What professor makes a 96.75% in class a A-?
Looks like I'm going to need to do some haggling with the admins to let me do an honors thesis. "The required GPA is 3.50, which I have if you use three significant digits!" Heh.
Things to do with what little time I have left:
-contact professors for recommendations/honors thesis
-research companies I would like to work for
-research grad schools --- done
-practice piano
-study for GMAT/GRE
-finish website
-finish mastering those recitals I recorded (!!!)
Ahhh where has my summer gone?
Showing posts with label school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school. Show all posts
Saturday, July 12, 2008
Catching Up
I'm terrible about keeping up with my own blog, even though I religiously view others. One drawback of posting less often is that I often feel compelled to write a huge uber-post that covers what several smaller posts would have done better. I'm going to try and avoid that in hopes that I will start writing here more often, so let's just talk about my summer plans for now.
This summer I'm working for the Segal Design Institute, which is really just a fancy name for Northwestern's design engineering department, which received a significant amount from money by Gordon Segal, founder of Crate and Barrel, in exchange for his name. Basically, I work to redesign, test, and manufacture various EDC projects that the RIC felt sufficiently lacking in fail to pursue further. So far, I've worked on a jar opening device for people with only one functional arm, and a feeding system for a girl with very little manual dexterity/strength. The next project involves a bit more engineering design, and is a pair of swimming goggles for people with limited upper-body dexterity. None of the projects particularly appeal to me, perhaps because I lack the disabilities to make any of these products necessary, but it certainly has been familiarizing me with the shop tools. Perhaps I'll even make something I'd be willing to put in my portfolio! Having flexible hours is also a perk that I've been taking advantage of a little too much :-P
I'm also taking GEN CMN 102 (Public Speaking) and ECON 311 (Intermediate Macroeconomics) this summer. The main reason I'm taking these classes is because I really want to do a senior thesis (for whatever bizarre reason I cannot say), but can't unless I raise my GPA to a 3.5 by the end of the summer. Having taken a few too many unnecessary classes that destroyed my GPA (*cough cough orgo*), this is my last chance.
In many ways, this summer is my last chance to really shape up in preparation for next year. I had been putting off preparing for the future, thinking "Oh I have time, I'm taking 5 years with the BS/BMus program", but signs now point to me graduating in 4 years with a BS in Mechanical Engineering (hopefully with honors thesis) and Certificate in Engineering Design, so I need to start thinking about finding a job or getting into grad school. This is the summer to beef up my GPA, refine my portfolio, ace my standardized tests (GRE and GMAT in September), and do the relevant things that will land me a nice job/grad school. Oh, and I should keep practicing piano so I can give my senior recital this fall. And learn Chinese better. And get in shape. And maintain some semblance of a social/romantic life. Time really does pass by faster as you age... and yet there are still people that complain of boredom.
This summer I'm working for the Segal Design Institute, which is really just a fancy name for Northwestern's design engineering department, which received a significant amount from money by Gordon Segal, founder of Crate and Barrel, in exchange for his name. Basically, I work to redesign, test, and manufacture various EDC projects that the RIC felt sufficiently lacking in fail to pursue further. So far, I've worked on a jar opening device for people with only one functional arm, and a feeding system for a girl with very little manual dexterity/strength. The next project involves a bit more engineering design, and is a pair of swimming goggles for people with limited upper-body dexterity. None of the projects particularly appeal to me, perhaps because I lack the disabilities to make any of these products necessary, but it certainly has been familiarizing me with the shop tools. Perhaps I'll even make something I'd be willing to put in my portfolio! Having flexible hours is also a perk that I've been taking advantage of a little too much :-P
I'm also taking GEN CMN 102 (Public Speaking) and ECON 311 (Intermediate Macroeconomics) this summer. The main reason I'm taking these classes is because I really want to do a senior thesis (for whatever bizarre reason I cannot say), but can't unless I raise my GPA to a 3.5 by the end of the summer. Having taken a few too many unnecessary classes that destroyed my GPA (*cough cough orgo*), this is my last chance.
In many ways, this summer is my last chance to really shape up in preparation for next year. I had been putting off preparing for the future, thinking "Oh I have time, I'm taking 5 years with the BS/BMus program", but signs now point to me graduating in 4 years with a BS in Mechanical Engineering (hopefully with honors thesis) and Certificate in Engineering Design, so I need to start thinking about finding a job or getting into grad school. This is the summer to beef up my GPA, refine my portfolio, ace my standardized tests (GRE and GMAT in September), and do the relevant things that will land me a nice job/grad school. Oh, and I should keep practicing piano so I can give my senior recital this fall. And learn Chinese better. And get in shape. And maintain some semblance of a social/romantic life. Time really does pass by faster as you age... and yet there are still people that complain of boredom.
Monday, March 24, 2008
Spring Break
Now that I'm on break, I have the luxury of sleeping in, eating lots of food, practicing piano daily, and worrying about my future. As distasteful as the last item is, I can't put off the future any longer. With still no summer internship in sight, I need to find something to do over the summer that won't seem too lame to prospective employers. I can't imagine they'll be too enthusiastic about a potential new hire without any internship experience in his fourth year.
