guys i need some lol college advice

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should I keep doing an senior honors comprehensives project?

pros:
- i like my topic ("violence in the thought of nietzsche and hobbes") & my advisor a lot
- im seriously considering going to grad school w/ the hope of becoming an academic (how much does doing an honors project matter on grad school apps?)
- i will probably be pissed at myself for not sucking up and doing this
- it's not actually due till february or something

cons:
- i have no time (3 other classes + being station manager of college radio station) and feel way behind (also splitting my time btw this & classes & the radio station makes my work on all those things mediocre)
- making the "im behind" feeling worse, i still havent narrowed down my project enough & i feel directionless
- as much as i like my advisor, he's really sick and i can only see him once every couple weeks (also i am feeling caught in weird ideological battles btw. various professors in my department that i only vaguely understand)
- i have a horrible work ethic

did any of you do honors projects (note that "honors" in this case means writing an entire paper seperate from my graduation requirements, not writing a longer version of a paper i would have to write anyway for a graduation requirement)? was it "worth it" (were you able to use it in the future? did you just love your topic/advisor/whatever)? how did it end up? should i give up on it (or maybe give up on the radio station?)? should i just go for it and see what happens?

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 04:48 (sixteen years ago) link

"becoming an academic" = "getting a phd and being a professor"

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 04:49 (sixteen years ago) link

If you want to apply to Ph.D. programs, then yeah, doing the honors project will help, and it might look a little weird to apply without having done it.

but, dude, think seriously about whether you want to apply to Ph.D. programs!

I did an honors project. I "used" it in the sense that I excerpted it for the writing sample I used to apply to Ph.D. programs. I got into one. Oh, and it also made me work with my advisor, who ruled and wrote me a rec for grad school apps. honestly, I was a slacker undergrad and it didn't end up being that much work. so maybe you should go for it.

horseshoe, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 04:52 (sixteen years ago) link

but if you have a horrible work ethic, THINK SERIOUSLY ABOUT WHETHER YOU WANT TO APPLY TO PH.D. PROGRAMS!!!

horseshoe, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 04:53 (sixteen years ago) link

yeah this is sort of the problem, im not 100% abt phd prgms and my anxiety/laziness (the latter of which feeds off the former) makes me want to just abandon this project and not ever apply to school (but i would be doing that just to avoid this project rather than because i didnt want to go back to school)

and yeah i love working w/ my advisor and i think i would feel differently if i could stop by his office every few days to talk about it but its a lot harder given that hes taking the semester off and is only in his office once in a while.

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 04:55 (sixteen years ago) link

as to how it ended up, eh. it pretty much makes me cringe now. but going through the experience (I had no idea what I was doing) is very much like going through the stages of grad school (I have no idea what I'm doing.)

horseshoe, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 04:55 (sixteen years ago) link

maybe you should do it. I think it will be less overwhelming than you think it will be.

horseshoe, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 04:57 (sixteen years ago) link

and if it totally sucks, don't apply to ph.d. programs and you'll have dodged a bullet!

horseshoe, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 04:58 (sixteen years ago) link

xxpost: yeah i know which is particularly why im not applying to go right out of undergrad! fuck i dunno id love to go to grad school b/c i love love love the stuff i study and i think id be good at it except i need to get my anxiety/procrastination under srs control.

for example: i have a 6-page paper due tomorrow in my "women in mathematics" class and i have done none of it and i am avoiding it to post about my anxiety about not having time for anything on ilx

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 04:59 (sixteen years ago) link

that was in response to "THINK SERIOUSLY ABOUT WHETHER YOU WANT TO APPLY TO PH.D. PROGRAMS"

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 04:59 (sixteen years ago) link

where is the job where i can read things i find really interesting and talk about them with fantastically smart people and maybe even write about them but i can do it all at my own pace with no pressure and no one ever judges my work?

