7:20 – Corey’s alarm goes off. I wake up, look at the time,
groan, and then doze for ten more minutes before I fully wake up and get up.
After that, I wake up, get ready for the day, eat breakfast, do homework, go to
the pool and use the free internet to check email, etc. After enough time has
elapsed, I get ready to head off with Corey to the campus – a three mile ride
away.
9:30/10:00 – Depending on the day, this is when my first
classes start. Let’s use Thursday as an example. After biking to campus (arriving
at about 9:20), Corey and I split up, then I head to my first class – good ol’
humanities. Dr. Thornton will be sure to give you at least one rant per class
about either: the goodness of GMOs; the fact that Americans have it easy; or,
the stupidity of rabid environmentalism and the praising of industry and modern
technology and agriculture. Otherwise, you get to hear a lot about Odysseus and
his travels, which is actually really interesting. This class lasts until 10:45, at which point I leave for the
Honor’s Office, which has free food, free computer labs, and studying space, as
well as a quiet environment that makes it the perfect choice for a study area.
I stay there doing homework until 1:40, at which point I head out the door to
my next class which starts at 2:00. Corey has a similar method of study, but
since he doesn’t have access to the Honor’s office, he likes to study in a
computer lab in the engineering building in between classes – at least when he
isn’t tutoring.
2:00-3:15 – CE85 (Intro to Civil Engineering). This class
teaches you everything you need to know about
civil engineering (though I dare say it doesn’t teach you everything you
need to know about practicing civil
engineering). If you want to know what a civil engineer does, then go no
further! Dr. Wright will show you the ropes – unless he has a meeting during
class period, in which case he’ll rush in, put a DVD about dams or some other
type of structure (the movies are incredibly interesting), then rush out
immediately after the movie starts. He's a very capable professor, though extremely busy. After the class ends, it’s back to the
Honor’s office!
3:15-4:40 – More time at the Honor’s office. More time to do
homework/study/eat free food!
5:00 – off to CE20 (Engineering Mechanics – statics) where
Dr. Monfaredian will teach you all you need to know about keeping an object
static! He’ll vector you and vector you until you dream about calculating
resultant vectors. Soon we’ll be getting into the good stuff – so far it’s been
mostly review. He obviously knows his material - and knows it well.
6:15 – CE20 ends, and 45 minutes until the Honors meeting
(colloquium). But the Honor’s office closes at 5:00! It was quite a dilemma -
which I solved today by going to the colloquium classroom 45 minutes early.
Better early than late! Also, if you need, you can write statics problems on
the whiteboard if you need any practice – at least until people start to
arrive.
7:00 – Honor’s colloquium, which on the schedule is supposed
to go until 9:00, but thankfully doesn’t. Today, I got out at 7:30, and that,
apparently, is typical. Then, it’s back on the bike for the ride back to the
apartment!
7:45 – Back at the apartment. Eat dinner, talk to Corey, do
homework; if we have time, we’ll play a game, etc. Then, I take a shower, and
go to bed somewhere between 10 and 11, preparing for another day on campus.
This basic pattern is typical for all my days – bike to
campus, class, Honor’s office, class, Honor’s office, class, bike ride to
apartment. Thankfully, I can't say any of my classes are bad...I've got good professors who are all nice.
That is my typical day at college (*virtual bow*). I hope
you enjoyed it!
Casey
Ha-ha-ha!!! Chandler and I really did enjoy it. Very entertaining post Casey!
ReplyDelete-Madyson
You're certainly busy! Keep up the good work Casey:). (virtual applause) hehehe.
ReplyDeleteYou are in our prayers!
I will see you in a couple weeks!
Kelsey