sextant 2011-w11 web

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Editor in Chief: Shani Blankrot March 24th 2011 Page 1 CO-OP CORNER Things to Remember: e Co-op website oers many tips and is very infor- mation. e website is engandcompscicoop.dal.ca Round II is from February 15 – April 8 Word of the Week Write. Get Paid. Send articles to [email protected] Looking for something to do? Not spending enough time mingling with other faculties/ disciplines? Then check out some of these events. Thursday , March 24th Formula SAE Night Actor and Architects Saturday , March 26th Dal Diabetes Thursday, March 31st Comedy and Dal ROV night Friday April 1  Trivia and April Fool's Thursday , April 7th Last day of classes!!!! Does your society have an event on Sexton Campus? Send an email to sextant@dal. ca and we’ll post it here! Don't forget - it's free to advertise a society on The Sextant. Sexton Campus Events Halifax's Best Trivia! Spring Boot Camp(n): e comple- tion of all projects, assignments , and studying for nals all within a one 1.5 week period. What about sleep? No dice. Redbull Overdose(n): An unsuc- cessful attempt at getting through Spring Boot Camp due unexpect- ed side eects. Editors’ note: Word of the Week is a humour column based on popular expressions around Sexton Campus. If you have any complaints or suggestions, please e mail [email protected]. Obviously we prefer suggestions! daleng.ca Engineering classes teach his pupils via discussion and asking questions. This could be viewed as the exact opposite of the didactic approach and ar- guably much more eective. It has been further documented by Kolb that students can be grouped into four learning styles: convergers, divergers, assimila- tors, and accommodators; which are based on a mix of whether people learn through concep- tualization, experimentation, experience, o r observation. See- ing as though it is likely that the didactic approach would only align with a small subset of those being instructed, one arrives at the conclusion – is it even worth- while going to class, and should I be penalized for not going? To tackle the latter part rst, since attending university is in itself an optional decision, then by exten- sion the same should follow for attendance. Moreover, all profes- sors should end the anachronis- tic practice of documenting who is in class. Now, to look at the rst part to the prior conclusion, the precise answer to this would be based on wh ether you ca n eciently learn by the method in which your class is being t aught. If your professor incorporates dif- ferent modes of instruction that allows you to absorb k nowledge, then by all means attend class. It would seem that the contrary would only lead to one answer, but skipping class is not the only alternative. You should be aware that the majority of courses in Engineering will embark on a se- ries of changes in both curricula and instruction to meet new ac- creditation requirements. This yields the opportunity for you, the paying student, to provide suggestions and request chang- es, because if you are not heard, then the only alternative will be lectures presented to an empty class. I would like to start by disclaim- ing that this article has nothing to do with neither genetically en- gineering the proletariat nor the bourgeoisie, but with instructional classes in the eld of Engineering. I t is well known that there are many dierent methods of teaching, with typical lecturing (didactic), being just one of these. Another technique, Socratic, is based on how Socrates would Navin Chari Industrial PhD Candidate Comic by Jeremy Lai, Electrical Engineering 10 Get a job. But no one seems to want to hire me. 9 What do you mean get a  job? More school for sure... Masters, Med School, Massage  Therapy….anything but work- ing. I think I'll just hang out in the T-room for the rest of my life. Maybe I'll take over Trivia if Stan retires. 8 As an Enviro engineer, I'll x that Climate Change situa- tion on the ASAP. 7 As an Industrial engineer, I'll travel the world most e- ciently by planning my itinerary according to a travelling sales- man linear program. Lord help me. 6 Move to Australia, live in a tipi next to the ocean and marry a Kangeroo. 5  Teach English in Asia. The Asians have everything g- ured out...ultra fast trains, bite sized food, miniature trees, JIT manufacturing, man I wish I was Asian right now! 4 Become the next Ceasar from "The Dog Whisperer". Man, can that guy train dogs! 3 Backpack through Europe: smoke in Amsterdam, nd love in Paris and hang out with fat drunk balding middle aged men in Britain. 2 Either become a Justin Bieber groupie or the next Halifax Sleep Watcher . 1 Get back reconstructive sur- gery. Carrying that backpack everywhere gave me the back of a 50 year old. Throw that 10 pound graphing calculator down 20 stories while you're at it. Top 10 Things to do Robbie McCormack (5th year Industrial) I f you haven't already noticed, this will be the last Winter issue of The Sextant. I'm graduating in June, and am super excited and nervous to begin the rest of my life. This is a scary and unpredictable time for us students who are graduating. It's strange having been working so hard for ve years towards a degree that is in our grasp. Now what? Like many, I thought I'd have it all gured out by now, but I don't. And I guess that's okay. Some of my friends have awesome jobs waiting for them after gradua- tion, and many don't. For those of you who don't, including myself, now is the time to just not worry so much. We have our whole lives ahead of us, we've worked so hard to get here, and everything will piece itself together. W ith my senior design project taking up every day and night of my life, I have barely had the chance to ap- ply for jobs or even think about the future. Looking back on all the amazing times I've had in uni- versity, the friends I've made, the experience I've gained, and how mcuh I've changed, I know it was all worth it. Working on The Sextant has been so much fun. I'd like to t hank my Assistant Editor, Dilan, and Trea- surer, Riccardo, for all their help along the way.  The Fall Sextant team is lined up for next semester, with great writers from Mining, Mechanical, and Industrial. I'm leaving you in good hands. Good luck on exams, and have a great summer everyone! Shani Blankrot Editor in Chief (Industrial '11)  A Sextant Farewell After Grad 