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:00 (sixteen years ago) link

definitely don't apply straight out of undergrad. the students in my program who've done that tend to burn out something awful. the anxiety/procrastination thing is a serious problem, but it's also very common among academics (flakiest people in the world, I swear.) also, you will almost certainly be better about deadlines in grad school than you are now, because it's just a lot different than college. (read: less fun, less distractions.)

honestly, it's good that you recognize the anxiety-procrastination loop now. maybe you could work on it after you graduate and be super-ready to apply? my caution is that there are no jobs and also, you seem like a nice kid and ph.d. programs make people insane, but if you love the stuff, you love the stuff. lots of people warned me, but fuck if I listened.

horseshoe, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:03 (sixteen years ago) link

yeah i mean id love to not go to grad school and potentially have no job and go crazy and stuff but i have yet to find something i like doing nearly as much as, well, learning & teaching stuff.

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:05 (sixteen years ago) link

on the "no one ever judges my work" tip, one thing I wish I had been more comfortable with before grad school is not being immediately good at stuff. because you have to be willing to risk being less than brilliant to get the hang of academic work.

horseshoe, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:06 (sixteen years ago) link

i also wouldnt mind being a farmer

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:10 (sixteen years ago) link

one thing to keep in mind is that when you're in college and you love school your only immediate role models are professors. but I have to believe there are other things you can do with your life where you learn and teach...or fields that reward you for thinking. I obviously don't know what those are otherwise I'd not be in a ph.d. program, but they have to exist.

horseshoe, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:10 (sixteen years ago) link

and to stop being totally eeyore for a second, it is pretty amazing to be training to do something as fun and frivolous as studying + teaching English lit. there's a lot of pleasure in the day to day of it.

horseshoe, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:12 (sixteen years ago) link

yeah i know i shouldnt be complaining, i guess i just wish it came easier or something. mostly i just need to hear that its not impossible.

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:14 (sixteen years ago) link

but thx for the advice horseshoe u did make me feel better :D

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:21 (sixteen years ago) link

I'm glad! it's not impossible!

horseshoe, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:22 (sixteen years ago) link

Judging by your posts, I bet you'd be an AMAZING high school teacher (not much $, though, and you'd be surrounded by assholes*).

*see Music Journalism

Tape Store, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:33 (sixteen years ago) link

thanks tape store! honestly, id love to be a HS teacher except that 1) i like research and paper-writing as much as i like teaching and 2) the stuff im really passionate about is the sort of crit-theory/contintental philosophy stuff that would likely get me drummed out by students AND parents (altho maybe im being small-minded abt the openness of hs kids to nietzsche)

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:48 (sixteen years ago) link

max you'd probably like teaching AP classes at a high school.

Jordan Sargent, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:53 (sixteen years ago) link

altho i think teaching @ a college>teaching @ high school (i have no personal experience to back this up obv)

Jordan Sargent, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:53 (sixteen years ago) link

yeah i dunno i probably also hell of romanticize college teaching over high school teaching cause it seems so much less stressful & the kids are (supposed to be) interested & intelligent and not, yknow, being forced to be there, and you have more freedom over yr syllabus &c &c

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:55 (sixteen years ago) link

AP classes= kids that are interested & intelligent.

the difference in hours between teaching college v. high school is what would probably do it for me.

Jordan Sargent, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:56 (sixteen years ago) link

times like this i wish my future self could send letters to my past self

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:58 (sixteen years ago) link

if they even HAVE letters in the future that is

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 05:58 (sixteen years ago) link

i also wouldnt mind being a farmer

-- max, Tuesday, October 2, 2007 5:10 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Link

yeah, me too :-/

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 06:47 (sixteen years ago) link

ps horseshoe why aren't we friends

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 06:48 (sixteen years ago) link

just to bring everybody down I am going to mention my grad advisor who was talking to me once about how crazy all these kids are who go and work straight on through eight to nine years, get their Ph.D in english literature, and then somehow think some small college in a nice town is going to have an opening with tenure possibilities ;_;

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 07:18 (sixteen years ago) link

because there is apparently a glut of that in this country

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 07:19 (sixteen years ago) link

yeah i mean i know that im entering a field that has 1-2 openings a year and as a white guy im not what most departments are looking for but i still really like it... plus im hoping/praying that in 10-12 years when im getting my doctor8 a lot of the tenured boomer profs will be retiring and leaving options open for me (also maybe since most of my grad skool peers will be female my being male might work for me?)

but god who the fuck knows. there arent really jobs anywhere for the shit that im good at (at least is my understanding), its just even worse in academia.

