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jlittleton1

Attending college robot-style

04/11/2012 by jlittleton1 1 Comment

Based on the decibel level and the foot traffic at Reese Court last weekend, you would have thought Eastern was playing an archrival and that the score was close. Real close. Buzzer-beating close.

You would have been wrong.

It was robots. Lots and lots of robots hooping it up on the basketball court.

Robots

Over the last few weeks, the EWU campus has been home to FIRST Lego robot builders and FIRST Robotics competitors, and this weekend Eastern will host hundreds of students competing in the Washington State Science Olympiad.

Besides being genuinely fun to watch, these events also create a profound love of science in young students. It’s a hardcore, full-on geek love that cannot be stopped by Jersey Shore or Ke$ha or the newest Internet time-suck (I’m looking at you, Ridiculously Photogenic Guy).

It’s the type of love that can make even the hardiest, most overworked, about-to-graduate EWU science major smile out of sheer joy.

Remember the first time you fell in love with a book or a sport or a song? Remember how you just couldn’t stop? That’s what these kids have.

Eastern is quickly becoming a top home for regional science activity. Part of it is the increased emphasis the university places on helping EWU students become fantastic engineers, programmers and designers.

Part of it is the recently built Computing and Engineering Building. It houses robots. Complex machines for testing thermal dynamics and fluid mechanics. Cyber security laboratories. Sweet 3D graphics and animation equipment.

It all comes together to make Eastern a perfect place for STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math).

EWU students are passionate about their studies in STEM, which is why so many of them volunteer for these events. It’s a great way for EWU students to share their love of science and help educate the next generation of American scientists and inventors, but it’s also a great way to test real world skills.

After all, if you can explain difficult scientific theories and principles to children and their parents, you can definitely explain them to your peers and professors.

We’ve all read the stories about the decline of science and math education in the United States, but these are the types of events that reverse the trend.

It’s time to get your geek on.

Filed Under: Community Tagged With: basketball, Eastern, Eastern Washington University, engineering, EWU, FIRST, lego, math, Ridiculously photogenic guy, robotics, robots, science, Science Olympiad, STEM, technology, washington

The Olive Garden reviewer

03/09/2012 by jlittleton1 Leave a Comment

Palouse

Marilyn Hagerty catapulted to Internet fame for her review of the Olive Garden, and my middle-of-nowhere, small-town heart loves it.

The story, that is, not the Olive Garden. The Olive Garden is sometimes hard to love … but Marilyn—she’s something special. If you haven’t followed her story, here’s the gist of it.

For several decades, Marilyn has reviewed restaurants in Grand Forks, ND, population 66,991. With only 100 or so active restaurants in the whole town, necessity has forced her to review places like Taco Bell and Dippin’ Dots. Desperate times, desperate measures.

When her review of the Olive Garden went viral, people didn’t know what to make of it. Was it irony? Was she totally honest? Was she crazy?

Now that the full story is out, it’s clear that the snarky, hard-working 85-year-old and her friendly reviews embody the absolute best of small-town life.

Some might call it niceness. Some might call it sincerity. We might even describe it as grace or honesty or perseverance or a warm acceptance of small-town reality. Because let’s face it: small towns don’t have the same night-life that big cities do.

If you live in a small town, you know this. Having grown up in a community of less than 5,000 people, it felt like we had survived a nuclear apocalypse and all we got in exchange was a Pizza Ranch with really bad hours. But we still went, because that’s what we had … and we had fun.

Marilyn doesn’t impersonate critics in New York or Paris or someplace else, and she doesn’t come across as cynical or jaded like the food critics in those cities. That’s how her homey review of the Olive Garden captured the attention of so many people: it made people realize you can still enjoy life without living in one of the world’s top cities or pretending that you’re in some posh glamor ad.

That realization makes Eastern great, too. We get the small-town sincerity of Cheney, but we also get the large-city culture of Spokane. You actually get to choose which world you call home. You can even choose both, if you want. Few schools that can say that.

Cheney is the best of small towns, of course. It has a major university and businesses that cater to students. It’s safe. There’s free transportation for students. It has a handful of unique restaurants coupled with all the dives and fast food joints that college students love. (Speaking from experience, Taco Bell at 2 a.m. sounds way better than it turns out to be.) It’s surrounded by adventure including hiking, cycling, skiing, swimming, rafting and rock climbing.


