28 January 2010
Welcome back!
So just to catch up...
Continue reading "Welcome back!" »
Posted by Maria at 2:58 | Permalink
11 August 2009
Summer is almost over...
Here's the list of things I said I would do:
1. Take a couple classes: ASL, French, Statistics
-->didn't happen! I borrowed some Learn French CD's but they proved to be too advanced for my beginner abilities. I arranged ASL lessons with a friend every Thursday night but that often got overlooked although I now know how to say some basic things like hello, how are you, i'm fine/good/bad/happy/excited/sad/tired/hungry/sleepy, i love you, good morning, how, who, where, when, why, and maybe a few others that I can't recall at the moment. I intend on auditing a stats class in the fall.
2. Work full time
-->YEP! A lot of this! I worked 32 hours a week (M-Th 9-5) June 1-August 14. I was the "Jill of All Trades" for the summer doing all sorts of things from organizing a closet full of science equipment worth more than my life, converting Lonely Planet VHS tapes to DVD's, gave tours of the campus, grant writing, etc. I also did a lot of fun things like work on a script for an infomercial about Ohlone's GIS/GPS program, teach a couple human ecology classes, helped out with some major events. Don't get me wrong I had a lot of fun and I learned a great deal but I will be glad once it's over.
3. Go on some trips:
river rafting-->done!
hike more mountains-->only hiked Mission Peak once more
Mendocino-->went there maybe 2 times and will be going again in 2 weeks for a wine festival!
Yosemite Nat'l park-->nope...but I went to Muir Woods :)
4. Watch Wicked-->going to be 3 times by the end of this summer, I highly recommend it!
5. Catch up on reading all my books!-->that's a slow and steady process
Other than this, I will be going camping one more time and returning the day before classes start, I got to spend more time with my family and friend especially my brother who is going away for college in September (Cal Poly SLO), and I will be celebrating my birthday at the end of this month.
I hope your summer was well spent :) But it's not over yet!!!
Continue reading "Summer is almost over..." »
Posted by Maria at 1:05 | Permalink
02 July 2009
SHIP Waiver Deadline!
What's SHIP? Student Health Insurance Plan
http://www.uhs.berkeley.edu/students/insurance/waiver/welcome.shtml
Every student is required to have comprehensive medical, counseling, dental, and vision coverage. Each semester, UCB will automatically apply SHIP to your account unless you submit a waiver located at the link below. The waiver is your proof that you have outside insurance equivalent to the university's. Unless you submit this waiver by July 15, you will be charged $698 for the Fall semester!
Waiver requires CalNet Login:
https://auth.berkeley.edu/cas/login?service=https://www.uhs.berkeley.edu/waivers/waiverform.asp
I didn't understand this my first semester and was charged for SHIP. I was able to get refunded by submitting the form after the due date but I was still charged $50. So in an effort to save you the $50-$698, WAIVE SHIP, provided you have equivalent insurance.
Continue reading "SHIP Waiver Deadline!" »
Posted by Maria at 1:43 | Permalink
09 May 2009
Summer plans
TA in Human Ecology class at Ohlone College in Fremont (M-Th 2pm-4pm)
Work on solar panel monitoring at the Newark Center for Health Sciences and Technology (time??)
What I would like to do depending on my availability:
1. Take a couple classes:
ASL, French, Statistics
2. Work full time-->need to make some money... :(
3. Go on some trips:
river rafting
hike more mountains
Mendocino
Yosemite Nat'l park
4. Watch Wicked
5. Catch up on reading all my books!
I really hate not having things solidified...but good luck to the rest of you and I hope you enjoy your summer to it's fullest :)
Continue reading "Summer plans" »
Posted by Maria at 4:34 | Permalink
09 May 2009
Dirt!
Inspired by William Bryant Logan’s acclaimed book Dirt, the Ecstatic Skin of the Earth, directors Bill Benenson and Gene Rosow employ a colorful combination of animation, vignettes, and personal accounts from farmers, physicists, church leaders, children, wine critics, anthropologists, and activists to learn about dirt—where it comes from, how we regard (or disregard) it, how it sustains us, the way it has become endangered, and what we can do about it. Possessing both a cosmic perspective that reaches into the vastness of time and space, and the kind of warm, earnest energy that inspires small revolutions inside human hearts, Dirt! The Movie offers an important and timely look at the vital relationship between those of us on Earth and something that is easy to take for granted—the soil upon which we tread. Benenson and Rosow find answers everywhere: in tiny villages that dare to rise up to battle giant corporations to trendy organic farms; from prison horticultural programs to scientists who discover connections with soil that can offset the damage from global warming.
