I’m so tired! Today I went to the Rio Salado Restoration Area. It was wonderful to see an area that used to be nothing but a place to dump trash being restored. I saw rabbits and all kinds of birds, of course, lizards and turtles, and water fowls. I thought that I saw what might be a finch. It was the brightest, prettiest yellow. I think that I have this picture in my head of Phoenix as just desert that really excludes wetland habitats, but with the rivers, types of those habitats must be here. I mean not hours out of the city but right here. I can hardly wait to explore stuff like that once I transfer to university to take the classes specific for my major. Anyway, I was really there to volunteer for project Wet. We had groups of 4-5 sixth graders that performed science tasks related to difference fields in science (Botany, Soil Science, Entymology, Water Chemistry, etc.). My group used kits to test for the quantity of different nutrients in the water. Since it’s science, our kits were expired and didn’t actually turn the appropriate colors, but we did get some results. It was fun to talk about the science and why it’s important. And it was just so pretty out there. It just feels good to be outside sometimes.
Thursday, February 28, 2019
Friday, February 22, 2019
Summer opportunities
I’m starting to get caught up. I think that I’m feeling much more capable this semester, so I am still freaking out a little bit about doing everything and doing it well, but I am much more confident that I am perfectly capable. I just need to block out the time and place which sounds much easier than it really is. As far as our experiment, I’m hoping to really zero in on the FTIR. I really like the idea of having quantitative results, and I’m hoping that not a lot of undergraduate researchers will have FTIR results and that maybe it will set us apart. That’s not super important to me, but it would be really nice. I’m really excited about potentially finding some kind of fellowship or internship this semester. I’ve applied for a few. Shout out to Nicole Spencer and Robin Cotter for helping me fill them out. Nicole helps a lot with the STEAM club, but I totally didn’t know that she helped with things like that too. She’s helped multiple students apply for science stuff over the summer though. You should go see her. :-) I’m currently working on completing the application for the program in the attached picture. I’m including a picture, so you can apply too. Your welcome.
Thursday, February 14, 2019
The craziness begins
So this is what happened. On Wednesday, my grandmother was taken in an ambulance to the hospital for a suspected stroke. (She has recovered!) On Thursday evening, I began to have symptoms of step throat. On Saturday, I went to the doctor. I was okay by Monday, but I wasn't good for a thing over the weekend. My son was suspended from Kindergarten on Monday. (I'm convinced that my child's school just enjoys suspending children since they are suspending Kindergartners for pushing. That is just what 5 year olds do. I'm pretty sure it's in the job description.) I got the lab that I had due on Tuesday mixed up because a scheduling issue put us on a different lab than the next one in the book, so my pre-lab wasn't good for much not to mention that I spaced the calculations for the previous lab. On Wednesday, my beautiful son was suspended again. They figured two days this time, but they assure me that he's not the only Kindergartner that is having these very same issues. I have received an extension for a paper for Logic. I am now beginning to understand just how illogical I really am. Hell, I'm starting to feel downright batty. If I was an earlier version of me, I think that I would start capitulating right about now. I don't know that I'm not doing that, but I don't feel as though I am. I just want to push through this mess.
On the upside, I have finished applying for a fellowship this summer. Wish me luck. And MNT was sooo much fun today. It was just the break that I needed. In addition to the protocol and small experiment, we looked through some career facts on the bureau of labor statistics website. One of my classmates was telling me that GCU is about to have their very first class of graduating engineers! I'm really excited to have a nonprofit school with an engineering program right in the middle of Phoenix! I'm going to keep an eye on them. They seem to be moving in a good direction.
It's been raining a lot. I kinda like it.
On the upside, I have finished applying for a fellowship this summer. Wish me luck. And MNT was sooo much fun today. It was just the break that I needed. In addition to the protocol and small experiment, we looked through some career facts on the bureau of labor statistics website. One of my classmates was telling me that GCU is about to have their very first class of graduating engineers! I'm really excited to have a nonprofit school with an engineering program right in the middle of Phoenix! I'm going to keep an eye on them. They seem to be moving in a good direction.
It's been raining a lot. I kinda like it.
Monday, February 4, 2019
Volcano
This semester is starting so odd. I feel super off kilter. It is too soon for that, but on the up side, maybe I can get that out of the way early and really get into a flow. I'm really excited about the subjects that I'm taking this semester. I got into the MNT class, and I get to do an independent project for that. I'm taking geology! I've never had any kind of geology. I'm excited, and my son Loves rocks, so that just makes me more interested because I get to go home and tell him all the stuff. It's awesome. We made a volcano this weekend, and we're working on some crystals right now. They take about 10 days. Oh, and I found a place in my schedule for Logic! I think it will be extremely useful, and the instructor is amazing. Eddie Genna. If you can take a class with him, you should; you will be nothing but better for it. Aww, I'm feeling better already just thinking about how much I like all my classes. Our project face planted this week. The FTIR machine was down, so we didn't get to analyze any samples. Such is science.
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