But it’s still a small town, and it feels that way when you step into a café or stop by the grocery store. It’s kind of nice, really.

If small town friendliness isn’t for you, you can choose Spokane and the half million people in the metro area. You can have your arena shows, dozens of coffee shops, nightlife and genuinely amazing restaurants. (The best Italian in Spokane is clearly Italia Trattoria, FYI.)

But that’s the essence of Eastern: having choices. City mouse, country mouse. Small town quiet, big city hustle. It’s entirely up to you, and we love that freedom.

Filed Under: Location Tagged With: campus, Cheney, college, Eastern, Eastern Washington University, EWU, food, location, Marilyn Hagerty, Olive Garden, restaurant, Spokane, writing

The impartial college

03/02/2012 by jlittleton1 Leave a Comment

How do you know you’re seeing the “college” and not just the “marketing”? How do you get to the true heart of a college experience?

Showalter

This week, NPR released new standards for its journalists. For an organization as big and respected as NPR, this is a pretty big deal. It’s like the Seattle Seahawks writing a new playbook, or Daft Punk deciding they’re going to start playing the type of music Nickelback plays. (Scary, right?) In the just-published standards, NPR introduces an entirely new concept: “being fair to the truth.” It definitely has a nice ring to it, and it marks a major departure for journalism in contemporary America. Right now, most news organizations adopt a “balanced reporting norm” approach: both sides get the same amount of air time to create a sense of fairness. Anybody who’s ever been in trouble knows how the balanced approach works in real life: you get called into the principal’s office and tell your side of the story, the other guy gets called into the principal’s office and tells their side, and in the end the principal decides who’s right. In the news world, the audience is supposed to play the role of the principal. Sometimes called the “he said, she said” approach, this approach forces the reader to figure out what’s actually true and accurate. It works great in theory … except there’s always “spin” on the story. If you’ve followed politics at all this election year, you know that someone is always trying to “spin” the story … and sometimes the facts, too. That makes it much, much harder to decide what’s actually true. Something similar happens with colleges. You can read their viewbooks, go online to their websites and open all their emails, but you might never get to heart of the matter. So what can you do?

  • Turn to students already on campus. If you know somebody at Eastern, you should reach out and see what they say.
  • Read the common data set. This is a loooooooooooong list of numbers and checkboxes, but nearly every school has one.. That makes it easy for you to compare schools on things such as cost, average debt load, and financial aid packages. Fair warning, though: some schools don’t give you all the information. You can find Eastern’s common data sets via this page.
  • Visit campus. While many visit activities are planned, you get a chance to see the university without editing, photoshopping or someone’s “spin.” Students are doing what students do on campus. You get to try the food. You can explore the neighborhood or nearby city.A full 71 percent of students say that a visit to campus is the absolute best way to get a feel for the college without the “spin.”

We agree, which is why a college visit, either as part of a tour or as part of an event like goEastern, is such an important part of finding the college that’s the right fit for you. We know that Eastern is the state’s best value and a phenomenal school … but we want you to discover it for yourself without the spin.

Filed Under: College Fit Tagged With: campus, Eastern, Eastern Washington University, EWU, goEastern, visits

Don't miss Wednesday's priority deadlines

02/10/2012 by jlittleton1 Leave a Comment

Just a friendly reminder: don't miss the priority deadlines on Feb. 15, 2012.

  • Feb. 15: Priority Application Deadline
  • Feb. 15: Priority FAFSA Deadline
  • Feb. 15: Priority Scholarship Deadline

Is your application incomplete? Be sure to send missing transcripts, test scores and other materials by the Feb. 15 deadline.

What if you don’t have final transcripts? Apply! Apply! Apply! We don’t expect to see your final transcripts until your courses are over or until you graduate from high school. If you’re still in school or taking classes, just send your current transcripts and make sure your materials reach us by the deadline.

Should I mail or fax my materials? Definitely mail! We need original copies.

What if I have questions? Give us a call at 509.359.2397, email us at admissions@ewu.edu or chat online. If you don’t need an immediate response, you can also tweet us at @EWUAdmission or reach us on our Facebook page.