Gene Rosow has directed more than 20 documentaries for theatrical and television release, including San Francisco Good Times, Routes of Exile: A Moroccan Jewish Odyssey, Doctora, Routes of Rhythm with Harry Belafonte, and Knights. His feature-film producing credits include the family film Zeus and Roxanne for MGM, along with Silent Tongue and Britney, Baby—One More Time, which both premiered at Sundance.
For more info:
http://events.berkeley.edu/index.php/calendar/sn/enviro.html?event_ID=18419&date=2009-05-11&filter=Secondary%20Event%20Type&filtersel=
Posted by Maria at 4:29 | Permalink
09 May 2009
Human Subject Protocol
http://www.lbl.gov/ehs/health_services/harc/hsc.shtml#Human subjects protocols at LBNL
Continue reading "Human Subject Protocol" »
Posted by Maria at 3:26 | Permalink
01 May 2009
Bringing Back the Natives Garden Tour
Check out the Bringing Back the Natives Garden Tour
Sunday, May 3, 10am-5pm
http://bringingbackthenatives.net/
It's a free self-guided tour through 60 native plant gardens throughout the Bay Area. These gardens are managed by a wide range of people: homes, contractors, designers, etc. In addition to getting access to these gardens, you can talk to the gardeners themselves about their techniques and troubles in the creation and management of a native plant garden. The Native Plant Sale Extravaganza will also be going on at several native nurseries!
Pre-registration is preferred but walk-ins are welcome! You may also volunteer to get hands on experience with native garden handling.
Continue reading "Bringing Back the Natives Garden Tour" »
Posted by Maria at 7:46 | Permalink
28 April 2009
I love my finals!
ESPM 111: exam #2 on last day of class which is not cumulative IS the final
ESPM 178B: presence on the last day of class during a discussion about what we've learned this semester
Again...I LOVE MY FINALS!
Continue reading "I love my finals!" »
Posted by Maria at 4:58 | Permalink
13 April 2009
Finding myself by getting lost
How hard it is to answer the question "Who am I?" Let alone, what I want to do with my life. I may acknowledge my passion for the environment but what to do with that passion is another question. And I don't feel I can take a step forward without answering that. Thus, I have concluded that the best way to find myself is by getting lost.
What exactly does this entail? There a number of routes I can take but it's the Peace Corps that won me over. What better way to get lost than to leave my world of familiarity and predictability for a world completely strange to me. Full of unknowns and nothing for me to depend on, at least immediately. A world where all I have a familiar sense of is myself. Yet as fulfilling as this experience potentially is, I find myself terrified of committing to something so beyond me. Of leaving everything and everyone that I hold dear and comforting. Of not having the sense of security of being able to predict almost everything in my current world before it happens. On having people, situations, outcomes that I can rely on. Leaving it all and bringing only whatever scrap of personality I have developed. Leaving it all for a world that may not accept me. And, most importantly, leaving it all to find myself.
A good friend of mine told me that if it's scary, it must be good. The thought of this terrifies me incredibly, almost to the point of debilitation. I'm going through the motions of committing to the Peace Corps yet I feel that with each step I do it with force upon myself. A big part of me is so scared of it that I don't want to go through with it. Yet, I feel that such a step is necessary for me to progress in my own personal development. And it is by this logic that I continue to push myself towards commitment.
It still scares the shit out of me.

"Strength and Independence"
Continue reading "Finding myself by getting lost" »
Posted by Maria at 2:30 | Permalink
05 April 2009
For the prospective transfer students
Disclaimer: My perspective is based strictly on my 3 years of experience at Ohlone College and my 1.5 semesters at Berkeley. I will give the Pro's and the Con's of Berkeley in retrospect of Ohlone. The bad should be taken in with the good equally.
Continue reading "For the prospective transfer students" »
Posted by Maria at 0:14 | Permalink
20 March 2009
A Day Without Paper
Check them out!
http://jstaton.wordpress.eusd.net/2009/03/10/a-day-without-paper/
Continue reading "A Day Without Paper" »
Posted by Maria at 8:59 | Permalink
18 March 2009
Thinking about Grad school?

Getting What You Came For by Robert L. Peters for $10.88 on Amazon.
http://www.amazon.com/Getting-What-You-Came-Students/dp/0374524777/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1237436284&sr=8-2
It goes through what grad school is like, what it takes to get there, what you should be doing before you get there, what you should do when you're in to get through on time...and all in amazingly insightful yet comedic detail.
Whether grad school is a just a consideration or a definite plan, read this book. It may scare you at first but it's all stuff you should know before going in. It's a big decision and a serious commitment so make sure you know what you're getting yourself into.
