Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Louise Baker: Preparing for the new year


Top Five Things New University Students Need To Know

GUEST POST: Louise Baker is a freelance blogger who usually writes about online degrees for Zen College Life.
If you’re headed off to your first semester of university, you’re probably worried about all of the new experiences. Living away from home for the first time, compounded on top of all your new classes, can be quite daunting. However, here you’ll find the top five things new university students need to know. These tips are sure to make your first year at your college or university much more bearable so that you don’t have to feel so much trepidation is getting in the way of your enjoyment of the academic program.
1. Go To Class

For the first time in your life, you’re going to be given free rein as to what you spend your time doing. Though some introductory seminars will still take attendance, as time goes on you’ll realise that there’s less and less accountability concerning whether or not you show up for lectures. As such, it’s important to remember that the main reason you’re in that place is to go to class. Sure, it’s fun to miss one or two classes to get lunch or play Mario Kart with your friends, but after a while you’ll find that you know more about the menus at the local restaurants than you do about your Psychology 1000 class. All in all, don’t skip class unless it’s a dire emergency.
2. Take Care of Yourself

Many people talk about the fact that some people, away from home for the first time, gain a lot of weight within their first semester. If you don’t want this to happen to you, be sure to watch what you’re eating and take some time to hit the gym every once in a while. You don’t need to have a highly-regulated workout regime, but be sure to make an effort to keep yourself healthy. You’ll find that all of your clothes will still fit you by the end of your first term and you’ll be in a much better mental state come time for finals.
3. Use Your Campus Resources

Your roommate has a girl over and you have an assignment due the next day, but your laptop is in the room? Don’t worry, you can easily hike over to your school’s library and finish it in one of their computer labs. When adjusting to a new environment, many freshers forget that their campus has a wide array of resources just waiting to be used by students like them. Whether it’s a quota of paper that they can use for printing, to free software allocated by the school’s technical services department, there are literally hundreds of amenities that come with being a student in a modern university. The only real work that you have to do is look for these resources.
4. Keep a Close Network of Friends

Especially near the end of the semester, it’s easy to feel completely overwhelmed with final projects and examinations that all have similar due dates. This is why it’s important to have a group of people that you trust and feel comfortable confiding in or just generally being around. Even if you don’t feel like you all have the time to hang out and watch a movie, remember that everyone has to eat. Getting together with your friends for a meal is one of the easiest ways to lower your stress during the rush of the end of the term.
5. Don’t Be Afraid of Your Professors

Lastly, you should never think that your professors don’t want to help you. It’s their job to make certain that you understand everything that they’re saying in their lectures and emails. So, if you have a question, just ask! From their viewpoint, they’d rather that you ask them up front than have you fail your exams because you misunderstood something. Show some initiative and let them know if you’re having problems.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Champlain Canon- Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone by J.K. Rowling

by Jonathan Alphonsus, CC Intern. Also on my Canon list: 'The Hiding Place' by Corrie Ten Boom

OK, I confess. I just read the first Harry Potter book.

I put it off when it first became the 'HP Phenomenon' because my 11-year old self needed to be 'cool' and stand-offish, thus preferring Manchester United as the logo on my pencil case and not the face of a bespectacled boy with a lighting-shaped scar on his forehead. For the record, Manchester United are still very cool.

Second confession, I've watched all the movies. I even watched the Goblet of Fire (book 4) and Deathly Hallows 2 (book 7) on preview night, ie paid a premium/stood in a long line for a long time to watch them early. I may or may not have enjoyed all these films thoroughly, causing me to always watch them whenever they're on TV. On our first date 10 months ago, my now-girlfriend and I watched Deathly Hallows 1 (I pretended to be unexcited because I wanted to impress her, secretly I was absolutely thrilled. She's still dating me, guess it worked?)

Confession no.3 : Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone was. Fantastic.

What a book, super well-written and smoothly narrated. J.K. Rowling has this ability to make you imagine you're right there in Hogwarts. And even though I'm 21 now, I can still relate to the story and the characters, it doesn't necessarily feel like a kids book. I can totally understand how the boy who lived is now the stuff of literary legend. Not to mention financial legend: 120 million copies of book 1 have been sold, in 180 countries and 70 languages. It's interesting that Rowling's first advance for the story was only just over $4000.

Draco dormiens nunquam titillandus

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Champlain Canon-The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time by Mark Haddon

(This book was selected by Stephanie Mindorff, a past member of Champlain Cabinet who is now the Communications and Web Specialist at the Canadian Co-Operative Association)







The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time is a story about self-discovery and triumph which begins with the curious case of a dog killed by a fork. Fifteen year-old Christopher Boone, the protagonist, is suspected of killing his neighbours dog Wellington. A sufferer of Asperger's Syndrome, he is described as a 'mathematical genius with behavioural issues'. As the story unfolds, he discovers dark secrets about his family and himself, and is forced to make difficult decisions that could change his life forever.


The book was written by Mark Haddon, an English novelist who won the 2003 Whitbread Book of the Year Award as well as the 2004 Commonwealth Writers' Prize for this work. It has sold 2 million copies, and there are plans for a film adaptation.