This semester, I am taking five classes. They are; Ceramics, Math for Liberal Arts, Spanish, Photography II, and Psychology of Race & Gender.
So far, my classes haven't been too boring or loaded with homework. I know it is only the fourth week of school, but with my roomies and my classes, I think it's going to be a pretty great semester. I'm going to break down each class and tell you a little more about each one. I'm sure you are thrilled to read this... I will make it as interesting as possible ;)
Ceramics- I have this class from 9am to 11:40 on Mondays and Wednesdays. Right now we are finishing up our duck bowls and starting on a simple form at least ten inches tall for a pit firing we are going to have in a few weeks. A duck bowl is an ancient type of pottery- basically we are making a bowl that has an animal that represents us. A pit firing is where we make something out of clay, the put it into a fire pit, cover it up with wood, sawdust, leaves, pretty much anything that will burn. When this stuff burns it will color the clay in the pit and leave natural colors and maybe even cool designs. I am pretty excited about the pit firing on October 10th. My professor said that it will be like a big get-together pot luck dinner with all of the ceramics and sculpture students.
My next class is Math for Liberal Arts. This is by far the weirdest math class I have ever taken. I'm not exactly sure what we are supposed to learn from this class, or how I will ever use it in real life.. but it should be the very last math class I ever have to take! In today's class we learned about the different ways to tally votes. I have my first test next Wednesday.
I have exactly five minutes to get from Math class on the far side of campus to Spanish class in the first building on campus. Needless to say, I take off out of my math class and walk super fast across campus to my building and the race up five flights of stairs to my classroom. I haven't been late yet, so I guess my method works pretty well. My Spanish class moves very quickly. My professor is American, but she is married to a man from Mexico and speaks spanish at home. She is a very good teacher and i have learned a lot in the few short weeks that we have had class. Just this semester, I am supposed to learn the equivalent to two years of high school spanish. I got a 92% on my first test! The test was over spelling and listening. I am really looking forward to increasing my Spanish speaking capabilities.
On Tuesdays and Thursdays I have Photo II from 9am- 1140. Last semester, when I took photo I we worked only in black and white... well, this semester we are working in color and doing a lot of editing and modifying our pictures. I'm not really sure I like going in and changing the color around in my pictures, maybe I just have to get used to it. Right now in class we are in the process of our first critique. For the first project, we were told to take pictures of light and color... an impossible yet simple assignment. My critique went pretty well, my classmates seemed like they liked my photos and had some pretty good things to say about my work. Tomorrow we will be finding out about our second photo project. I'm a little nervous about what it could possibly be...
My last class is called Psychology of Race & Gender. Basically, this class is all about stereotypes people have about different races and genders. It's a pretty interesting class so far. We are reading a book about a man who was raised as a girl. It is a strange but very good book. The only bad thing I have found that don't like about this class is writing reaction papers. We have to read some about some boring issue concerning race and gender and then read a pro essay and then a con essay. After reading all of this, we have to come up with a reaction and strong opinion on the issue. It's a great big ball of fun.
See, that wasn't so bad now was it? Thanks for sticking with it this long. :)