Wednesday, 11 May 2011

Facelift Planning For Premed Path

School is done. Grades are in. Transcripts sent to UBC. Plan B created with Langara.
Now, back to working full time for my local health authority.
Now, preparing my wife and I for the big move at the end of the summer.

Hopefully this will equal to more blog time... but I could see possibly the opposite happening.

I plan on finishing the current series and doing a little facelift. Currently, I have kept the site to its default template and its slowly starting to bother me.

Much Love.

Saturday, 7 May 2011

First Year General Chemistry

I think next time when I write two posts in one day I will post both of them and not accidentally save as draft the second post... :P

General Chem
Text: Chemistry: The Central Science, 8th Ed.
Since my last post was about my weakest course, english, I thought I would follow up with my strongest course, chemistry. Most chemistry class are formated the same: labs, 1-2 midterms, maybe a few assignments, and a final. A lot of students dread lab courses as it means 2-3 extra hours of class time and an assignment (lab report) each week. I have to admit I'm quite the opposite. Chemistry tends to come easily to me. I have yet to experience problems with understanding the material or really getting stuck on a question. Because of all this, I knew to spend less time on understanding this course and placed most of my effort on other courses.
I don't say this to boast how awesome I am; I say this to once again show the importance of strategy in undergrad class selection. I have selected a program where I have 1-2 chemistry courses each semester. I play to my strengths while allowing me to concentrate on my weaknesses. Like most first year university courses, you will find most of the objectives to be review and expansion of their grade 11 and 12 equivelants. I did find the textbook helfpul in many ways and will discuss this later. My text named chemistry the central science because chemistry can easily be related to all the others. I continuously found the knowledge in my other courses helped me with chemistry. Some obvious examples: integrated rate laws and calculus, almost anything in cellular biology and organic chem, quantum physics and any chemistry dealing with the atoms.

How I Did
First semester: A+
Second semester: A+

How to Do Well
The reason why students have issues with lab courses is because of time management and efficiency issues. Try to complete your lab reports as soon as possible (easier said than done). Labs are usually integrated with the previous section of lecture, so it is important that both the lab and course work is as fresh as possible. I will stress again that a student excells when the teachers expectations are met or exceeded. Every proffesor or TA wants different information and style for lab reports. I try to find out right away what they are looking for. I then work increadibly hard on getting the first lab report as perfect as possible. After this, all subsequent lab reports are just minor alterations of the first with new data. I used this method even when my proffessor excluded a section for one lab. Example: lab three didn't require theory but I kept that section regardless to keep my format and to show understanding throughout the report. Another tip for labs is to approach it as a seperate course from the lecture. Although I did state previously the two are usually integrated, I did notice how my fellow students would get hung up on this idea and would get confused when they did not perfectly match.
General chemistry has a decent balance of memorization, problem sets and theoretical application, where the chapters will differ in magnitude of each. That's why a diverse strategy works best. I would preread the text the day before class, watch Freelance Teacher just before class, and then review my notes the next day. On average this would represent about 30 minutes for every hour of lecture.
Test studying would completely depend on the subject. For theoretical subjects I would make note summaries. For memorization topics flash cards and mind maps always work best. For problem sets I would practice as many problems as possible (priority for any ones given by proffesor or previous students over text book).
Overall, don't get frustrated and enjoy your time in undergrad! There will be stresses but don't let it get you down.


While writing this I was listening to Periphery!

Wednesday, 4 May 2011

First Year English

This will be short. As most have gathered by my awesome sentences, writing is not my strength. Not too sure why: I like to read, I am artistic (musically), and love to argue logically. Luckily I'm done English courses forever (except written section in MCAT). I have completed one semester of University Writing and one semester of Literature.

University Writing
I took this course in 2005, so please keep that in mind. I ended up with a B in the course with a teacher known for being an easy marker. This course is basically English 12 on steroids. The course is to teach good writing skills, according to your professor (keep this in mind for later). Usually the prerequisite for other English courses and mandatory for most programs. Mostly work on technique and how to properly source materials.

Literature
This class is nothing but reading and writing about reading. Material will usually consist of short stories, poems, plays and a novel(s). I somehow tricked a teacher, who is famous for low grades, into giving me an A-.

How I Changed My Approach:
I'm going to give the big secrets off the bat:
   * go to class
   * listen to the teacher
   * read the material
   * get at least two people to edit your writing
   * the big one: finish the assignment around a week earlier, visit your teacher during and get her to edit it by asking "am I on the right track" or "is there anywhere I can improve"
English is a subjective course, which means you're as good as your teacher thinks you are. You improve your chances of success when you are arguing the point your audience already believes. By taking these steps you will ensure that your essay is clear, concise and mostly what your instructor is looking for. A lot of schools have free writing centres so please use all the tools available.

This won't teach you how to write well, but it will show you how to do well in a course that is difficult for most science based premeds.
Oh PS: take in whatever you can on how to write well for the MCAT

Random Update

There's a few chores to get done with this post.

First, I've noticed a huge increase (relatively speaking... ex: one is more than none) of visits and was able to track the source down. MedRunner (aka HKing) has put a link on his blog to here. I'd like to thank him since there was no request or requirement and we don't know eachother personally. I would like to say check out his blog, not because he linked to me, but because he is a genuine great guy (even if he is a Canucks fan... go Jets!). Over at pm101 he is quick to assist and up lift others. You have to be a great person to seem like a good person online, so he must be awesome! So I command all two of my readers who accidentally found this to check his blog out!

Secondly, I fell for a huge blog cliche: I apologized for lack of update, followed by a promise, and then came up empty. Sorry. I promise not to promise to update regularly but will try my best to be as often as possible. This way no one is dissapointed.

Thirdly, I'm done my last year of college. I'm pretty excited. Next year I move to UBC and enter the big leauges. I'll go from a big fish in a small pond to a small fish in a big pond. I hope to meet this challenge! I've recieved my grades for this semester and I'm both happy and dissapointed. I beat last years GPA (not according to U of Man as they measure A- and A as equals) but I think I could of done better.

Fourthly, I will try to write two more posts today and hopefully finish my "first year courses" series soon!