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Page 1: Sextant 2011-W11 Web

8/7/2019 Sextant 2011-W11 Web

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/sextant-2011-w11-web 1/2

Editor in Chief:Shani Blankrot

March 24th 2011Page 1

CO-OP CORNER 

Things to Remember:

• e Co-op website oers

many tips and is very infor-mation. e website isengandcompscicoop.dal.ca

• Round II is from February 15– April 8

Word of the Week

Write.Get Paid.Send articles to [email protected]

Looking for something to do?Not spending enough time

mingling with other faculties/

disciplines? Then check out

some of these events.

Thursday, March 24th

Formula SAE Night

Actor and Architects

Saturday, March 26th

Dal Diabetes

Thursday, March 31st

Comedy and Dal ROV night

Friday April 1

 Trivia and April Fool's

Thursday, April 7th

Last day of classes!!!!

Does your society have an

event on Sexton Campus?

Send an email to sextant@dal.

ca and we’ll post it here!

Don't forget - it's free to

advertise a society on The

Sextant.

Sexton Campus

Events

Halifax's Best Trivia!

Spring Boot Camp(n): e comple-tion of all projects, assignments,and studying for nals all within aone 1.5 week period. What aboutsleep? No dice.Redbull Overdose(n): An unsuc-cessful attempt at getting throughSpring Boot Camp due unexpect-ed side eects.Editors’ note: Word of the Week is a humour columnbased on popular expressions around Sexton Campus.If you have any complaints or suggestions, please e [email protected]. Obviously we prefer suggestions!

daleng.ca

Engineering classesteach his pupils via discussionand asking questions. This could

be viewed as the exact oppositeof the didactic approach and ar-

guably much more eective. It

has been further documentedby Kolb that students can be

grouped into four learning styles:

convergers, divergers, assimila-

tors, and accommodators; which

are based on a mix of whether

people learn through concep-tualization, experimentation,

experience, or observation. See-

ing as though it is likely that the

didactic approach would only

align with a small subset of thosebeing instructed, one arrives at

the conclusion – is it even worth-

while going to class, and should

I be penalized for not going? To

tackle the latter part rst, since

attending university is in itself anoptional decision, then by exten-

sion the same should follow for

attendance. Moreover, all profes-

sors should end the anachronis-

tic practice of documenting who

is in class.Now, to look at the rst part to

the prior conclusion, the precise

answer to this would be based

on whether you can e ciently

learn by the method in whichyour class is being taught. If 

your professor incorporates dif-

ferent modes of instruction that

allows you to absorb knowledge,

then by all means attend class.

