Friday, August 21, 2020
Sketches from the Fall Semester
Sketches from the Fall Semester 1. Lamborghini recently brought this magnificent display to campus. I believe it qualifies the company for the âBest Intern Recruitment Strategyâ award. (Poster next to car said: The cooperation between Automobili Lamborghini and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology started in October 2016 through a partnership with the MIT Italy program of Dr. Serenella Sferza and Professor Carlo Ratti. THe collaboration already brought to SantâAgata Bolognese a first MIT graduate Patricia Das, Mechanicals Engineering, Class of 2017 to experience the thrill of working in the Super Sport Car field. One year later, Automobili Lamborghini proudly announces its collaboration with two MIT labs: the âDinca Research Lab,â led by Professor Mircea Dinca, Department of Chemistry, and the âMechanosynthesis Groupâ, led by Professor Anastasios John Hart, Department of Mechanical Engineering. THese new collaborations will lead to new technologies in the fields of the Energy Accumulation Systems, Materials Science, and Manufacturing, sustained contacts between MIT and Lamborghini, and additional opportunities for MIT students to perform research at Automobili Lamborghini.) 2. Sometimes, we are very rigid in our ways. Consider how we pronounce class numbers (without class titles!): 6.111 = âsix-one-elevenâ but 5.111 = âfive-eleven-oneâ 7.012 = âseven-oh-one-twoâ 6.0001 = âsix-triple-oh-oneâ but 6.00 = âsix-hundredâ 2.009 = âtwo-double-oh-nineâ and 3.091 = âthree-oh-nine-one There is no apparent logic to this. But when a group of us heard a freshman pronounce 3.091 as âthirty-ninety-oneâ and 7.012 as âseven-oh-twelve, it bothered us, viscerally. Though, isnât âseven-oh-twelveâ actually more efficient than âseven-oh-one-twoâ? 3. East Campus is very close to classes. Anecdotal proof: For five years, Id had a perfect track record of silencing my phone in class. Then, one day, sophomore year at MIT, my phone started talking to me in the middle of a discussionâ"oh the shame! Turns out, the classroom was so close to my room that Google Assistant thought I was still home. Also, Iâve walked myself to MIT Medical Urgent Care with food poisoningâ"itâs just across the road! 4. I am (probably) no longer a Course 24-1 Philosophy major. Which means right now (as a senior), I am still not sure what majors/minors I am graduating with, and that is a learning moment for all the prefrosh and frosh who are already nervous about choosing a major. Plans change, but that is totally ok as long as you keep track of requirements (praise CourseRoad!) and have at least one major set. 5. We had a K-pop dance and watch party recently. Someone even made colorful cake pops for the occasion. After the party and a birthday cheesecake for one of our hall members, we (the 21+) went to an adult dance party at a local club. At this club, everyone happened to look like a member of Coldplay. So next time, weâre going to an emo dance party where everyone will probably look like Green Day or MCR members, so thatâll be a better fitâ"after all, our hall has hosted several âangsty teenâ parties, eyeliner included. 6. One of the papers cited in my poli sci thesis prospectus featured the phrase âmy crunchy gf,â which was rather poetic. The prospectus also included a citation with Allan K. â17 the Blogger as one of the authors, which I think means Allan has made it in academia (read his paper here). My thesis is titled âMainstream Media and the U.S. Government: Correlation of Responses to Ethnic Conflict.â Iâll be exploring how media coverage influences government responses to conflicts, focusing specifically on the Ukraine-Russia conflict. The project will involve a lot of reading and programming for text analysis (aka the âtext-as-dataâ method) and regression. Itâs a mix of media studies and political science, and entirely new territory for me. 7. Once, my upperclassman (21+) friend got drunk at a party after taking 5.111 Introductory Chemistry with the frosh (learning moment: I recommend to delay taking some GIRs). Then she blacked out and (in her words based on eyewitness accounts): âI turned to Toby and muttered âJohn what is the chemical structure of BF3?â When i woke up i was like, âwtf is BF3â and was confused about this until Jake told me it had been on one of the 5.111 lecture slides and i had subconsciously retained it to spit it out while blacked out. Now every time i drink Toby is like, âBF3 girl.â And that is one of the most MIT stories ever. 8. Another Very MIT story: one time, master of the human genome Professor Eric Lander decided to hire students to clean the giant lecture hall boards before the 7.012 Biology GIR (General Institute Requirement). His pitch (paraphrased): âHereâs an opportunity for you to put employed by Eric Landerâ on your resume. Raise your hand if you want to help wipe the boards for money. We need about 5 people.â What he didnât expect: dozens of people raising their hands. The staff had to move the application onlineâ"learn from Prof. Lander how to make effective pitches! 9. The distinctive features of senior year are, in no particular order: There is very little time left at MIT but, on the plus side, Iâve accumulated enough experience to pass on to the freshmen. Now I can shamelessly tell stories about my living group that start with âback in my dayâ¦ââ"its how hall legends are passed on. Incidentally, you can give advice to the frosh even if you fucked up. Call it a âlearning moment.â Currently, my future looks like a dark void. Not in the usual âwill I pass this class?â kind of way. There is nothing months away. My fate is uncontrollable: other people grant jobs. I also do not know where I will live, how, or with whomâ"will I at least be able to keep my very nice free couch and bed? Wish Iâd started a business or something. Networking is crucial. Maybe not so much if youâre set on graduate school, but connection can help anywhere. I got a lot of practice talking and writing emails this semester. Eventually, even meetings with friends became âcoffee chatsâ (youâll understand the significance of this after your first employer info session). Fortunately my recruiter-wooing game has translated into real life: after fall Career Fair, I initiated a conversation with a boy in the (free) taco truck line. Then my friend registered him to vote in Cambridge, so I guess that interaction was a success (he got to fulfill his civic duty!). Motivation level: stirred my coffee with a Sharpie. Transitioning to plastic cutlery. Post Tagged #Course 17 - Political Science #Course 24-1 - Philosophy #East Campus #GIRs
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.