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 07:37 (sixteen years ago) link

pros:
- i like my topic ("violence in the thought of nietzsche and hobbes") & my advisor a lot

i also wouldnt mind being a farmer

http://www.deepsprings.edu/

Curt1s Stephens, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 07:40 (sixteen years ago) link

max, are you a phil. undergrad?

xpost deep springs rears its head agane

John Justen, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 07:43 (sixteen years ago) link

also, where?

John Justen, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 07:43 (sixteen years ago) link

english & comp lit, at 0ccidental college in LA

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 07:44 (sixteen years ago) link

oh ok, i was going to let you know that phil. grad school is basically gagging for grad students if you're willing to TA, but that isn't quite as true for the lit side of things.

John Justen, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 07:46 (sixteen years ago) link

yeah id most likely being for a lit degree but i havent necessarily ruled out philosophy or maybe a program like history of consciousness @ ucsc or rhetoric @ berkeley

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 07:49 (sixteen years ago) link

being = be going

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 07:50 (sixteen years ago) link

that or buying a farm in the dominican and playing dominoes

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 07:50 (sixteen years ago) link

let's be friends, rw!

Tombot's grad advisor otm. ;_;

horseshoe, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 12:20 (sixteen years ago) link

have a keg party and pull a prank on the dean with some nerds.

max r, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 12:24 (sixteen years ago) link

where is the job where i can read things i find really interesting and talk about them with fantastically smart people and maybe even write about them but i can do it all at my own pace with no pressure and no one ever judges my work?

it's called college, lol.

choose between the honors project and the radio station.

gabbneb, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 14:16 (sixteen years ago) link

get a job

DG, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 14:29 (sixteen years ago) link

Lots of great advice on this thread, I'll go through some of what was said. I think I might have some things to offer as I was in a similar situation and was thinking long and hard about the academic route. I studied philosophy (mostly continental/crit theory stuff as well as a lot of ethics, some logic, general history of phil.) and was very seriously considering doing a Phd. Actually, "was very seriously considering" = "ruling out pretty much all other options and thinking that I was definitely going to become a professor." I ultimately decided to take a few years off, thinking I would later apply to programs. I am beyond happy that I looked into other options. Most of my advice centers around "but, dude, think seriously about whether you want to apply to Ph.D. programs!"

Here goes:
one thing to keep in mind is that when you're in college and you love school your only immediate role models are professors. but I have to believe there are other things you can do with your life where you learn and teach...or fields that reward you for thinking.

this is completely, completely OTM. So many smart undergrads who really excel in their majors (especially humanities students) look to the first immediate lifestyle in sight -- their professors, and just think "oh that's what I'll do" without really understanding a.)that there are loads of other options that aren't immediately visible but offer the same intellectual engagement with a lot less of the hassle and b.)that a Phd-->tenured professor dream is a hellish, hellish, hellish process that is extraordinarily difficult to achieve for most humanities students. Some students hear this, but then think "oh, I'll definitely be the lucky one, the student who gets a tenure position, I'm the smartest, most motivated, etc." But every Phd hopeful thinks they will be the lucky one, and the majority of them will not be.

the stuff im really passionate about is the sort of crit-theory/contintental philosophy stuff

This is an awesome field and there is some really engaging stuff in it, but unfortunately the job market is utter crap for this kind of stuff.

just to bring everybody down I am going to mention my grad advisor who was talking to me once about how crazy all these kids are who go and work straight on through eight to nine years, get their Ph.D in english literature, and then somehow think some small college in a nice town is going to have an opening with tenure possibilities ;_;

OTM. Nobody likes a downer, but unfortunately there aren't enough downers giving advice on students who are hoping to be academics. Most of my undergrad professors built up my self-confidence, and I thought "yea I got mostly As and good remarks from my profs" and my academic self-confidence was big and bloated, but none of them really gave me a realistic perspective on graduate study. Looking into it made me realize that I'd get my ass kicked in academia and I'd be miserable to boot.

a lot of the tenured boomer profs will be retiring and leaving options open for me

This might be true, but fewer and fewer of the retiring tenured profs are being replaced with other tenured positions. Adjuncts and other part-time crap jobs with lousy pay and no benefits are replacing the tenured professor who had his/her awesome job for 35 years.