It would seem that the contrary

would only lead to one answer,

but skipping class is not the only

alternative. You should be awarethat the majority of courses in

Engineering will embark on a se-

ries of changes in both curricula

and instruction to meet new ac-

creditation requirements. This

yields the opportunity for you,the paying student, to provide

suggestions and request chang-

es, because if you are not heard,

then the only alternative will be

lectures presented to an emptyclass.

I would like to start by disclaim-

ing that this article has nothing

to do with neither genetically en-

gineering the proletariat nor the

bourgeoisie, but with instructional classes in the eld of Engineering.

It is well known that there are

many dierent methods of 

teaching, with typical lecturing(didactic), being just one of these.

Another technique, Socratic, is

based on how Socrates would

Navin Chari

Industrial PhD

Candidate

Comic by Jeremy Lai, Electrical Engineering

10Get a job. But no one

seems to want to hire me.

9What do you mean get a

  job? More school for sure...

Masters, Med School, Massage

  Therapy….anything but work-

ing. I think I'll just hang out in

the T-room for the rest of my life.Maybe I'll take over Trivia if Stan

retires.

8As an Enviro engineer, I'll x

that Climate Change situa-

tion on the ASAP.

7As an Industrial engineer, I'll

travel the world most e -

ciently by planning my itinerary

according to a travelling sales-

man linear program. Lord helpme.

6Move to Australia, live in a

tipi next to the ocean andmarry a Kangeroo.

5  Teach English in Asia. The

Asians have everything g-

ured out...ultra fast trains, bite

sized food, miniature trees, JITmanufacturing, man I wish I was

Asian right now!

4Become the next Ceasar

from "The Dog Whisperer".

Man, can that guy train dogs!

3Backpack through Europe:

smoke in Amsterdam, nd

love in Paris and hang out withfat drunk balding middle aged

men in Britain.

2Either become a JustinBieber groupie or the next

Halifax Sleep Watcher.

1Get back reconstructive sur-

gery. Carrying that backpack 

everywhere gave me the back of a 50 year old. Throw that 10

pound graphing calculator down

20 stories while you're at it.

Top 10 Things to do

Robbie

McCormack (5th

year Industrial)

If you haven't already noticed,

this will be the last Winter issue

of The Sextant.I'm graduating in June, and am

super excited and nervous to

begin the rest of my life. This is a

scary and unpredictable time for

us students who are graduating.It's strange having been working

so hard for ve years towards a

degree that is in our grasp. Now

what?

Like many, I thought I'd have itall gured out by now, but I don't.

And I guess that's okay. Some of 

my friends have awesome jobs

waiting for them after gradua-

tion, and many don't. For those of 

you who don't, including myself,now is the time to just not worry

so much. We have our whole lives

ahead of us, we've worked so

hard to get here, and everythingwill piece itself together. With my

senior design project taking up

every day and night of my life, I

have barely had the chance to ap-

ply for jobs or even think aboutthe future. Looking back on all

the amazing times I've had in uni-

versity, the friends I've made, the

experience I've gained, and how

mcuh I've changed, I know it wasall worth it.

Working on The Sextant has been

so much fun. I'd like to thank myAssistant Editor, Dilan, and Trea-

surer, Riccardo, for all their help

along the way.  The Fall Sextant team is lined

up for next semester, with great

writers from Mining, Mechanical,

and Industrial. I'm leaving you in

good hands.

Good luck on exams, and have a

great summer everyone!

Shani Blankrot

Editor in Chief 

(Industrial '11)

 A Sextant FarewellAfter Grad 

Page 2: Sextant 2011-W11 Web

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March 24th 2011Page 2

Apparel - Belt Buckles (Bronze, Silver and

Gold toned), Keychains and T-Shirts!