Added to that insecurity is the fact that I still haven't decided what my stay at Northwestern will entail. All I know is that it will be some combination of the below, taking from 4-5 years depending on the path I take:
*BS Mechanical Engineering: This and the Design certificate are the only ones I've decided on for sure.
*BMus Piano Performance: What a tough one. I don't want to go through music history and stuff, but I've already fulfilled so many of the requirements. But, as they say in basic econ classes, sunk cost is sunk cost and shouldn't affect rational decision-making. I need to see if I can get a minor or something.
*Certificate in Engineering Design: They say design is what will set American engineers apart from our outsourced peers in Asia. Northwestern goes a bit further and says design will set apart its engineers from UIUC engineers, which come from a higher-ranked engineering program.
*Certificate in Managerial Analytics: the new Kellogg certificate program (if I can get in). It seems more and more important these days that engineers have some business acumen as well in order to survive and advance in the real world. DP professes to hate this type of engineer on principle, but I plan to be one he doesn't hate (a lofty goal indeed).
*MS Mechanical Engineering: Either through the 5-year BS/MS program at NU, or elsewhere if I can get in anywhere. My interests seem to lie in mechatronics and design, so I'll be looking at schools that are strong in those fields.
*MS Engineering Design and Innovation: It's such a new program (5 students so far) that I don't know what to think of it and how much the degree is worth. But it seems like a good combination of engineering, design, and business which fits my interests. Might even be able to finish in less than 5 years.
*Co-op: Only if I get an offer this quarter. If not, it's too late to do this anymore. Pro is that you get paid work experience and (if you perform well) usually an invitation to join full-time when you graduate. Con is that it takes an extra year and is usually paid less than industry average.
I'll need to do a lot more research before I decide in the end. For now, I shouldn't rule out anything, and I'll prepare with everything in mind. Which means continuing to search for internships, studying for the GRE (which, luckily, is like the SAT's older brother), building relationships with professors for recommendations, pulling up my GPA, continuing to build solid extracurricular experience and social skills. Sometimes I think it'd be a lot easier if I could just choose something and focus. It always pains me when JG says that you should do everything to the best of your ability in an attempt to make me practice more... because you could apply that same argument to everything I do and make a case for focusing more on that particular aspect of my life. It's picking and choosing that's the hardest part.
Now that I'm thoroughly stressed out, in other non-life-changing news, my parents gave me some traditional Chinese medicine which apparently can help me gain a couple centimeters to reach the magic 180. I feel like my epiphyseal plates have probably already disappeared by now, but hey, I wouldn't mind a couple centimeters. Also, I think I'll get my hair cut soon. Anyone know any good hairstyles for Asian men with thick, wavy, coarse hair? I'm kind of liking this but I also think that's just Collin Chou having a great smile.
Added to that insecurity is the fact that I still haven't decided what my stay at Northwestern will entail. All I know is that it will be some combination of the below, taking from 4-5 years depending on the path I take:
*BS Mechanical Engineering: This and the Design certificate are the only ones I've decided on for sure.
*BMus Piano Performance: What a tough one. I don't want to go through music history and stuff, but I've already fulfilled so many of the requirements. But, as they say in basic econ classes, sunk cost is sunk cost and shouldn't affect rational decision-making. I need to see if I can get a minor or something.
*Certificate in Engineering Design: They say design is what will set American engineers apart from our outsourced peers in Asia. Northwestern goes a bit further and says design will set apart its engineers from UIUC engineers, which come from a higher-ranked engineering program.
*Certificate in Managerial Analytics: the new Kellogg certificate program (if I can get in). It seems more and more important these days that engineers have some business acumen as well in order to survive and advance in the real world. DP professes to hate this type of engineer on principle, but I plan to be one he doesn't hate (a lofty goal indeed).
*MS Mechanical Engineering: Either through the 5-year BS/MS program at NU, or elsewhere if I can get in anywhere. My interests seem to lie in mechatronics and design, so I'll be looking at schools that are strong in those fields.
*MS Engineering Design and Innovation: It's such a new program (5 students so far) that I don't know what to think of it and how much the degree is worth. But it seems like a good combination of engineering, design, and business which fits my interests. Might even be able to finish in less than 5 years.
*Co-op: Only if I get an offer this quarter. If not, it's too late to do this anymore. Pro is that you get paid work experience and (if you perform well) usually an invitation to join full-time when you graduate. Con is that it takes an extra year and is usually paid less than industry average.
I'll need to do a lot more research before I decide in the end. For now, I shouldn't rule out anything, and I'll prepare with everything in mind. Which means continuing to search for internships, studying for the GRE (which, luckily, is like the SAT's older brother), building relationships with professors for recommendations, pulling up my GPA, continuing to build solid extracurricular experience and social skills. Sometimes I think it'd be a lot easier if I could just choose something and focus. It always pains me when JG says that you should do everything to the best of your ability in an attempt to make me practice more... because you could apply that same argument to everything I do and make a case for focusing more on that particular aspect of my life. It's picking and choosing that's the hardest part.