Ultimately, you are wise for not wanting to go straight to grad school. Unless one is a complete crit theory diehard (or any other subject) who reads this stuff constantly even when his/her classes don't require it, he/she would probably benefit from taking some time off. Even that person might benefit. If you find you truly can't live without reading/discussing/researching/ Foucault, et al., then you can always go back to school. I took some time off and haven't read a work of philosophy since graduation, and it feels effin' great. I've had so much more time to find out what really, really interests me and I often think how miserable I would be if I was in a grad program right now.

As for the honors project -- I'd say go ahead and do it! (whether or not you plan to apply for Phd programs.) Things like that can be a blast, even if they are a lot of work. You'd probably be happy you did it in the end. It gives you a decent sense of what long-term, intensive research entails, which is precisely what grad school/academic life is. The only caveat is the one you mentioned about your advisor -- projects like that definitely benefit from frequent meetings with an advisor and if they aren't really there most of the time, it might be difficult. See if there is anyone else you could meet with.

One last point -- to all those who actually did go ahead and do a Phd -- I can be very forthright in all the reasons why one shouldn't do it, but ultimately I think it's a pretty awesome path and have a ton of respect for you. It's such a fantastic way to make a living, if you're motivated enough, and that's great. Damn I went on too long, didn't I?

Mark Clemente, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 15:17 (sixteen years ago) link

i really wish deep springs had grad school

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 17:09 (sixteen years ago) link

thx for the extended reply, mark. i think a major problem is that as true as this: a.)that there are loads of other options that aren't immediately visible but offer the same intellectual engagement with a lot less of the hassle might be, those "other options" are very much not visible, and i dont really know how to go about looking for them. im more than open to other options (in fact, id really like to something i love as much as this without the impossible job market & 7 years of school), its just hard to figure out that they are.

but this isnt a thread about my creeping feeling of dread, its about my honors project.

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 17:41 (sixteen years ago) link

I'm glad I'm doing a PhD, but I really wish someone had told me/I had figured out just how shitty and unsatisfying it would be a lot of the time.

caek, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 17:46 (sixteen years ago) link

in case anyone's wondering i still havent finished my 6-page paper on women in mathematics.

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 17:57 (sixteen years ago) link

haha joeks

gbx, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 00:43 (sixteen years ago) link

my friend dated a med student as an undergrad, and the reaction from her friends was pretty unanimously UH

gbx, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 00:44 (sixteen years ago) link

UNANIMOUS UH

El Tomboto, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 00:46 (sixteen years ago) link

the UHs have it

gbx, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 00:48 (sixteen years ago) link

i'm lucky in that half my profs scheduled midterms for the week before spring break and the other half scheduled them for the week after.

three essay exams and a project due tomorrow. THAT'S ALL THOUGH.

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 01:34 (sixteen years ago) link

YOU KIDS DON'T YOU KNOW THIS IS THE BEST TIME OF YR LIFE

ohman maybe not the full-on best time ever but damn it's pretty sweet! even if you think you're busy now, there is actually so much time! it just gets even busier if you go to grad school, and then you go and get a real job with real responsibilities (UH) and still try to remain this well-rounded person that grad school maybe encouraged you to be, and everything gets even busier! i don't know how this happens but it will probably make you want to go back to school soon enough even though you know this is a wrong idea that will result in extra pain that will only get you away from the pain of job-style work.
yes, reading about students stressing never gets old once you're not a student. if anything got me through my thesis it was the desire to attain that kind of non-student status. and yet. noooo. but.
lol.

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 01:36 (sixteen years ago) link

btw max, good choice!

