Sunday, 26 January 2014

Jumping in with Both Feet

  I’d like to speak for a moment about a dilemma that I’ve often faced in my time as a student: the battle between talent and tenacity—my fancy alliterative phrase for “strengths and weaknesses”. When planning my first foray into post-secondary education, I didn’t know what exactly I wanted to do, but I was sure of two things:

1)    That I would NEVER study or practice business, and
2)    That I would NEVER be a computer scientist/engineer/physicist

The first, because I had no interest, and the second, because although I knew I was smart, I didn’t think I was the right kind of smart to do all of those things. Writing comes naturally to me, math… not so much. But the beauty of education is that enough tenacity can help you to overcome a lack of talent, and in some cases, to develop a talent you weren’t aware you had.
            That, dear reader, is what happened to me last semester. As I continued to use my gloriously expensive and hard-earned Bachelor of Science degree to work in customer service for a coffee conglomerate and contemplated my options, I realized that my employability and grad school prospects might be greatly enhanced by some basic programming skills.
            So, I enrolled in Programming for Total Noobs (also known as CSC 108), and even though I didn’t have a natural penchant for Python, the course was so well organized, well taught and well-paced that my tenacity was able to help me achieve great success—so much so, that I became the one offering help to other students!
            At the successful conclusion of that endeavor, I aspired to my next challenge—this class. I wasn’t expecting it to be easy, but I was initially thrown off guard by the course structure. The first lecture was an unmitigated disaster, with the instructor thrown off by jet lag and lack of sleep (thanks end of break snowstorm!), and the slides sparse and hard to follow. By the time my first lab rolled around, I was horrified—random assignment based on birthdate landed me with a partner who regaled me with tales of his inattention and lack of effort in 108, interspersed with gripes about the difficulty and pointlessness of the lab we were working on that day (spoiler: it was NOT a difficult lab). Productive learning environment? I think not.
            Happily for this narrator, though, things have gotten better.  Turns out my teacher is much better at his job when he’s had a proper amount of sleep, and what he fails to explain in class, he makes up for in spades by being incredibly active on our class discussion board. Switching lab sections brought a new partner, a new TA and a new lease on life. Unsurprisingly, cooperation is better than condescension when working in pairs. With these changes made, I'm looking forward to talking the challenges this course will bring.

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