Another one bites the dust.

 

Another summer, that is. Welcome to the last weekend of Summer 2012. Boo. How did the days go by so quickly? I can’t believe it’s this time of the year already…

I spent the day fine-tuning my syllabus, lesson planning for the first few weeks of the semester, and wanting to cry because summer is over and it’s almost time for my Subject and Language Exams. Ahhhhh!

I feel like my brain just can’t hold any more information, and classes haven’t even started yet! What am I going to do? Life is crazy.

I’m incredibly excited to meet my new students. I even found out I have the classroom of all classrooms today. I’ll have to work on my voice projection to make sure my students can hear me. I guess I’ll also have to start wearing heels on the daily so that they can see me too. Oh well, at least we won’t feel claustrophobic. I actually feel pretty happy to have been assigned the monster classroom. It’s a treat. :)

I’d love to stay and chat (and make up for my recent absence), but I really need to go clean my house. Cleanliness is next to godliness after all.

 

I may not know how to study.

Creepy practice books only get me so far.

 

As I’ve begun seriously thinking about applications again, I’ve also begun seriously freaking out about getting ready to re-take the GRE Subject Exam in English Literature. I began by taking a practice test just to see where I stand after over a year and was pleasantly surprised to see that my score went up 30 points without any studying or preparation.

However, I, being me, still want it to be better. I googled some strategies and some prep sites, but as I sat down to begin studying for the test of all tests, I realized that I may not know how to study. It’s been so long since I’ve had to take an actual standard test – the last one being the same exam I’m preparing for now over a year ago. I’ve got my flashcards and my outlines, but my brain doesn’t seem able to absorb anything. I keep running through my cards over and over and the pile of “I know these by heart” cards never gets any bigger. It’s frustrating.

What happened here?

I’ve realized over the last few weeks that my level of productivity has drastically decreased. I’m not sure what to attribute this sudden drop in effectiveness to, but I know that I must do something if I plan to pass any of my classes this semester.

I think I overloaded myself so much during my undergraduate career that now that I have a normal workload, I don’t know how to handle it. I’ve always had to beg, steal, and borrow free time, but now I actually have iron my own. My acquiring of this phenomenon has led me to become addicted. I’m addicted to doing nothing, and this is not me. At all. I’ve never been one to sit around all day, doing nothing, going nowhere, and not caring. I’ve always been the I’ll see you at Starbucks at 6am, waiting outside the library for it to open at 7:30am, getting kicked out at 1am the next day kind of girl. I always thought this is the girl who was going to go to graduate school.

But, what happened here?

Perhaps spending a summer with basically zero responsibility aside from my part-time job killed my productivity gene. What a bummer. Now I feel like I’m grasping at straws to get it back. I feel it creeping slowly from the hidden space (perhaps somewhere around my spleen – that forgotten corner of our beings where things we can’t really find a use for hide). Very slowly, I’ve been enticing it back with a fancy new computer I can carry to the library without breaking my back, a pretty new calendar application that lets me compulsively plan my days, readings of books and blogs that promise to help me maximize my efficiency, and a schedule of times during which I will barricade myself in the library with nothing but my books and my brain.

Productivity gene, I miss you. We used to have such good times. Remember when we wrote that thesis or taught all those classes every day? Please come back. I promise to reward you with cookies.

Survival.

After yet another night filled with anxiety about my chosen path in life, I spent today at the library trying to catch up on reading and to get my head back on straight. After about an hour sitting in a study carrel on the top floor of the library, I was freezing and decided to head outside to read. The sunshine helped me clear my head. What it did for my reading, well, that’s another story.

Later in the day, when I could no longer focus my eyes on the tiny black and white print of my page, I headed to the University Center for some lunch. I got my sandwich and walked outside to find a table. Seton Hall seems to be trying to make the most out of their air conditioning units because everywhere, I mean everywhere, on campus was freezing cold today. Anyway, I found a spot at a picnic table on the raised patio outside the University Center and sat down to enjoy my lunch.

Just as I was starting to relax and enjoy the beautiful day, I overheard a bit of the conversation going on at the table next to me. I looked over to find two kids, maybe first or second year students, dressed in what I can only call classic “teen rebel phase” clothes – ripped up jeans, heavy metal band t-shirts, chains, and dreads – yet it wasn’t so much their outfits that worried me as what I heard them saying.

The one guy was telling his girl friend (girlfriend or girl who is a friend, who knows) that he was so annoyed at being in school, that he saw no purpose, he didn’t care, classes were stupid and a waste of time, and that he could be doing much better things with his time (what those things might be, he did not say). The girl agreed and continued on to complain about the fact that her professor was angry at her for having turned in a paper late and that she couldn’t believe her class was being quizzed on reading assignments. “How juvenile is that?” she asked. “Of course we’re going to fail those.” The guy agreed, shook his head, and started collecting his things. The two left the patio smoking cigarettes and continuing their diatribe about higher education and professors.

