I am so pissed! I got the notification this afternoon that I'm enrolled as a student. OK, that's the good news and yippie for that. I only started this process on Monday (1/5/15) given the fact that I decided to go to school over the holidays so Monday was really the first day I could start the process of enrollment. And I had no clue how to do any of that. It's been countless hours of hunt and peck and many phone calls trying to figure out each step. But I'm good at that sort of thing and I'm figuring it out. But I digress. I've been trying to sign up for classes. The one class I really want is English 101. I figure it's the foundation for many other classes. I've got to know how to write a college paper among other things. Oh, I stumble through a blog alright I suppose and I get close to being correct on the grammatical front, I think. (Ha, not sure I quite made it with that sentence - but I'm leaving it in to p...
OK, I did it. I scheduled my spring term at BSU...which starts in less than 48 hours! I've totally been freaking out for two days about this since they sent me the official notification that I am a student and can now enroll. Between trying to figure out how to work the computer system to actually enroll myself in the classes, wanting classes that are mostly already filled, and trying to take classes that they say I don't need because I took them 35 years ago, has been a traumatic experience for me. Though perhaps I should pat myself on the back because I ONLY derailed for two days. I even made myself physically ill last night - a major crash and burn. But it was nothing that taking a nap, listening to Clockwork Prince (down loadable library book on OverDrive), and playing Candy Crush couldn't cure. All effective avoidance techniques that I highly recommend. But I'm still too freaked out to tell you what I actually signed up for. It's al...
Part of my online class discussion thread about education. I have been thinking about my own experiences in education while reading Whitehead. I read a particular paragraph, but I just about dismissed it as being non applicable. Then I read it several more times and decided that it was perfect for me. He said, “The essence of education is that it be religious”. Now bear with me, because that’s where I got turned off. I’m a big proponent of separation of church and state, so I immediately thought, “that’s not me”. But now, I take it to mean something different. I believe he isn’t saying to study religion, but rather to instill a religious type of “duty and reverence” into education. OK, now he has my attention. I’ve waited so many years to be back here in college, that I do feel a reverence about it. The Holy Grail if you will, and hard won! Whitehead states, “Where attainable knowledge could h...
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