Saturday, August 15, 2020
Quick and dirty
Quick and dirty Im going to have to make this quick today, since I have to study for the GRE biology subject test that Im taking on Saturday its probably not all that terribly different from the SAT II in biology, but Im having to study quite a bit because I havent learned anything about plants or ecology since I got here the MIT department is focused on cellular, molecular, and developmental biology, so no ecology classes for me! (And frankly, I couldnt be gladder. I think plants are uninteresting unless they are in my dinner.) Luckily, I dont think the test will be of too much consequence in my graduate school application, since I already rocked the GRE general test, will be graduating with two degrees, have a good GPA, and (most importantly) have a lot of research experience, including two publications and three glowing letters of recommendation. Of course, I am still stressing big-time about the GRE subject test. Stupid plants! I hate you! EDIT: I sent my personal statement to the professor whose lab I work in, who is also my biology academic advisor, and he just emailed back saying that it is mature and thoughtful I wouldnt change a thing. Feel free to imagine the dance around the room I just did, complete with arm-waving and chanting. It may or may not have looked something like this. Questions! 1. Jennifer asked if Ive ever analyzed my sleep statistics for other variables. Definitely. I tried to look at hours of sleep per night versus GPA, but I didnt get a sensible plot because I couldnt figure out how to calculate the standard error of my GPA. Then I tried to plot the hours of sleep vs. number of units taken (because I feel like I sleep more when I take more classes, mostly out of exhaustion), and the line looks nice except for the second semester of my sophomore year, when I was taking a lot of classes but didnt get much sleep because that was when Adam and I first started dating, and I basically didnt sleep or eat for like two weeks because I was so infatuated. (Awww.) This also reminds me of the time I tried to track my caffeine intake vs. sleep that spreadsheet failed because I started consciously adjusting my caffeine intake so I would get a better correlation on my graph. Oops. 2. Mike asked how much time I spend on homework each week, and if it would be possible for me to have four free hours per day. This is a pretty busy semester for me. I suppose I will usually spend 8-10 hours on my 5.60 problem set each week, plus another 5-6 hours per paper due that week. I spend roughly 3-4 hours reading each week (but some of that can be done during downtime at the lab, so its not all at night at home). Since I am taking five classes, working about 20 hours a week (between my lab job and my blog job), and cheerleading, it is rarely possible for me to have four free hours each weekday although it can be possible, so long as Im willing to work sufficiently hard on the weekend prior to that week. Personally, most of the time I prefer to have a carefree weekend rather than a few hours of free time on the weekdays. I just asked everyone in the lounge how much free time they have in the average weekday. Mark 07, course 6-2 (EECS): Twelve hours. Mark doesnt always go to class, has possibly the most bizarre sleep schedule known to man, and doesnt do any extracurricular activities. Jay 08, course 6-2 (EECS): Depends on the season. Jay is a baseball player, so he has several hours of free time per day during the fall, but almost no free time during baseball season. Tal 09, course 4 (architecture)*: Two hours. Scott 09, course 5 (chemistry)*: Six hours. Scott compares free time at MIT to the ideal gas law: the things you want to do will expand to fill all the available space you have for them. *Freshmen at MIT are officially undeclared that is, the department youre writing down on your application has absolutely no consequence for what youll actually major in. Freshmen declare majors around the middle of their second term (although youre free to switch later if you want to). These two freshmen just happen to be pretty sure they want to major in course 4 and course 5, respectively.
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