Saturday, February 12, 2011

Unit 22

Time is flying and we've finished five weeks of the semester already. The homework never stops, so I'm having trouble finding time to keep this blog updated!

In our language class, we've finished our first unit and thus have our end of unit video due this Tuesday. We also have a presentation due in 1420 and an interpretation of For the Birds due in 1400 on Tuesday. I'm not sure exactly why all my profs make everything due at the same time, but trying to get it all done is crazy! I did the end of unit video today just to get it out of my hair for the rest of the weekend. The unit dealt with money so our assignment was to find an article with tips or suggestions of how to better manage money, or one aspect of money. I found an article with Christmas shopping tips for my video. I wasn't supposed to interpret, so much as paraphrase the information. I stuck to the bolded points, but was pretty much on my own from there.

I recorded the video twice, then decided the second one was better. In an effort to not be a perfectionist this semester I think I'll stick to this technique. Two tries, then pick the best of the two. That way I can still feel that I did well but don't find myself recording 6 or 7 times in an effort to look perfect.

Video link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FnFgIF7sQHQ
Article link: http://www.daveramsey.com/specials/christmas-articles/article/top-10-christmas-shopping-tips-for-2010/

Aside from homework, I have started volunteering at the Deaf Center every Friday night. I man the front desk from 5 pm - 10 pm. It's a lot of time, but so worth it. Having that interaction, connection, and role at the Deaf Center is truly invaluable. There isn't a Deafaistan to which I can move for two years to truly learn ASL, so the Deaf Center is as close as I get. It's also going to look like one impressive Deaf activity at the end of the semester! ;)

Friday, January 28, 2011

Three weeks

The first three weeks of school are over. They have flown, but have also be perfectly insane. All of last weekend I had something not school related and thus I didn't do any homework for four days. I came back to school on Monday needing to do some catch-up work, and found that the professors were into full-homework mode! It seems that the homework this semester has less busywork, which is a blessing, but also means that every assignment is important and none can be faked!

I didn't post anything about the terminology paper because everything was so crazy, and because I got out of the habit of posting here over break! For the terminology paper I had to survey 5 people and ask them their perspectives on 8 different words connected to the Deaf-World. I then had to write a 4 page paper summarizing my thoughts and reactions to the survey answers. The project wound up working out, though a few times it was a giant headache. On the basic level, though, I can talk to people and I can write a paper. The assignment was interesting, but didn't require any skills I don't already have.

The next huge project, however, has been a very different story! On Tuesday we were given a video tape to watch and gloss. Glossing is the invented way of writing ASL with English words and symbols. ASL has no written form, but for the sake of study hearing people have come up with a system of writing it anyway. Well, this clip was a grand total of 59 seconds long but took around 4 hours to gloss. Catching every facial expression, figuring out how to write down and describe every classifier, needing to understand all the fingerspelling. The assignment isn't due until Tuesday, but I finished it last night out of a desire to just finish the thing! The rest of my classmates are having the same difficulty and annoyance with the project. It doesn't really help to know we'll be glossing more throughout the rest of the semester. I think we'll mostly be glossing our own work, however, and that should be somewhat easier as we know what we signed!

We had our first interpreting lab on Wednesday and I'm happy with how it went. The teacher seems nice and reasonable and it was good to get back to working with the equipment and interpreting again. We interpreted a short clip we had seen before and I feel I did a good job! It is so invigorating to listen to my own voice interpreting and think it sounds decent! I feel the wheels of interpreting in my head are finally starting to turn.

I just finished recording for the first time this semester! For consecutive interpreting we have to find 2 words or phrases each week which we don't know how to interpret then bring them to class and figure out, together, how we would turn one of the words/phrases into ASL. We then have to record each word/phrase that everyone shared. That's a total of 7 words a week for 11 weeks which we turn in all together at the end of the semester. I didn't record last week because of the other activity that was going on, so I did 14 words today. Either interpreting/recording was easier than I had thought, or I don't have a good idea of what I'm supposed to be doing, because I was satisfied with the recordings on my first try! Again, though the homework is somewhat overwhelming, I'm glad to be back at school and in a familiar routine.

This weekend I have been volunteering at the Deaf Center during the Western States Basketball Conference. My job is to tend the concessions table. Not inherently exciting nor busy but I've had the chance to be in the Deaf community and both talk with Deaf and see conversations between Deaf. I've noticed that I'm actually comfortable with having a casual conversation in ASL! I'm so happy that I'm starting to feel confident with my skills, though I know I still have a ton to learn. Between a workshop tomorrow and volunteering again, I don't really have a weekend again. At some point I need to be able to just sit down without any homework to do. At this rate, though, I'm guessing that will happen in May!

