Feb 28, 2008

i probably sound like a weirdo stalker, huh?
-yaya
Yeah, a bit. But thats ok. My records show Yaya being my only regular reader who comments too -*-. Thanks Yaya. A way of replying or a link to your blog would be nice though. That would make your interest in my daily life seem less like a weirdo stalker.

Feb 27, 2008

The half-mark was my Corporate Relationship Management exam today. This leaves me with two subjects left to study for: Mass Media Law and Ethics, followed by Marketing Communication on Saturday.

Today's exam was hard in that the questions were very ambiguous. I wasn't sure if my idea of a correct answer was what my teacher's would be. I think I did OK. One thing's for sure: I would have done a lot better without the girl turning around asking her friend for answers every minute.

First year students always seem to assume the only way to pass an exam is to copy off of the friend that studied. "It's just so hard." they'll whine when asked why they don't try reading a bit before the exam. This particular girl had worked out a winning technique. She would turn her head and lay her chin over her right shoulder while keeping her short and plump body still. It looked like she was sneezing every minute, only she would sneeze "What's 32?" then "33?" followed by "Isn't 34 B?" To a male friend sitting next to me. I don't mind people peering over each other once in a while. It's part of the culture. Copying every single multiple choice question on a 50+ questions exam is just... dumb. Not as dumb, however, as the professors proctoring the exam. Male prof. #1 was busy using his cupped hand to chat on his cell phone. Male prof. #2 had iPod headphones in his ears the whole period, silently rocking out at the front of the room. Or maybe it was jazz he was listening to. Either way he seemed relaxed and unconcerned.

Did I snitch on them? Nah. Almost. About 10 minutes before students were allowed to leave they began passing answers on an eraser. I was pretty annoyed but didn't fancy making a scene.

I finished my last answer 1 hour 30 minutes into the exam. I picked up my bag and walked outside, chatting with friends about the questions. I was leaning against the railing when I saw it. The cheating girl had forgotten her bag of pens, pencils, erasers, and student ID card in front of the exam room. Life's surprises are just great.

My friends and I had lunch as I told them about this first year couple. The eraser still had answers and messages in blue ink. Instead of returning it to the office, we decided to have a little fun. Paula had the best handwriting so we had her write on a small piece of paper in Thai "Cheating or any form of academic dishonesty during university exams will result in immediate six month suspension, an 'F' grade in all subjects during that term, and possible expulsion." I put the slip inside the bag and headed up to see if I could find the girl. Instead I walked past the male student, her partner in crime. I held up her I ID. "Do you know this girl?" I wasn't sure it was the same kid, good to check. The look on his face said he knew her quite well. "Yes. Is she in trouble?" I gave him the ID and told him the bag belonged to her. He took the bait. hehe. I walked back to the table and watched as the kid took the bag back to his friend's in the cafeteria, within eyesight. We all kept from laughing as the whole group read the letter aloud. They were noticeably tense. He actually came over to our table and asked if a teacher had said anything when they gave me the bag. I said I found it in front of the exam room. I'm pretty sure they think they were caught but the administration is giving them "a second chance" to straighten up. Study more, cheat less.

Last night I was looking through graduate schools again. Between daydreams of interesting classes and jobs after college, I noticed that almost all the schools I was considering required 3-10 pages of scholarly and/or published writing. I've only had one writing class at BU. Although Prof. Kibor taught me a lot of useful tips for writing leads and using correct punctuation; I haven't had any practice writing scholarly.

I went back to reading books until I noticed a copy of the university newspaper laying on the floor. Within minutes I had the names of all the writers and editors using the school website's search function. I couldn't believe it. Bangkok University, the number one school in Thailand for Communication Arts (most journalists graduate from here), has a student paper with not one student writer for the English section. In the past some students and teachers have been asked to contribute but never wrote on a regular basis.

So... I emailed two editors and the head of the Comm. Arts. dept.
Hi,

I've always enjoyed BU News and wondered how our school newspaper works.

Major Thai universities such as Chulalongkorn, Thammasat, ABAC, Mahidol, and most large schools around the world have student-run newspapers, written and edited by students to inform other students of news and interesting features of the school.

