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Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Blog 1 - Senior Final Lesson / Interview Reflection





1.  What three lessons were most helpful for you to see and why?
  1.  Veterinary Medicine by Jessica Castillo. This presentation was helpful to me because I might want to pursue veterinary medicine as my senior project so it gave me a small insight of what I would be signing myself up for if I did decide to embark on the journey of veterinary medicine. It also helped me realize that my activity didn't have to be academic and boring, it could be a cute little 'pretend to be a vet' play sort of thing.  
  1. Criminal Law by Givanti Chatapal. Givanti seemed very passionate about her subject. She was very well informed and rarely ever looked at her power point, except to make reference to it for her audience's sake. It help me to see that it would be my best bet to pick something that I'm excited and ready to learn about. Also, her debate activity was really engaging and was extremely relevant to her topic so it felt like that might have gotten us to pay more attention after. So I should try and find an enthralling and blood-pumping activity as well. 
  1. Wildlife Rehabilitation by Alyssa Jurkevics. This presentation, or lack there of, was really helpful in showing me what not to do. She didn't show up to her presentation and it is literally the most important aspect of our senior year. Its essentially what our entire senior year leads up to and she flubbed it. I should not do that and I should be prepared and confident in myself to pull through with what I need to do. 
  1.  One thing that I learned about senior project in interviews that will help me get off to a good start is choosing a topic that I'm prepared to pursue. A lot of people talked about having to get a new mentor because their previous one was flaky as heck. There was also the complaint of the topic losing its flair and being forced to do and learn about something that you honestly couldn't care less about. There's also the fear of not having adequate information to fulfill research checks as well as not enough information to talk about for half an hour. I should just pick a topic that I'm bursting to learn about, that there is constantly something being learned about regarding the topic, and that I feel secure in committing an entire year of my life living IN this topic. 
  1. Veterinary medicine: Ive always loved animals and learning about the care and keeping of them. Ive always personally felt that animals are much better than people, morally and emotionally , and it would be great to so if this is something I would want to do for the rest of my life. 
  1. Zoology: The same reasoning as veterinary medicine expect now I get to do it with more exotic animals. Monkeys are pretty amazing. 
  1. Architecture: I enjoy learning more hands on and what could be more hands on than building something with your own actual hands. Also, I think that there is more than meets the eye to architecture and I would like to see if thats true. Another thing is that, buildings are pretty cool. Yes, you have your standard four walls and one ceiling but then you have the really beautiful stuff like the Sydney Opera House and St.Basil's Cathedral in Moscow. 
  1. Speech and langage pathology: My grandma is a speech and language pathologist, as is my mom, my aunt works at the same business and is contemplating getting the same degree and then, my uncle's past girlfriend was getting a degree in something else but decided to transfer over and become a speech therapist when she met my grandma and mom and went to visit their business for a couple weeks. I would just want to see what all the fuss is about. I also think that people deserve to be able to speak and its pretty cool that people come to you when they think that their child is never going to say a word and BAM!, you get their kid talking. 
  1. Im just going to decide to answer this question based off of doing my project on speech and language pathology. Maybe, "What is the most effective plan of action to get a child to their expected level of speech?"
  1. Not to sound super unprepared or anything but, honestly , at this exact point in my life. At 1:55 AM on Wednesday the 3rd of June, I have had so much going on lately that I haven't really come up with any plans to find summer mentorship. I have the LA ZOO 30  minutes away, my grandma and mom are speech therapist and my grandma owns her own business, my uncle is an engineer and is working side-by-side architects, daily, at his job, and there is an animal clinic not more than 5 minutes away from my home. Im not entirely in the dark about mentorship, I know where I cold go to find them, but I haven't really come up with a way to pursue these mentors. Im going to though, don't you worry. I have everything under control. 



2. List one thing that you learned about senior project in interviews that will help you get off to a good start. 

3. What topic(s) are you considering, and why?  

4. What E.Q do you think might be interesting to consider in guiding a project like this? 

5. What are some ideas you have about finding summer mentorship?