Thursday, January 13, 2011

College in a nutshell

I ran across a quote just now and I laughed!

"The trouble with success is that the formula is the same as the one for a nervous breakdown." - Anon

Pretty much sums up my college experiences! I can get straight As, but only with a good dose of perfectionism, stress, lack of sleep, and more stress. But hey, it's worth it. ;) (Kinda)

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Spring Semester 2011

Break is pretty much over! It’s hard to believe, but at the same time I am so ready for school to start again! This has been my longest break from school with no major projects since before high school and I have discovered that I do not do very well when I have nothing to do! I need activity and to-do lists and a schedule and rhythm. Starting tomorrow I’ll have that back. :)


These are the classes I’m taking this spring:


ASLI 1400 - Cross-cultural interpreting

ASLI 1420 - Consecutive interpreting

ASLI 1430 - Linguistics

ASLI 2020 - Intermediate ASL II (language class)

ASLI 2300 - Conversation II


It adds up to 15 credits. No, that’s not a typo! I had the option of taking Conversation II either this semester or this fall. After working out the rest of my schedule and looking at some of my long term goals earlier this week, I decided to take Conversation II this semester. Am I crazy to take this many intense credits? Maybe. But, what would a semester be without an 8 am class? I’ve had one (or two) 8 am days every semester so far, and it almost seemed traitorous to my morning-person self to not have to get up at 6 o’clock on any given school day. So here I am, with an insane schedule, one for which I will need to get to bed before 11 pm. :P


Overall, I’m really happy with the morning ITP schedule. I have classes back-to-back MWF and a half-hour break on TR. This is exactly what I had fall semester... but I then had a two hour break before my interpreting lab, then a two hour interpreting lab. This semester I still have a two hour lab, but no two hour break! That makes me happy, because I’m a fan of not being at school until 4 pm. I also start each day earlier. 9 am MW, 8:30 am TR then the already mentioned 8 am morning on F. I might be complaining about this come April, but now I’m really happy I can go to school, and be done with school early each day.


I think have all my books, purchased a fresh notebook, I just need to scratch some sharpie off two folders and relabel them for this semester’s classes. I’m so excited to start this next portion of my journey to my dream!

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Looking Back on Fall of 2010

Christmas is over, New Year's is approaching, fall semester 2010 is totally done and grades have been back for almost a week.


I learned so much this semester. I walked into class the first day nervous that I had forgotten a lot of my language skills over the summer, slightly scared to be in classes that were taught in ASL (rather than classes in which ASL was taught, even if the teacher only used ASL to teach). I didn't know how I would measure up, wasn't sure if I was actually good enough to be in the ITP, and very aware that B- was failing in all of my ASL classes.


Many of the 8 other girls who were in that first ITP class in August were already my acquaintances; a few I hadn't met. By the end of this semester we were family. Friendships were forged, pain shared, interpretations critiqued. Sometimes we fought, sometimes we cried, but whatever we did, we did it together.


I feel that I have grown, as a signer, from someone able to carry on a basic conversation to someone able to understand a broader range of topics and more comfortable in any situation. I'm certainly not fluent, but I have made a leap in that direction. My interpretation skills have gone from very little to some. I understand the processes behind interpreting more and have the head knowledge, if not really the skills, which will enable me to become an interpreter.


I feel I proved myself too. As the youngest student in this ITP cohort and one of the most inexperienced signers, I often felt I had catch up work to do. Maybe I wasn't good enough to be there, maybe I should have waited to join the program until next year. At the end, however, looking at my grades and critiques, I know I belong. I'm not the best, though I have strengths (and weaknesses) in unique areas, but I'm certainly not behind my classmates.


I've learned jargon words and processing skills in CPDA (1220). Learned what it takes to actually interpret. I've been handed the skills to do what I love. Been allowed to try my hand at interpreting, and found it's a whole lot harder than I thought it would be! I can analyze a discourse now, a skill I'm not sure I actually wanted to learn! My prediction skills in particular are a strength.


I learned head knowledge in Intro (1200). Learned Deaf history and became so familiar with registers I can talk about them in my sleep. I also learned how to think about myself; something that's often hard to do. Learned to make goals, learned to write reflectively and analyze new information. Learned I cannot write and listen to music words at the same time! Drowned myself in the Code of Professional Conduct. I feel I have a better grasp on the concept of ethics, though mastery is far from me. Learned the difference between the words "intrapersonal" and "interpersonal."


I learned language in 2010. Learned to classify accidents and pretty much everything else! Learned words and vocabulary. Learned I'm not perfect, and that's okay. Learned to take a deep breath and relax with my videos. Learned that not knowing my grade day by day is okay as well. :)


I learned how to have fun in Conversation 1 (1300). Learned to just hang out and not stress about my signing. Learned that I'm still pathetic at reading fingerspelling!