I would like to know how I can become a part of BU News. As a third year student in BUIC's Communication Arts major I would like to gain journalism experience before going on to study at the graduate level next year. I would be happy researching and writing about any assigned topics and have a background in photojournalism.

How can become a part of my school's newspaper? :)

Sincerely,
Dan
The next morning I received a reply from the International Affairs Office:
Hi Dan:

Thank you for your email. We are happy to know that you are interested to participate in the English section of the BU News magazine. The English section is produced for our foreign students and faculty and for Thai students and faculty interested in reading English.

We do invite students and faculty to contribute, however, so far not many have shown interest to write articles. You must have read the articles from mostly BUIC students on their student exchange experience, and there have been only few teachers writing articles.

Normally we focus on Thai culture and the culture of this region, education and universal topics in general.

The English section is produced every month by staff of International Affairs Office. You are welcome to pass by to discuss your possible contribution in detail. It is good to know that you like to expand your journalism experience by contributing to BU News.

If you would like to come this week, our office is open from 9 to 5 with lunchtime during 12 - 1.

Best regards,
August

August Timmermans
Staff, International Affairs Office
After teasing the cheating freshman I walked up to building 9 a few minutes before five o'clock. On the 11th floor I met with August and we sat down and talked about the paper. August is a nice man from Holland who has been single-handedly writing the English section of the paper. He told me he had once tried to get the BUIC students, administration, and dean involved but nobody ever wanted to be involved.

Enter -- me. I hope to be writing monthly, as the only student writer/photographer/editor for BU News. August will be the senior editor and help me with layout issues. March is a post-exam break, with students returning mid-month. Because of this March and April are lumped into one issue which prints this week. My first article will be in the next issue, the May issue, and will feature something the paper has never done before. It will be a two page interview with the dean of the International College. I picked the dean because he's seen by students as such a mysterious and powerful man who spends most of his time tucked away in a corner office of the BUIC building. Hopefully, I will be able to learn a bit more him and give people an idea of who their dean is. He and I have scheduled a meeting tomorrow morning to talk about scheduling.
This also gets me a model for my digital photography homework due Sunday by midnight: a portrait using fill flash.

I have Mass Media Law to study tonight so I'm at the library again, enjoying it's silence and the university's blazingly fast and free wireless connection.

Saturday night I found a Thai Flickr Meet group on Flickr. Sunday morning I was waiting at the Taksin Bridge docks to go on a photography trip. It's a neat once a month gathering of Bangkok photographers. Sunday we went to the other side of the water and visited the temples and small streets of Klong San. Poor animals.

แมวหมวย

Soi Dog, Klong San


Oh..about the landlord with the crappy "one-year or loose half your deposit rule"... the old lady downstairs mentioned this morning that the he graduated from... Chula, in the Faculty of Political Science's Master of Arts International Development Studies, or MAIDS. The program only accept 20 applicants a year and it's top on my list at the moment. Small world?

Feb 23, 2008

I'm in the middle of midterm exams right now and feeling pretty good about them. Besides only having four exams, versus the normal six, I'm not exactly sure what has me in such a good mood.

The library has been a great remedy for my boredom of being an apartment dweller. Wednesday and Thursday I found a table there and studied with Lek, until the 21.00 closing time. I think I was the last person there. The change of location seemed to help though; my Special Topics on Communication exam seemed relatively easy. The Bangkok University library is particularly quiet or well-equipped so I think the reason for me reading so well is probably just from changing things around a bit.

Last week the band had two auditions at two night venues in town. We decided we need more practice before doing any more.

This got me thinking a lot about grad school applications which will be coming up in a year. Ohio University and Columbia both have great journalism programs... but Chula's MA International Delevopment, or MAIDS program, is most interesting to me. It's a really cool program, would be really interesting and fun, has the best professors in the country, and would only take a few years to pay off after graduation. Why is researching colleges so much fun? Is it the excitement of planning that I like so much?

