Thursday, February 4, 2010

What Was The Question?

I just finished dinner before realizing I had not even started on my post for today. I apologize to my daily reader. Thursdays are the longest day in my week. It is the only day I get home after six. My initial class, Psychological Research, was full of laughing about how we shouldn't perform unethical testing while the teacher consistently gave examples of it with very sparse examples of what was morally acceptable. Directly proceeding it was my Philosophy class where we had the fun “Free Will vs Determinism” talk. In part one of two we talked about Determinism and I had a very good time scaring people into not defending Free Will by destroying all their examples with an empirical approach, adding the asterisk only at the end of my two minute monologue that I was not actually completely for Determinism, as any of you who are keeping up on reading my blogs knows. I love college. My final class was at 3 pm and it was psychology lab. I think it is going to be the most time demanding thing, outside of my research paper for history of psychology but it is going to teach the most foundational skills for research as well.

After class I went straight over to psych club. What am I suppose to make of a “Hey, your in my class. you are the one who answers all the questions,”? Being the smooth person I am, I apologized and said it is only because the teacher challenges me with because of the way his questions are formatted. Talk about humble right? I was also mocked for saying I loved a class that is rather difficult by another girl in the club, When asked who we wanted to have speak she was yelling while wearing a mischievous grin, “Say ____! You love his class!” The people in that club are probably my favorite group of people over the number of ten I've ever met.

Thoughts of the Day:

Do you think I should cut back on answering questions in my classes or change my

methodology?

If I can get bacon not to rot in the hot sun, do you think I can get one over on the

law?

The importance of repetitiveness in learning cannot be overly stressed.

The importance of repetitiveness in learning cannot be overly stressed.

The importance of repetitiveness in learning cannot be overly stressed.

No comments:

Post a Comment