EngiBEERing every Friday afternoon in the

Design Commons! Wear a sweater vest for a

free beer!

Gossip Geek here, your one and only source into thescandalous lives of Sexton’s Engineers..

You reap what you sow. What goes around comes

around. No matter how far you run, you can never truly

escape. Everything catches up to you in the end. And

when it does, it usually kicks your ass. My time here has

almost come to a close.. and that means I’m feeling alittle nostalgic. For my nal post, I’m revisiting some of 

those good times you thought you’d left in second year.

Now there are those that change for the worse.. and

those that change for the better.. I think we can all agree

that, although S & friends look adorable.. we’re glad theyno longer look like they’re 12.

D… seriously? I’ve caught you in some bad poses.. but

nothing competes with that hair.. wait.. is it really hair?

Or a toupee? Oh and M.. pretty sure you don’t look old

enough to be drinking.

Choo choo! This is just adorable. Can’t say I’d ever think 

I’d see N looking so squeezable. J.. is that a pink handker-

chief? You’re lucky I didn’t ‘choo’se to put that pic of you

in your bow tie at prom in…And all in an instant, everything changes. We leave the

past behind and speed toward the unknown. Our future.

We set out for far away places and try to nd ourselves.

Or try to lose ourselves. Exploring pleasures closer to

home. The problems start when we refuse to let change

happen, and cling to old habits. But if we hold on to thepast too tight, the future may never come. So long Sex-

ton.. your memories will always be with us.

XOXO —Gossip Geek 

The time has come, and Gossip Geek is graduating this

 June. We will truly miss Gossip Geek's contributions....

but the legend must live on.

If you think you are worthy of being the next Gossip

Geek, well, you have big shoes to ll. Still interested? 

Email [email protected]...

or [email protected]

Photo of the Week by Navin Chari (PhD Candidate

Industrial): Freetown Christiania, Copenhagen

ossipeekG

Gossip Geek says

Goodbye

Engagement. What does it mean?!?!

 The Double Rainbow of your uni-

versity experience, ‘engagement’

is that thing we have trouble describ-

ing or facilitating, but it’s oh-so-beau-

tiful to witness. Engaged people

have a certain energy about them, adesire to drink deeply from the cup of 

life - and they make you want to be-

come engaged, yourself.

But enough of this idle banter! Let’stalk about engagement on Sexton

Campus.

At the moment, students seem to

be primarily engaged in their stud-ies – which is great! That’s what

you’re paying for, correct? However,

a well-rounded university experience

can include many things beyond the

classroom – sporting events, par-

ticipations in student governance,snowball ghts, society functions, or

informal conversations about howfractals are related to evolutionary

biology and the rise of social move-

ments… etc., etc.

 The DSU, despite whatever criticismswe level at it, strives to provide these

interstitial opportunities, greasing

the wheels of student initiative. This

is why there are a few new faces oc-

cupying what used to be the admin

o ces across from the elevator justeast of the Alumni Lounge. Neil, Wil-

low, and Laura have been hired by the

DSU to occupy the space between

the hours of 10am and 8pm, ve days

a week (‘till 6pm on Fridays), allow-ing you to connect with the DSU and

many of the services they oer with-

out trudging down to Studley and

sacricing yet another umbrella to

the Maritime Tempest Gods.

Rumors abound that they may soon

have a couch for you to sit on as you

ll out your grant application forms,

talk up your society event, or wait for

the fat pay cheque you’re expectingfor that haiku on uid dynamics you

submitted to the Sextant. This proj-ect is a pilot, and will continue on

next year with renements based on

the feedback you give, so head down

to room A-102 and get heard!

Neil, Willow and Laura would love to

see you.

Neil Bailey

DSU Sexton CampusPilot Supervisor

e Sextant is published by the

Dalhousie Sextant PublishingSociety and aims to representall of the students studying andliving on Sexton Campus.Editor: Shani BlankrotAssistant Editor: Dilan WatsonTreasurer: Riccardo Ciccarelli