Continue reading "Thinking about Grad school?" »
Posted by Maria at 1:08 | Permalink
03 March 2009
Why People Believe Weird Things
General Admission $10
Smith Center Box Office
http://www.tinyurl.com/shermeratohlone
Presented by The Ohlone College Psychology Club
Michael Shermer is a genuine ghostbuster, a relentless crusader against superstition, and pseudoscience. In this lecture, he discusses his investigation of paranormal claims and other unexplained phenomena and what makes us believe in them.
Is ESP real?
Does “alternative” medicine really work?
What causes mass delusion?
What’s up with UFOs sightings?
Why are people so gullible?
What’s the evidence for Near-Death Experiences, Alien Abductions, Recovered Memories, Creationism, Holocaust Denial, Race, or God?
Based on his bestselling book Why People Believe Weird Things, psychologist Michael Shermer applies scientific reason to these and many other questions in a witty talk that has been described as a no-holds barred attack on the pseudoscience and nonsense of our day.
Michael Shermer is available for interviews prior to the event. Please check out the web page, and/or email Sheldon W. Helms at sheldon@ohlone.edu for more information.
Continue reading "Why People Believe Weird Things" »
Posted by Maria at 9:51 | Permalink
21 February 2009
FREE practice exams!
Go to: http://www.kaptest.com/practice
You can take various practice tests (GRE, MCAT, LSAT, etc.) for free to get an idea of what you're in for if you plan on taking it for real at some point.
Continue reading "FREE practice exams!" »
Posted by Maria at 0:03 | Permalink
05 February 2009
Spring 2009 finally finalized!
Mondays:
10am-11am ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology (Discussion)
11am-12pm ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology (Lecture)
1-3pm ESPM 178B (Environmental Ed Practicum) field placement at King Middle School
Tuesdays:
9am-11am ED 189 Democracy and Education
11am-12:30pm SOC 150A Self and Society (audit)
*potential independent research time*
Wednesdays:
11am-12pm ESPM 111 Lecture
1pm-3pm volunteer at Jepson Herbarium
5pm-8pm ESPM 178B Lecture
Thursdays:
9am-11am ED 189
11am-12:30pm SOC 150A (audit)
*potential independent research time*
Fridays:
11am-12pm ESPM 111 Lecture
12:30-3:30 Restoration Internship at RFS
Continue reading "Spring 2009 finally finalized!" »
Posted by Maria at 9:53 | Permalink
16 January 2009
My Winter Break
First things done:
1. watched The Gods Must Be Crazy I & II

It's an awesome movie if you get the chance to watch it!
Continue reading "My Winter Break" »
Posted by Maria at 3:20 | Permalink
23 December 2008
Awesome grades!
Hope you all did well in your classes! And Happy Holidays!
Continue reading "Awesome grades!" »
Posted by Maria at 0:39 | Permalink
18 December 2008
A revelation worth sharing
One of my sisters died on the day after Thanksgiving. On her death bed, I was telling her about my plans for the future and she told me “Don’t forget to live.” I wasn’t sure what that meant at first but I started thinking about how I had lived my life thus far and how I was planning to live it in the future. I realized that I live my life very goal-oriented. Now, that’s not necessarily a bad thing. It’s great to have aspirations and to work for them. But sometimes, especially as college students, we forget to appreciate things in the moment. With every minute that we spend studying for an exam or writing our notes in lecture, we tend to think in terms of the goal we are trying to reach whether that’s simply the degree, a well-paying job or future stability. For the longest time, I maintained a mentality of “I need to know this stuff so I can pass the exam so I can get my degree” and I would immediately forget the material as soon as the exam was over. I was wasting time, effort, and money for an education that I would never retain.
Continue reading "A revelation worth sharing" »
Posted by Maria at 2:32 | Permalink
13 December 2008
Hit the ground running
Continue reading "Hit the ground running" »
Posted by Maria at 2:05 | Permalink
06 December 2008
The Term Paper
Continue reading "The Term Paper" »
Posted by Maria at 2:24 | Permalink
01 December 2008
R.I.P Minnie Broas 11.28.08
She has had a long fight with GIST (Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumor). She was married for almost 25 years (10 months short) and has a son of 16. The love that emanated from their family was unlike any other. She's always been a healthy person, ran in several marathons, had the heart of an athlete. Her son reflects her athletic abilities with amazing soccer skills. He's even training now for the next Olympics and has had several offers for a professional career. Minnie is such a beautiful person. She has one of those personalities that radiate and make you feel like you've known her forever.
In her final months, her husband stayed home and did his work at her side. Each moment was too precious to let go. The remainder of the family, myself included, rotated taking care of her as she had already reached a point where she could not do so herself. This included bathing, eating, moving, defecating and all the simple things that most people take for granted. She continued to intake food and drink although it was taken up by the tumors leaving her nothing to absorb. Overall, those months were like a rollercoaster ride. Some days she would seem practically normal and have regular conversations with you, laughing along at jokes, as if she were healthy again. Other days, she would have seizures which were scary in themselves because she had a request for no resuscitation. She so longed to go but was often unable to.