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 01:37 (sixteen years ago) link

UHnanimous

Curt1s Stephens, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 01:39 (sixteen years ago) link

yeah college uni is pretty sweet but mainly because of the opportunities for fuckin'. learning is okay too. but even at my advanced age i can remember being pissed off at people saying YOU KIDS DON'T YOU KNOW THIS IS THE BEST TIME OF YR LIFE (although they were talking about high school in my case).

they were probably right, in retrospect, but god knows there was a bunch of other shit going on that they couldn't remember.

mookieproof, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 01:54 (sixteen years ago) link

a lot of other shit for sure. and haha i was totally like 'whatever' to anyone who said 'appreciate this time in yr life b/c it's the best blah blah blah' and yet. truth is i have never called any time in my life the best time in my life, mostly b/c i don't believe in that kind of thing. i do though think back and appreciate all the time and energy and freedom i had though. or maybe it was just blissful ignorance aah. whatever though, it's not like now isn't good or full of more choices, freedom, etc.

i always like hearing abt how people are freaking out b/c of school and then find a way to turn it around. that old story, always a good one.

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 02:08 (sixteen years ago) link

When you're thirty and working you can spend your money on whatever you want.
When you're twenty and studying you can spend your time on whatever you want.

El Tomboto, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 02:14 (sixteen years ago) link

the aphorisms of tom

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 02:19 (sixteen years ago) link

the problem with saying "grass is greener" in that equation is that by the time you hit thirty every hour is worth 50% more than it was when you were twenty, so in a lot of ways, you find yourself really wishing you could use that money to buy more time, which even the most powerful commodities traders in the world can't do

El Tomboto, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 02:19 (sixteen years ago) link

when you're thirty and studying you'd better really like whatever you're spending your time and money on

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 02:20 (sixteen years ago) link

xpost

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 02:20 (sixteen years ago) link

i really wld rather have more time than money, it's true

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 02:21 (sixteen years ago) link

i feel so cheated by phrases like that though cause i totally have no time

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 02:23 (sixteen years ago) link

but you have energy

it's all a big equation of the universe

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 02:24 (sixteen years ago) link

i wish i was living in a more affordable place so i could afford to work less so i could afford to have more free time between my 12 hour class days, is what i'm getting at i guess.

"but you have energy" ha it's all relative i guess? certainly doesn't feel like i have lots of energy except to type fast

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 02:24 (sixteen years ago) link

energy + time
/
nostalgia for lol college life
x money
= UHNIVERSELOL

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 02:26 (sixteen years ago) link

one month passes...

i just defended my thesis! i totally flubbed the questions but i still got honors! and i passed my comprehensive exam w/ "distinction"!!!!

max, Wednesday, 16 April 2008 23:47 (sixteen years ago) link

!!!

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Wednesday, 16 April 2008 23:47 (sixteen years ago) link

congrats bro

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Wednesday, 16 April 2008 23:47 (sixteen years ago) link

http://www.cyberpunkreview.com/images/Pi09.jpg

gabbneb, Wednesday, 16 April 2008 23:53 (sixteen years ago) link

CONGRATULATIONS MAX!!!

ENBB, Wednesday, 16 April 2008 23:54 (sixteen years ago) link

ps - I am in grad school and not insane thankyouverymuch. ;-)

ENBB, Wednesday, 16 April 2008 23:54 (sixteen years ago) link

Hoos, you go to TSU, right? Any clue how strict their transfer admissions are?

milo z, Thursday, 17 April 2008 00:55 (sixteen years ago) link

congratz max :)

Rubyredd, Thursday, 17 April 2008 01:02 (sixteen years ago) link

Pushing my graduation back two semesters will be worth it if it means I get to go to Wellington (from rural Minnesota) for a year, right?

BigLurks, Thursday, 17 April 2008 04:20 (sixteen years ago) link

wellington, new zealand???

Rubyredd, Thursday, 17 April 2008 04:35 (sixteen years ago) link

yep

BigLurks, Thursday, 17 April 2008 04:36 (sixteen years ago) link

that's where i live!

Rubyredd, Thursday, 17 April 2008 04:37 (sixteen years ago) link

well, for 2.5 more months. what are you going to be doing here?