As they walked away, I couldn’t help but feel a little sad. Here I was at an institute of higher learning, one prized for its dedication to the liberal arts, and students could not see the value of it. In fact they believed it to be a “waste of time.” I wanted to run after them and ask why they were here at all. They were definitely over 16 and had, presumably spent time and money submitting an application to attend this university. Seton Hall doesn’t just let people walk into classes off the streets. If you think it’s such a waste of time, why come?

Disheartened as I was, I then started to realize the hypocrisy of their situation even further. How could they sit there on those benches and eschew the very system of higher learning they so vehemently believed unimportant while supporting by their very status as students. Isn’t their agreeing to attend, to even deign (as I’m sure they see it) attend class, a willful participation in the very system they wish to undermine? I wanted to ask them all these things and to see if they had considered the fact that their very presence on this campus took that opportunity from someone else. Seton Hall does not have a 100% admittance rate.

I may sound bitter, and perhaps I’m putting too much blame and spite on these individuals, but I simply couldn’t believe the ideas coming from them. From their conversation, I could understand that they are here, receiving a college education, because they are supposed to, because it’s what one does after high school. In essence, they again are playing into the very societal system to which they so, apparently, object. Then I started to think about their professors. I bet that these two students completed (or are completing) English Composition. I bet that some of my classmates were (or are) their professors, some of my classmates who spend their nights grading, their weekends devising lesson plans, and their free time striving to make the material accessible and relevant to students. Had these two kids ever considered that?

Again, perhaps I’ve jumped on to a high horse or a soap box, but I look at the world in which we live today, in which English and Humanities professors, departments, and schools are faced with the task of justifying their existence, in which education has lost its place among valuable assets, and I can’t help but feel a little defeated. We live in a world where people largely feel entitled to receive what they have come to expect yet refuse to work for it. It’s painful, painful to see that by and by our universities are filled with students who admit they have not done the work asked of them, who complain that professors dare to expect greatness and original thought from them, who see the process of education as a burden to bear before they can move forward, who view learning as a waste of time they could be spending on “better things.” No wonder education has lost its standing in this world. No wonder the value of gaining knowledge for knowledge’s sake has lost all value. No wonder we are producing more and more people who cannot read or write. How can anyone expect our universities to survive in such a climate? How do we, as academics, survive in a world that calls us useless and devalues our contributions?

I fear that universities cannot survive the masses of students who view higher learning like the two sitting beside me. Then the scariest question arises: can our universities survive without them?

The day that loves all days.

Happy Valentine’s Day.

I decided today that my life might be a little bit sad.  Recently, I’ve been having intense separation anxiety from the library.  I miss it with its rows upon rows of books, mediocre coffee shop, and graffitied wooden study carrels.  I’ve begun to envy my friends’ freedom to spend a day in the library.  I’m even missing long nights of reading and paper writing and getting kicked out via announcement over the loud speaker.  I’m dying here.  This is just sad.

Then again, what kind of student would I be if I didn’t yearn for more free time in the library?  While I love my students and my support staff at my internship, I hate the way I’ve become so removed from UCF, from the campus, from the student life…. I miss the days of waking up for class, meeting friends for lunch, reading in the library, and staying up late to finish a paper.  I am not an 8-5 kind of person.  It’s too confining, the schedule.  I am gone all day, and by the time I get back to campus, pretty much everything is closed.  People are gone; classes are all ending.  I haven’t even been to the middle of campus for weeks.  I miss my life as a student.

If I had been smart enough to put the pieces together last semester, I would have appreciated my last semester as an actual student more than I did.  I was jaded and unaware, unaware that December 7th, not May 6th, marked the end of my days of being a full-fledged UCF student.  Yes, I’m still enrolled right now and yes, I still live on campus, but I feel so disconnected.  I feel like a pretend student.  I do not like it.  I am not an 8-5 person.

Perhaps this is why the life of a grad student and a college professor appeals to me so much.  If my dreams come true, I will never have to be an 8-5 person.  I will always be able to pencil in lunch with a friend, to read a book in the afternoon.  I will be able to move around, walk from building to building during the day.  I will not be confined to one room in one building all day.  I don’t know how people do it.  Let me reinforce, I am not an 8-5 person.  I am not a cubicle person.  I am not even a huge corner office with panoramic views of the ocean person.  I am a student’s life kind of person.  I am an academic.

I am an academic eagerly awaiting her place in higher academia.  I am in love with learning.  Happy Valentine’s Day.