Sunday, July 26, 2020

Save a tree

Save a treeĆ¢€¦ eat a Beaver. Speaking of beavers killing treeslets talk about how many pages of paperwork the MIT Athletics Department (DAPER) is forcing upon me. As a new MIT athlete, the first thing I had to do was print the Eligibility Checklist, which has been tremendously useful. It lists all of the forms that need to be filled out, along with their deadlines and the addresses they need to be mailed to. First there was the Medical Report and the Supplemental Medical History for Varsity Athletes (both of which were submitted to MITMedical). Then I had to fill out the Practice Form, which was sent to the athletics department and was 10 pages long! These were all due August 1st (yesterday, for those of you who are chronologically challenged now that summers here) and the Medical Report was required for all incoming freshmen, so I hope everyone met the deadline! Personally, I mailed all medical forms and the first 9 pages of the practice form in plenty of time, thank you very much. (The tenth page was discovered this morning in my scanner. I never took it out after making copies. See what happens when you follow directions?! I mailed it out today with a little apology note attached and crossed my fingers that it wont get lost and create a big, messy, administrative problem.) Now I just need to fill out the one page Sports Information Sheet and the 10 page NCAA Division III Form and brin g them with me to my first meeting with my team. Oh, but before signing the NCAA form, I need to read the Summary of NCAA Regulations- Division III, which is thankfully only 11 pages long. Im tired just thinking about this. Moving on to.FEE results! The FEE stands for the Freshman Essay Evaluation, and all incoming frosh are required to take it. You sign up on-line, access the required readings on-line, and submit your essays by email. A few weeks later, the results are posted. These results analyze your English ability and determine which classes you are able to take as a freshman. I took the test in June, because the results were available before the deadline for the HASS-D lottery. The upshot of this is that you can make more informed choices in the lottery, because youll know what restrictions will apply to you next year. I read my results (which were very helpful and specificthey totally called me on the fact that my essays had no structure at all, so props for that) and confidently submitted my preferences for the lottery. Once I did this, I of course promptly became very, very confused about my results and panicked about the possibility that I had messed up the lottery. [Editors note in 2017: some of the requirements described below have been updated since this was first published. Please refer to the current description of MITs communications requirement.] Heres what happened: my results said that I may take any CI-H or CI-HW subject during your first year at MIT, which was fine with me, because I had no idea what the difference was between CI-H and CI-HW. Still dont, in fact. So I just filled out the lottery based on the subjects I was interested in and didnt take CI-designation into account at all. Then I realized that some of my choices (including my first choice) werent Communication Intensive at all. I was nervous that I messed up (maybe I was required to take a CI class?) until I realized that the course catalog we received was made especially for freshmen- so if all freshmen were required to take a CI class first semester, why would non-CI classes be included in the booklet? Exactly. So, assuming youve followed me so far, heres what Ive figured out. Youre required to take 4 CI classes before you graduate. This translates to roughly one per year. So if I take a regular HASS-D first semester, I can still take a CI class second semester. (You are required to take one CI class your freshman year, and CommReq agrees with me. Yes! I feel like Ive finally figured something out!) Apparently, Ill be ineligible for sophomore standing for the spring semester, buthey, I have no idea what Im doing anyway. Thats why they give me an advisor and let you add and drop classes later in the term and all that Next big date: August 15th, when advising folders will be available on-line. (These will include such goodies as your freshman advisor and seminar, AP scores, results of requests for transfer credit, FEE results, Math Diagnostic results, and HASS-D lottery results.) Fun stuff. I apologize for the dryness of this entry, promise to write things that are more entertaining once I start packing and getting properly excited about college, and certify that I am absolutely uncertain of any and all of the information listed above. One last thought- I finally made a proper banner and set up my blog just the way I like it. Ahhh, satisfaction. Thoughts? Please let me know if its completely illegible. I have a tendency to really screw things up that way (just ask Ben). Please dont tell me if you think its really ugly, unless youre sure its ugly only by accident, because that would make me sad. OK thanks. Have a nice day. =)