Overall, my stress level this semester was higher than it has been ever before. I wanted to be perfect so badly. I wanted to be recognized as someone who deserved to be in the ITP. I wanted my professors to look at me and think "she'll be a good interpreter someday." I wanted my peers to acknowledge my skills. This was my chance to start to shine and I wanted it so badly. I wanted to not only pass classes, I wanted to ace them. I didn't want to walk away with anything else than a 4.0. But I didn't know if I could do it.


Well, I did it. When all was said and done, everything I poured into this semester is represented on official paper by four letters. A, A, A, A. I got the 4.0 GPA I wanted. But now, I look back, and realize that it might not have been worth it. One, or two, A minuses wouldn't have killed me. In fact, I wouldn't have killed myself like I did if I had allowed myself to be something else than as perfect as I could be. Last time I got a 4.0 I glowed and gloated for months... this time it's like it doesn’t really matter. Yes, I know my skills improved and if I had gotten straight Bs I would have known my skills weren’t as good as they needed to be. At the same time, maybe less stress and more fun would have resulted in more learning overall?


Often, the lessons learned in the classroom are so much bigger than just the information needed to write the next paper or pass the next test. I’m blessed to be at a school and in a program where learning those bigger lessons is possible.


Next semester starts two weeks from yesterday. 14 credits, all ITP classes. I know it’s going to be harder than this semester, in a way. At the same time, I have two of the same profs again and feel I know what they expect. I know what it takes to succeed in the program. I know I belong and no one is looking at me wondering why I’m there.


I’ve fallen in love with this language I’m learning to interpret. Fallen in love with the culture to which I’m being introduced. I intend to work just as hard as I always have... but maybe stress a bit less.

Spring semester 2011: Bring it on!

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Odd days

Yesterday I was driving to the credit union when I looked at the clock and thought "crud, they're closed." It was 1:30, but I had momentarily convinced myself it was Saturday. Later last night I freaked out because I forgot to go to the library, which needs to be done every Tuesday. Once I realized that I was still living Monday, I calmed down. Then I laughed at myself. I hadn't realized how reliant I have become on the rhythm of school days to keep me on track as to which day it is. Today I also thought for a minute that it was Saturday as I hadn't gone to school.

Finals week is a lot of pressure, but is also a lot of sitting around and waiting for something to happen. I finished signing stories 4 yesterday, then did my unit 20 video today and so I'm done except for my 1220 final tomorrow morning. I've pretty much just ran errands and cleaned the rest of the day. Tomorrow morning will likely feel the same... I don't need to leave for my final until 11:00 and really have zero to do until then. Yes, I can study, but I can only read the review sheet so many times before my head explodes. I feel I know most of the material. At the same time, I feel like I have so many things to remember... my paper and flash drive, my book I'm selling back, my pencil and eraser, the card for our teacher, etc.

Today has seriously dragged. Which is very odd. It feels like Wednesday. Which is even weirder as Wednesday has been my crazy day this semester and I certainly haven't been at school for 6 hours today nor did I have my Wednesday babysitting job. Maybe it's because I thought yesterday was Tuesday? I just want my days back! Ahh!

On the bright side, I purchased all my books for next semester today! A girl who is just finishing 2nd semester contacted me and asked if I wanted to buy her books. Of course I did! They wound up costing me slightly more than half of what I would have expected to pay at the bookstore, and she got more for them than she would if she had resold them. I was planning to get them tomorrow when I'm on campus for the last time this semester, but I guess I can cross that item off my to-do list!

Off to try to sleep in preparation for tomorrow's final. I'm not tired, really, so this should be interesting.

End of semester countdown: 17 hours.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Finals week

I just turned in my final portfolio and Demand and Control paper for 1200. That means I'm totally done with that class! Sadly, it was probably my favorite class this semester, and the first big one I'm done with. Oh well.

While I was chatting with my prof after turning in the binder and paper, she asked me if I had checked my grade in the last hour or so. I checked my grade about three hours, but not one hour, before, so I said "no." She then informed me that she finished grading the final processing test and my grade on that had bumped my overall grade so far in 1220 to an A. I was so happy! Admittedly, that grade could very well go back down again, but to see that class listed as an A right now makes me smile.

My school to-do list looks like this right now:
2010: Signing stories four. Figure out how on Earth to do unit 20 video. Film unit 20 video. Turn everything in.
1220: Study for final. Take final.

That's it!

I'm so tired and worn out right now from a super crazy-busy weekend and a few intense conversations. But, I shall somehow persevere through the end of finals week. Or two more days, as it's the same thing. 48 hours from now fall semester 2010 will be in the books. Odd.

End of semester countdown: 2 days