Rubyredd, Thursday, 17 April 2008 04:37 (sixteen years ago) link

Going to a different lol college. It'll push back my grad date 'cause I don't really need the credits badly; I just want to get as far away from here as I possibly can, and the study abroad thing seems like a convenient way to travel FAR. My girlfriend and two good pals are coming with, though they're all a bit unsure of what they'll be doing there (ha any recommendations?). We won't be there until January.

What do you do in Wellington? Do you like it?

BigLurks, Thursday, 17 April 2008 04:44 (sixteen years ago) link

oh wellington is awesome! webmail off-board if you want to ask about anything.

Rubyredd, Thursday, 17 April 2008 04:49 (sixteen years ago) link

*webmail ME off-board

Rubyredd, Thursday, 17 April 2008 04:49 (sixteen years ago) link

one month passes...

wow, how did i miss the update? belated yaaaaaaaay max!

also, ENBB, i think you are in graduate school for something proper and useful, not lol english lit, so i totally believe that you are not insane.

horseshoe, Saturday, 17 May 2008 15:07 (sixteen years ago) link

Hahaha. We'll see how useful it turns out to be. I did english lit/creative undergrad so maybe I'm 1/2 insane. ;-)

ENBB, Saturday, 17 May 2008 15:31 (sixteen years ago) link

thanks horseshoe. i graduate tomorrow!

max, Saturday, 17 May 2008 17:43 (sixteen years ago) link

CONGRATULATIONS, MAX!!!

horseshoe, Sunday, 18 May 2008 08:15 (sixteen years ago) link

yaaay max!
and congratulations on sticking with the thesis + comps option! :D

rrrobyn, Sunday, 18 May 2008 13:49 (sixteen years ago) link

guys i just got a letter from college that apparently oops they fucked up and I NEED ONE MORE CLASS TO GRADUATE

fuck knows how half a dozen advising sessions and three degree audits official and otherwise could have missed this

but i kinda feel like this whole insane semester, which was structured as it was for the sake of getting me completely done by june (and thus getting $10,000 in loans forgiven), was completely for naught now.

argasdsfkwl jf jifjks j kijfkidjfdkijf/disfyu yu if hn ddfjn ;nusweic4ju9u4

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Sunday, 18 May 2008 18:27 (sixteen years ago) link

>:(

gbx, Sunday, 18 May 2008 19:22 (sixteen years ago) link

Aw Hoos want me to go clothesline some Texans for ya?

Abbott, Sunday, 18 May 2008 19:23 (sixteen years ago) link

damn hoos that is nightmare territory

max, Monday, 19 May 2008 01:47 (sixteen years ago) link

but i kinda feel like this whole insane semester, which was structured as it was for the sake of getting me completely done by june (and thus getting $10,000 in loans forgiven), was completely for naught now.

Can you tell this sentence to someone with any measure of power? I feel like if it was my decision, and I knew you had repeatedly visited advisors who didn't catch the "mistake", along with the degree audits, I'd use my executive powers to help you out. Then again, this is probably why I will never achieve any position of influence...

Z S, Monday, 19 May 2008 02:50 (sixteen years ago) link

oh man, hoos :( so sorry!!!

tehresa, Monday, 19 May 2008 03:09 (sixteen years ago) link

hoos, that sucks so bad dude :( surely someone will be sympathetic to your case...

because of my own fuckup in planning my degree, i was 2 points short at the end of my last semester (360pts for a degree) but there was no fucking way i was doing another semester so i wrote to the associate dean of my faculty and told him all the reasons i should get an exemption and he granted it within a couple of hours. but my situation was pretty minor. hopefully something similar will happen for you!

Rubyredd, Monday, 19 May 2008 03:38 (sixteen years ago) link

Can you tell this sentence to someone with any measure of power?

I'm calling my Dean in the morning.

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 19 May 2008 05:59 (sixteen years ago) link

thx for the sympathies, guys.

also

CONGRATS MAX U GO HAVE A FUKKIN TASTYCAKE DAWG DEAD SERIOUS

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 19 May 2008 05:59 (sixteen years ago) link


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