Other Fall 2008 Papers

ART 115 – Art History II

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Paper 1, Raphael

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Paper 2, Hamada Shoji

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Paper 3, Pointillism

HIS 131 – American History I

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Essay 1, Colombian Exchange

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Essay 2, Emancipation

My Final Papers

I don’t know if anyone really cares to read my academic writings, but here they are, my final papers:

ENG 131 – Introduction to Literature
Frost vs. Longfellow
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HIS 131 – American History I
Sociological Impact of the American Civil War
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Another Course Change

I’m not being flaky this time, I have a valid reason for the change, two of them actually. This is the course I originally wanted, but it was full, so I took an alternate, but now I’ve been given a permit. The second reason, it counts towards a core requirement on the psychology degree, whereas the other course was a duplicate requirement (which makes it an elective credit).

 

So, reflecting my last change of course for the spring semester, here is my complete detailed semester, including the change from Clinical/Counseling Psychology to Cognitive Psychology.

Spring 2009

Theories of Personality [PSYC310]
Vivian Dzokoto
Theories of Personality: An investigation of theories concerning the development and functioning of the normal personality, with attention to empirical findings related to individual adjustment or maladjustment. — 3 hours

Registered

Cognitive Psychology [PSYC421]
James Hogan
A study of theoretical approaches and research findings relevant to the complex processes of thinking, linguistic expression, problem solving, and decision making, with attention to the relation of these processes to intelligence and creativity. — 3 hours

Registered

Art History I [ART114]
Richard L. Gilbert
This course covers the development of art forms from ancient times to the Renaissance. Emphasis is placed on content, terminology, design, and style. Upon completion, students should be able to demonstrate an historical understanding of art as a product reflective of human social development. This course has been approved to satisfy the Comprehensive Articulation Agreement general education core requirement in humanities/fine arts. — 3 hours

Registered

Nutrition [BIO155]
Paula H. Dedmon
This course covers the biochemistry of foods and nutrients with consideration of the physiological effects of specialized diets for specific biological needs. Topics include cultural, religious, and economic factors that influence a person’s acceptance of food, as wellas nutrient requirements of the various life stages. Upon completion, students should be able to identify the functions and sources of nutrients, the mechanisms of digestion, and the nutritional requirements of all age groups. This course has been approved to satisfy the Comprehensive Articulation Agreement for transferability as a premajor and/or elective course requirement. — 3 hours

Registered

Digital Photography Studio [ART288DH]
Michael K. Hensdill
This course provides the opportunity for advanced self-determined work beyond the limits of regular studio course sequences. Emphasis is placed on creative self-expression and in-depth exploration of techniques and materials. Upon completion, students should be able to create original projects specific to media, materials, and techniques. This course has been approved to satisfy the Comprehensive Articulation Agreement for transferability as a premajor and/or elective course requirement. — 3 hours

Registered

Waiting for Grades

This should feel like a three times annual procedure by now. Finish all of my course work and then wait patiently, or not so patiently, for instructors to enter grades. This semester is a little different though, and I can’t put my finger on why. I am usually so very hyper and waiting for grades is almost like an Olympic sport, but this semester it is like I am waiting for fates to decide if I have done well enough or not to get an A in a particular course, while other courses the anticipated grade is much clearer. I am calm, but almost so calm that I am depressed. I don’t want the semester to be over, I want there to be more to it. I have enjoyed my courses so much this semester that it is just sad that they are over. The spring semester will start soon enough I suppose, but what am I supposed to do now? I have been filling my days and evenings (or late nights, early mornings and afternoons) with doing classwork or with avoiding particular assignments that I felt particularly procrastinistic (or procrastinatory, neither are real words, but oh well) about.
I have been avoiding art a lot this semester, probably because I have been busy doing other things, but now it seems a little strange to just jump back to them. It has gotten cold outside now, which makes ceramics a pain for me, as I have no good indoor wash-up facility for it. Drawing seems too time consuming and requires me being patient with myself as I find my hand again. Photography… while always easy to do and fun, its been freaking cold this week.
I’m noticing a pattern here, my excuse for everything seems to be that it is cold outside. Perhaps I’m suffering from a bit of seasonal affective disorder since winter seems to have hit so suddenly?

