a decision in the spring. 11 AM 1 PM (7.21 Microbial Physiology) So initially, I didnt think I was going to be taking this class, because 1) I know pretty much next to nothing about bacteria except how to grow them in the lab and 2) the course title sounds daunting (how can you have an entire class about microbes?). But after this summer, my friends girlfriend at Berkeley who is a Microbial Biology major told me to give the subject a try, so I went for the first session. The class is interesting since its the smallest biology class Ive been in since coming to MIT, and even among the 40 or so students who are there, it was a 50-50 split between grad and undergrad students! (its a joint grad/undergrad course, I realized later). The class seems to be focused heavily on science literature discussion, which would probably be a departure from the traditional lectured-at biology classes that Ive been in, so maybe I will end up giving this a try. 1 PM 2:30 PM Lunch break so I wouldnt starve. 2:30 PM 4:00 PM (9.01 Intro to Neuroscience) This is the gateway course to the BCS (Brain and Cognitive Science Course 9) department, and thus its usually full of sophomores who are taking the course as their first foray into Course 9. Ive heard a lot of good things about this class from non-course-9 majors whos been through the class, describing the class as engaging and even fun, so I thought I would give it a try, from having taken an onslaught of biology and chem classes since I exited the GIRs. I thought the first class seemed promising, so Ill probably just stick it through and see what happens :) (oh and the class is in the beautiful BCS building (building 46). being in that building always makes me so happy, lol) 4:00 PM 7:00 PM Took the bus to Harvard on an errand, and had a great dinner at the Vietnamese place next to Harvard Square. I must honestly say that all east coast Asian food has paled in comparison that in the Bay, after this summer, sadly but nonetheless, it was still good. :) 7:00 PM 10:00 PM (21H.308 the Vikings) Originally I was going to take 21F.712 (which is like Spanish 5 here), but then this history deal came up and I thought I should look into more history classes this semester, so I signed up for this its a totally different feeling having classes at night, actually. The class itself isnt bad, but I might be looking into another history class since it was a bit of just meh for me. 10:00 PM 12:30 AM Went home, and iHouse had an impromptu Wii party (while we still have the time and energy to before the Great Academic Onslaught), which culminated into me getting wacked by the Wii controller during Wii Boxing and getting a huge bump on my forehead (it didnt really hurt much, but it was crazy how fast it swelled up ). Im afraid that Wii Boxing turned more into Real Life Boxing, haha. (hey at least we didnt break the TV :P) I finished up course shopping today by going to another three classes 9:00 AM 11:00 AM (7.20 Human Physiology) This is an earlyyyyy class! but otherwise, the content seems fascinating actually. Its interesting how MIT would structure a physiology class around the molecular basis, rather than just straight-up memorization. (ie. the class going to explain from a biochemical perspective how parts of your body work rather than making student memorize names to body parts or names of bones). I will probably blog more about the bio major before I graduate, but this just illustrates again that Biology here is really a THINKING major, not the typical run-of-the-mill biology majors you are familiar with (the ones that make you memorize phylum names or trivia like AP Biology). Just like the engineering courses here, the focus is on problem-solving, and I would say the focus is definitely on why? rather than just what? 11:00 AM 12:30 PM (7.30 Ecology I) I signed up for this class because I think itll also be cool to explore ecology, which I briefly touched on after self-studying all of AP Environmental Science in 60 hours during my senior year of high school. -___-;; Unbeknownst to me, I actually stumbled upon a Course 1 CI-M* class. (we have things called CI classes at MIT which stands for Communication Intensive. its basically another way of saying that theres going to be a lot more essay writing in the class, usually ending in some sort of lengthy paper. there are CI-Hs, and CI-Ms. CI-Hs are CIs in the humanities, which you take as part of your HASS (humanities) requirement for graduation. CI-Ms are CI classes in your major, which you have to take two to graduate most CI-Ms in the science majors are lab classes, and your resulting write-up and paper is counted as the CI aspect) There is a major 10-15 paper/project assigned for the course, but I think it may prove to be an interesting challenge, so I guess Ill keep it and see how it goes. As this is also a Course 1 class, theres plenty of 1C (civil engineering) and 1E (environmental engineering) majors in the course, so it was also cool to be in a class with a different crowd. 12:30 PM 1:00 PM Short lunch at Stata. 1:00 PM 2:30 PM (21H.466 Imperial and Revolutionary Russia) This is a tiny class! (7 people) I actually miss these classes a lot from high school, since the two years past then has generally been lectures with 100+ kids even most of my HASSes had 20 or 30. The course content already proves to be pretty engaging so Im definitely looking forward to how this goes in the coming semester. SOOO that concludes all 13 hours of course-shopping, and as you can see thats a total of 84 (127) credits, which is NOT a good idea (but which I can actually technically take since there are surprisingly no scheduling conflicts, lol and I dont even have class on Friday! I dont know how all of this worked out, haha). Im definitely keeping 7.06, 9.01, and 21H.466, dropping 21H.308, most probably keeping 7.30, and either 7.20 or 7.21 (I really want to take 7.20 but I have a pretty full semester, considering Im probably also doing a UROP, so Im not sure whether to drop it (ill be somewhat sad) or stick it through on Pass/D/F (the class is informally known for its difficulty)). Im aiming for 60 credits (5 classes) + UROP, and potentially another history class if I can find one that fits in my schedule and one that Im interested in. In any case, lets hope sleep and sanity isnt a problem this semester :)

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