Now that I'm thoroughly stressed out, in other non-life-changing news, my parents gave me some traditional Chinese medicine which apparently can help me gain a couple centimeters to reach the magic 180. I feel like my epiphyseal plates have probably already disappeared by now, but hey, I wouldn't mind a couple centimeters. Also, I think I'll get my hair cut soon. Anyone know any good hairstyles for Asian men with thick, wavy, coarse hair? I'm kind of liking this but I also think that's just Collin Chou having a great smile.
Saturday, March 15, 2008
No Rest for the Wicked
Whew! I just woke up a short while ago from my first time sleeping in my own bed for the last 5 days. Due to the inevitable barrage of end-of-quarter projects and "midterms", I spent nights sleeping in the Ford building and stopping by my apartment for only short periods of time to restock on ramen that I would cook and eat in Ford. The fun is by no means over, but I think I can rest a little this weekend. In the meantime, here's a picture of the Mechatronics project I've been working on (photo credit goes to Prof. Michael Peshkin)!
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It's a 2-DOF user-controllable sphere for studying granular flow. Some big shots in McCormick are interested in using it for their research, which means we have to do a really good job making it robust and flexible. When I get done with my Steinway laptop concept project for Industrial Design Methods class, I'll put up some pictures too.
Now on another note: Greg Mankiw! The Harvard professor, former CEA member, and highly cited economist many of you may recognize from the cover of your introductory economics textbook has a blog where he brings up interesting little (economics-related) tidbits he finds. I highly recommend it. A few particularly interesting links from his recent posts: The Inequality Myth, Unintended Consequences, and Middle Class Tax Burden.
.jpg)
It's a 2-DOF user-controllable sphere for studying granular flow. Some big shots in McCormick are interested in using it for their research, which means we have to do a really good job making it robust and flexible. When I get done with my Steinway laptop concept project for Industrial Design Methods class, I'll put up some pictures too.
Now on another note: Greg Mankiw! The Harvard professor, former CEA member, and highly cited economist many of you may recognize from the cover of your introductory economics textbook has a blog where he brings up interesting little (economics-related) tidbits he finds. I highly recommend it. A few particularly interesting links from his recent posts: The Inequality Myth, Unintended Consequences, and Middle Class Tax Burden.
Saturday, February 9, 2008
Epic Fail
Here's a post to start off a new lunar year! I wonder if blogging is my back-up response if people aren't available to talk through stuff. A lot's been weighing on my mind recently. Some highlights:
Grades: This was supposed to be the quarter where I finally get all my acts together and emerge a newer, smarter Jon. I even set up my class schedule so that I could ease my transition into the brotherhood of smart people. Well, that goes to show you can't get rid of idiocy that fast, no matter how much you wish you could.
Co-op/Internships: I need one! Please! I'm still trying to sort out my 5-year plan, whether it ends up being co-op or BS/MS. My future still seems so uncertain, though, which bugs me.
Friends: I've been disappointed in a lot of people lately, myself included, but at the same time getting to know other people better. I'm partway in so many groups of people and trying to figure out where I belong is confusing me. This is especially tricky in the case of...
Housing for next year: Who am I living with? Why are other people so picky? Why am I so picky?
Family: I worry about my brothers maybe more than I worry about myself sometimes. I hope they don't resent me for being overbearing and hard to deal with at times. I figure I'll be one of those stressed-out Asian parents that push their kids to overachieve. Maybe it's because I wish I did get more discipline. That's no fault of my parents, though, that's me just not taking in what they had to teach me. Although, as a prerequisite to parenthood...
Relationships: Another year passed. Still a Zero. Someone'll show up in the end, I hope.
Well, I really shouldn't be up this late -- Celebrasia is today, and there'll be a lot of work to do! But I just finished downloading Enchanted...
Grades: This was supposed to be the quarter where I finally get all my acts together and emerge a newer, smarter Jon. I even set up my class schedule so that I could ease my transition into the brotherhood of smart people. Well, that goes to show you can't get rid of idiocy that fast, no matter how much you wish you could.
Co-op/Internships: I need one! Please! I'm still trying to sort out my 5-year plan, whether it ends up being co-op or BS/MS. My future still seems so uncertain, though, which bugs me.
Friends: I've been disappointed in a lot of people lately, myself included, but at the same time getting to know other people better. I'm partway in so many groups of people and trying to figure out where I belong is confusing me. This is especially tricky in the case of...
Housing for next year: Who am I living with? Why are other people so picky? Why am I so picky?
Family: I worry about my brothers maybe more than I worry about myself sometimes. I hope they don't resent me for being overbearing and hard to deal with at times. I figure I'll be one of those stressed-out Asian parents that push their kids to overachieve. Maybe it's because I wish I did get more discipline. That's no fault of my parents, though, that's me just not taking in what they had to teach me. Although, as a prerequisite to parenthood...
Relationships: Another year passed. Still a Zero. Someone'll show up in the end, I hope.
Well, I really shouldn't be up this late -- Celebrasia is today, and there'll be a lot of work to do! But I just finished downloading Enchanted...
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