I missed being able to vote in the 2016 general election by a month. My township held an election today for a few local positions, so I got to exercise my civic duty for the first time.
I hadn't registered in advance - I didn't know this election was coming up. Therefore, I couldn't vote at the township hall. So I went to the area's courthouse and registered there. After a very brief wait while they processed my registration, I voted in a room of the courthouse.
Interestingly, there was only one position with more candidates than seats. There were also plenty of positions with no candidates running; I'm not sure how those will be filled.
Tuesday, April 4, 2017
Monday, April 3, 2017
All the college decisions are in
This week, I received the last two college admission decisions - Dartmouth and Stanford. Both were rejections, but that's to be expected; those are very prestigious institutions. On the plus side, that means all my applications have been judged, and I already have a pretty narrow list:
- University of Iowa
- University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
- Reed College
- University of California, San Diego
- (University of Chicago - waitlisted)
Now I need to decide, probably between UCSD and Reed. College Decision Day is May 1, only a month away.
Saturday, March 18, 2017
Volunteering at Imagination Station, again
Last year, a group of friends and I volunteered at PBS's Imagination Station event, which features fun and educational activities for young children who are fans of PBS Kids television programming. This year, we did it again. I was assigned to one of two Sid the Science Kid rooms, fortunately the one for slightly older children.
I and one of my friends managed the electricity table. When children arrived, I showed them a "circuit" with one wire missing and then lit up the bulb by making that connection, explaining that electricity only flows when there's a circuitous path. I increased the brightness of the bulb by inserting additional batteries.
Nearby, we were provided with several question-and-answer sheets. Each cell in the table had a metal pin through it, and wires on the back connected each question to its answer. When the children touched one free wire of a bulb-and-battery apparatus to the question and the other wire to its answer, the bulb lit. For some reason, the division quiz had several questions with the same numerical answer, but there was one answer choice per question and only one instance of the answer worked. Since that would not do, my partner and I inserted wires on the back as appropriate to make all copies of each answer electrically equivalent.
My favorite demonstration and knowledge fragment of the event - which I only remembered late in the day - was that batteries add or subtract brightness (i.e. voltage) from the circuit depending on their direction relative to the other batteries. It was interesting to hear the children's attempted explanations of that phenomenon; some came much closer than others.
I and one of my friends managed the electricity table. When children arrived, I showed them a "circuit" with one wire missing and then lit up the bulb by making that connection, explaining that electricity only flows when there's a circuitous path. I increased the brightness of the bulb by inserting additional batteries.
Nearby, we were provided with several question-and-answer sheets. Each cell in the table had a metal pin through it, and wires on the back connected each question to its answer. When the children touched one free wire of a bulb-and-battery apparatus to the question and the other wire to its answer, the bulb lit. For some reason, the division quiz had several questions with the same numerical answer, but there was one answer choice per question and only one instance of the answer worked. Since that would not do, my partner and I inserted wires on the back as appropriate to make all copies of each answer electrically equivalent.
My favorite demonstration and knowledge fragment of the event - which I only remembered late in the day - was that batteries add or subtract brightness (i.e. voltage) from the circuit depending on their direction relative to the other batteries. It was interesting to hear the children's attempted explanations of that phenomenon; some came much closer than others.
Friday, March 17, 2017
Two more college decisions
Apparently 'tis the season to hear back from colleges.
- Reed College, accepted! They even sent the admission letter in a nice box, with confetti folded inside it. Their first-year humanities course has a focus on the Iliad, and they included a copy of that book too.
- University of Chicago, waitlisted. Interesting.
Wednesday, March 15, 2017
More admission decisions
A few more college admission decisions came in since last post:
- UC San Diego, accepted! This is looking like a very good option.
- MIT, rejected. Not surprising.
- Washington University, rejected. Somewhat surprising, but I had about zero interest in actually attending there after getting accepted in a couple other places, so no disappointment.
Saturday, February 4, 2017
Accepted to a place
A couple months ago, I sent off applications to a handful of colleges. I got automatically accepted (based on test scores and classes taken) to Iowa quite a while ago. Today, I heard back from the first Regular Decision, non-automatically-inspected application: University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign). When I logged into the online application, I was greeted with this message filling the screen:
That's an acceptance! There are plenty of schools I've yet to hear from, but the University of Illinois is a very nice place and I would be very happy to go there.
That's an acceptance! There are plenty of schools I've yet to hear from, but the University of Illinois is a very nice place and I would be very happy to go there.
Saturday, December 31, 2016
Submit all the college applications
Today I submitted the last five of my college applications. I proofread the essays - so many of them - one last time and copied them from Word into the appropriate text box. Then I finalized the applications through their respective portals (mostly Common App, fortunately) and sent SAT scores to the college.
It feels really good to have them all done. Results will arrive in a few months with the first one coming in February. Right now, I am really happy to finish out the year with these handled.
It feels really good to have them all done. Results will arrive in a few months with the first one coming in February. Right now, I am really happy to finish out the year with these handled.
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