Filed Under: Admissions Tagged With: application, apply, deadline, deadlines, Eastern, Eastern Washington University, EWU, financial aid, priority, scholarships

Making every tuition dollar count

01/30/2012 by jlittleton1 Leave a Comment

We just saw this in the Spokesman-Review (the regional paper for the second-largest city in Washington, which is just 15 minutes down the road), and we definitely thought it worth sharing:

Demetrius Dennis shopped carefully to find the best college education for the lowest price.

“I reviewed the departments, programs offered and cost of tuition,” said Dennis, 34. “Financing contributed at least 75 percent of the deciding factor when I chose a transfer college.”

The Lakewood, Wash., resident had already saved about $20,000 on a bachelor’s degree in journalism by attending Pierce Community College before determining Eastern Washington University offered the best value to finish his studies.

EWU “provides the most reasonable tuition-to-education ratio available in the state,” Dennis said.

You can read the whole article about the rising cost of college tuition and the challenges that today’s students and families face.

By 2018, at least 63 percent of all jobs nationally will require a postsecondary degree, which means college will be necessary for more and more workers.

As states have cut budgets, however, college has grown more expensive, forcing students to be extra savvy when they make their college decisions.

Our goal at Eastern is to make an amazing college education as affordable and accessible to as many talented people as possible, which is why we’ve had fewer and smaller tuition increases than most universities in the state.

Without sacrificing innovative programs like justice studies, psychology, dental hygiene, education or engineering, we’ve quickly become the state’s best value in education … and our students are smarter than ever. Our average incoming freshman GPA went up again this year (from 3.17 to 3.24), which means we’re attracting more and more talented students who see the incredible value in what Eastern offers.

We’re glad Demetrius compared colleges, and we hope you’re doing the same. We’d love it if everyone made their comparisons and decided that Eastern was the best place to be (because it is!), but more importantly, we want you to choose the university that’s best for you and your future.

Wherever you go, we’re here to answer any questions you have along the way.

Filed Under: Tuition & Financial Aid Tagged With: admissions, college, comparison, cost, education, savings, tuition, university, value, washington

College fit: it's about you

01/25/2012 by jlittleton1 Leave a Comment

If you’re in the middle of your college search, you probably have one huge question: “Out of all the thousands of colleges in the world, which one is the best fit for me?”

Boxcar races at EWU

Traditionally, our society emphasizes two approaches to answering this question. One is the “true love” approach: there’s one school out there that’s going to be perfect for you. All you have to do is find that one school, and suddenly you’ll know that’s where you’re supposed to be. Stars will streak across the sky and purple glitter will rain from giant glitter clouds, and perhaps a choir will burst into song. You can’t miss the signs.

Of course, some of you probably have experience with the second approach, which is a bit like an arranged marriage: 15 years ago, before you’d even had your first nap time in kindergarten, someone picked your college for you. Sweatshirts. Water bottles. Maybe even a tattoo. Even if your situation isn’t this extreme, chances are you know someone who wants you to attend a particular school.

Both approaches have flaws. For instance, the “true love” approach is just like true love in romantic comedies: if you want to be happy in the long term, your true love needs to last. Consider this: that school that has you infatuated right now? It costs twice as much as another school you like, and that could mean a lifetime of debt. That school that seems too good to be true? Students there take classes taught by assistants, not by professors. Will you still be in love when the hard part of the relationship begins?

The arranged marriage approach has a serious flaw, too: it might not be your choice. After all, you’re the one who has to take the classes, live in the residence hall and talk to the professors. You’re the one who will spend four years or more in the college community. So is your college making you happy, or is it making the people you know happy?

All this comes down to one big point that should be your first step in any discussion about college fit: you need to decide who you are and what makes you tick before you decide which school is best for you.

  1. What makes you truly happy?
  2. What’s your learning style?
  3. What classes do you love? What classes do you hate?
  4. Your favorite teacher: what makes that teacher special?
  5. What activities and hobbies define you?
  6. What does “value” mean to you?

Because here’s the truth: you can have fun at almost any college. You’ll meet amazing, brilliant people everywhere in the world. But if you’re choosing a school that emphasizes research when you really want close mentorships with your professors, you’re setting yourself up for heartache. If you need an internship to help land your dream job but you choose a school that isn’t close to a large city, you’re making your dream harder to achieve.

In the end, choosing a college isn’t always about the college. It’s about discovering who you are, determining what you want to do after college and finding a place that helps you make it happen.

Filed Under: College Fit Tagged With: admissions, advice, college, college decision, college fit, decisions, fit

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