Composition of the Internet

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If only this were true. There is a lack of hardcore porn on the Internet, the soccer moms have taken over, so now there is more DIY info for making toaster cozies than there is high quality, freely available hard-core porn.

The Efficiency of Men?

Less than 24 hours ago (about 3PM yesterday), I sent a request for an informal evaluation of my computer science courses to UNC-FSU’s Mathematics and Computer Science department, now an official evaluation sheet has been sent to the Office of the Registrar for input. It took two weeks for my General Education/TAC adviser to make any recommendations about my course equivalences, and another two weeks to get around to sending them to the registrar. It took my Psychology adviser about 3 weeks to look over my transcripts and decide that she did not see any additional course work that she wished to take from them. Both of them are women, and apparently are very slow and methodical in their handling of things. The Math/CS department chair and the CS Coordinator are both men, and have handled things with great haste and efficiency.
All of this being said… the registrar is a woman and it always takes her several days to do things, so I expect to see my transfer credits at the beginning of the new year.

Finished with Fall 2008

I just finished with my last assignment of the semester, and it is such a relief to be done. All of my exams are finished and all of my projects are turned in.

 

I finished my literature project on Tuesday, a little bit late, but oh well, I just had to upload it to my literature wiki. It has not been graded, but the instructor has promised to turn in grades on Friday…I’m nervous about that a bit. I worry that I am going to get something less than an A and ruin my Gaston GPA (presently a 4.0).

 

Earlier this evening I finished off my Art History II course. I took the final exam. The timing allowed is 100 minutes, and I ended up using about 50 minutes. I received a perfect score on the exam. I have an ‘A’ in the course.

 

A few days ago I finished my American history paper and got it turned in, tonight I finished my last history quiz. I did well on the quiz, the paper remains ungraded. I worry about this class because I have so far only been awarded 137.93 points out of 200 for the course, and there are still about 60 points left unallocated (20 points for discussion board, 15 for the paper, 15 for the project). Could go either way, but presently it looks like the course is going to lean towards ‘A’.

 

Finally, I am finished with C# Programming. I finished my final project last night, and then this evening I finished my final exam. At present I have a ‘B’ in the course, but there is a large quantity of points that have not yet been assigned.

 

Overall I feel very good about the semester. This weekend I should have final grades from all of my instructors… at least by Monday anyway.

UNC-FSU CS Transfer Credit

I just received my transfer credit evaluation from Fayetteville State University’s Computer Science and Mathematics department (for a potential minor).

Transfer CSC 148 at CPCC to FSU as CSC 105
Transfer ITCS 1214 at UNC-Charlotte to FSU as CSC 120
Transfer ITCS 1215 at UNC-Charlotte to FSU as CSC 130
Transfer ECGR 2103 at UNC-Charlotte to FSU as CSC 202
Transfer ITCS 2231 at UNC-Charlotte to FSU as CSC 100

Poetry is Stressful

I got a late start on my Frost vs. Longfellow paper, and since it needed to be at least 8 pages in length, I started off a little worried. The first 3 pages or so came out well, but the rest sort of dragged on. I am so happy, I am finally finished with the paper, it is turned in and now my life can return to normal (normal for my life I guess). Finished I am, no more moods, meters, pentameters, stanzas, metaphors or imagery for me tonight. Now I can rest… at least until I have to start my C# project next week, then I think I can sit still for a few weeks, before Psychology courses start on January 8th. This whole winter break thing is seeming shorter than it used to. When I was a child, wasn’t this break like 4 weeks? 

Word of the Day: Weather-cock

I have been staring at Henry Wadsworth Longfellow poetry all day, and I think it is starting to get to me.

I ran across a fun word used several times in Longfellow’s poetry earlier, Weathercock.

Webster says: "Weathercock – weather vane in the shape of a cock". Still not much better for my tired brain and my lacking sense of humor. In short, it is a traditional weather vane, not one that looks like a farmhouse of a John Deere tractor or anything of that sort….

 

A Weather Cock:

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