About 2 weeks ago, she requested for some key people in her life to be at her side. That included my other brothers and sister, and her parents. Then on Tuesday, everyone returned back to take care of work and other things expecting to return on Sunday. At the time, Minnie seemed normal and said she would be fine until they returned. Even on Thanksgiving, she was still eating despite having some breathing problems.
Finally on Friday, she mumbled some words which made no sense in the order they came out and faded away. There was no pain in her passing and she was in the presence of her husband and son, her two beloved boys.
Naturally, everyone feels a degree of guilt, wishing that they had stayed for her last breath, wishing they didn't miss that phone call, wishing they didn't have other responsibilities at the time. But it's good to know that she is finally free of pain and that she is finally where she wants to be. This is what I try to keep in mind and all I can do is be there for the rest of my family.
She decided to donate her body to research so that others may benefit from whatever knowledge science learns of her case.
Rest in peace, sister.
Continue reading "R.I.P Minnie Broas 11.28.08" »
Posted by Maria at 3:49 | Permalink
25 November 2008
Finally...a break!
If anything, the one downside is that I still have to do a paper that is due on the Tuesday we return. On top of an essay due on Wednesday and a presentation on Thursday. How deceiving...
Happy Thanksgiving everyone!
Continue reading "Finally...a break!" »
Posted by Maria at 1:32 | Permalink
21 November 2008
Crunch Time
Continue reading "Crunch Time" »
Posted by Maria at 5:27 | Permalink
04 November 2008
Inopportune Times
Continue reading "Inopportune Times" »
Posted by Maria at 6:07 | Permalink
17 October 2008
Finding a Faculty Advisor
With my AOI focusing mainly on environmental education for positive social change, I found it particularly difficult finding an adviser in the ESPM department. Majority of them are more on the sciences and if anything politics and justice. And although those are great things, that wasn't my emphasis. Evidently, I located my best match in the education department. His emphasis is exactly mine, education as a mode for social change...perfect! I look forward to the knowledge I have yet to gain from him.
If you are in the midst of finding an adviser for yourself, don't exclude faculty outside of ESPM in your considerations because they equally have something grand to offer. The most important part is that their interests match with yours. Best of luck!
Continue reading "Finding a Faculty Advisor" »
Posted by Maria at 6:10 | Permalink
09 October 2008
NO CLASSES IN THE SPRING!
What makes it worse is that after talking to my major advisor and other people in my major, they all seemed to agree that classes tend to be flaky like that, especially the classes for CRS majors! It's just frustrating...because now I don't know what to do next semester!
Continue reading "NO CLASSES IN THE SPRING!" »
Posted by Maria at 9:14 | Permalink
03 October 2008
Gaining wisdom through others' experience
Continue reading "Gaining wisdom through others' experience" »
Posted by Maria at 2:58 | Permalink
21 September 2008
University vs. Community College
1. Opportunities
This is one of the first things that hit me. There are so many opportunities that UCB has to offer, which quite honestly I find overwhelming. They have everything from independent research to study abroad to classes about pretty much everything there is to have a class on. But as a junior I feel at a slight disadvantage simply because I, ideally, only have 2 years here which doesn't give me enough time to experience everything I would like. So my suggestion to people coming into to Cal as freshmen is to take advantage of as many of the opportunities as you can because you have no idea at how much of an advantage you really are.
Continue reading "University vs. Community College" »
Posted by Maria at 2:27 | Permalink
11 September 2008
ES vs. CRS
A couple months after the application deadline, I discovered the CRS major which highly appealed to me simply because it focused on an aspect that I felt I was devoting more of my efforts towards, at the time anyway...
Continue reading "ES vs. CRS" »
Posted by Maria at 0:56 | Permalink
04 September 2008
An Introduction
Hi! My name is Maria, but I am also known as Lou. I don't really care which name you use because they both refer to me. I'm a junior transfer fresh in from Ohlone College in Fremont. If you don't know where that is, it's north of San Jose and south of Oakland, and consequently Berkeley. In essence, still in the Bay Area. The first 9 years of my life was spent in Union City which is a neighbor to Fremont. For the most part, much like everyone else's I imagine, my childhood was pretty carefree. I went to school, played with friends, discovered new things in my surroundings...
Continue reading "An Introduction" »
Posted by Maria at 7:18 | Permalink
Categories
Monthly Archives
Recent Posts
Finals, Life and Confusion of a College Kid
EDITED: What goes on in those bspace chat rooms
Syndication