I think I'm gonna move again. Last night, an 80-year old woman repeatedly informed me how dumb I was for forgetting my key inside my room (Yes, again), and reminded me that moving out before the one-year contract (unsigned, still in my closet) ends, the owner will keep half my deposit if I decide to leave. There's no arguing this one because he has the money and theres only one month left on the calender. Last month my electric bill was a 2300฿ almost twice a normal bill, meaning something isn't right in the accounting department. The Karaoke/bar girl rental place on the first floor has always been an annoyance too. They're supposed to close at midnight but the cops are usually drinking and singing there until 2 or 3am. Not sure where I'll go... deal with that later next month.

Today the nice old lady sent up a maintenance crew for a yearly air-conditioner cleaning. I filmed a timelapse video while the three men: cleaned, fixed, broke, and re-fixed the AC. It's very cool (temperature) now but I'm afraid to turn it on in fear of my upcoming power bill next week.



Speaking of movies: The Life of Henry Gale with Kevin Spacey was really good, as was Runaway Jury staring
John Cusack, Gene Hackman, Dustin Hoffman.

That's all for now folks. Corporate Relationship Management on Wednesday, Mass Media Law on Thursday, and Marketing Communication on Saturday.

Oh, and... props to Washington Mutual for giving back my overdraft fee.

Feb 12, 2008

I haven't gotten far on my photo essay. Today I spent an hour or more shooting birds in the cafeteria. Was eying the fan and florescent light patterns as well. I think a lot of people thought I was crazy. But the catch of the day was right at sunset,while I was walking to the other side of the campus.

Balance

This is all I have from the first day. This may be the image I use to demonstrate color balance (not the walls and balls type of balance). Lines are decent in this one too I think. It's certainly a candidate for the top three. Then again, I may not get more than three keepers by Friday afternoon...

The teacher I'm always wining about gave another clear example of bad teaching today. At least she made it clear though... I quote "Uhm. I know the slides are all blank but that because I like to talk. You know? I just say whats in the book. You can read at home if you like." This lines pretty well sums up her classes. Immediately after this clarification of her teaching style, half of the class gathered their things and walked out. This was the last class before the midterm, the third of the semester that she showed up for, so a short pre-exam review would have been nice. Nope. She didn't even tell us what types of questions would be on the exam. I'm guessing 3 essay questions asking about random subjects from the first half of the book (? is there one?).

Feb 10, 2008

My sister is out of the hospital. She taking meds to help with the seizures and MRIs to monitor what doctors are calling "the thing". I'm really glad I made time to get back and see everyone. Now that I'm back I wish I could have spent another week or two hanging out.

DSC00803

It's odd traveling in such a short time. Feels like I was gone much longer than eight days. At the moment my mind is floating between the two places like some sort of time warp. I think it might be an organizational issue; I just need more things on my schedule to feel busier and active.

My trip back was relatively uneventful. I had to get on my knees and beg a bit to keep my guitar from being sent down below. The problem came from using a full size hard case instead of a common guitar-shaped soft gigbag. The later is half the size, a quarter of the weight, and eight times easier to get past gate managers looking to save overhead compartment room. Besides all this, I nearly destroyed the guitar by not paying attention on a S-gate escalator in Seattle. The width of the escalators happens to be 1" smaller than the width of the case. I managed to get the case wedged and almost snap it in half.

DSC00820

I just opened my calender for the first time in almost two weeks. This next week is the last week of classes before the midterm. I'd known my midterms were on the 22nd, 27th, 28th, and 1st but I hadn't realized next week was the last before exams. I should really think about buying the textbooks and studying...

A mini-project was assigned in class yesterday. It's a 3-photo photo-essay using various color/contrast balance and composition techniques. The theme is urban patterns. At least I think that was it. Our professor doesn't give access to her PowerPoint slides like other professors. Luckily, my class is full of Computer Graphics students and a abundance of digital cameras: someone takes a picture of each slide then distributes them to the rest of the students later via email. I'm not sure what my subject is going to be yet but I need to finish shooting mid-week if I'm going to get prints done in time.

*Anyone using the Firefox browser (hopefully all of you) should really really check out one of the coolest add-ons there are: PicLens. Once you click the link, download, and restart Firefox, visit my Flickr page. Rest your cursor on a picture and click the play button. Or use it to browse Google Images. Great stuff.

PicLens