Category Archives: Careers / Work

Excel, I do not

I wish Go Global would get back to me on my summer school status soon. It will be good to make concrete plans for the summer. Right now, everything’s up in the air.

I’m skimming through job positions right now, though. Many job applications have already come and gone. Most of the time, I just read them to see what kind of qualifications people are looking for, and I’m getting increasingly nervous. Literacy with Microsoft Word? Easy job. Excel and Access, on the other hand? Uh…

See, the first and last time I used Access was in Year 9 (Grade 8). I’ve forgotten how to use it by now. The same goes for Excel — the complex formulas are gone and all I use it for now is to keep track of my monthly expenses. It’s somewhat irregular given that I don’t spend every day and I like to split up what I bought or spent by category, so one day might have six entries. If allowed to play around with Excel, I think I could work out how to do what I’m told. To do it immediately, though, is currently beyond me. I’m studying the Excel Help categories and online tutorials, but it’s all rather overwhelming right now.

Also quite scared about whether I’ll be able to get into Arts Co-op, and whether I’ll be able to get a job after getting in with this incapacity. I’ve never had an official job before so this freaks me out; volunteer work I’ve done plenty. I need to start somewhere and gain these basic skills, but where?

Summer School

Summer school? Now why would anyone want to do that? Summer’s meant for getting a tan down at the beach, hanging out, relaxing…

You can still do that. Summer school is split into two six-week sessions and one four-week one, so you can choose how long you want to do summer school for. It’s a good way of knocking off some credits (I need nine) and you still get the rest of your summer to have fun.

If you want to stick around UBC, there’s a deposit/registration fee you need to pay by March 26. You can view this in MyFinancial Account when you log into the Student Services Centre. That’s all you need to sign up for the 2008 Summer Session.

Me, I’m hoping to get into Herstmonceux in the UK. They have summer school there as well and easily transferable credits. Go Global said I’d find out the results in mid-March, so fingers crossed that I’ll find out before I need to pay the deposit. Either way, though, I’ll be done with school by mid-June. I’m hoping to visit friends in the UK and also to come back to Vancouver to enjoy myself a bit before I go back to Hong Kong.

And there’s still time for a job before I return in mid-August…

Ah, the wonders of a long summer.

In my dream world, there would be…

A literary festival. That is what I think we should have. A week in the year when authors and poets are invited to come and talk, complete, perhaps, with book signings and special deals at the Bookstore so people will be encouraged to buy. Invite professors to lecture on a topic.

An annual literary and art magazine, with a different theme each year, for students from all faculties to submit their creative work to, run by students who aren’t only from the English or Creative Writing departments.

The chance to potter about in my garden early in the morning before sitting down to write, then taking a break for lunch before starting in on academic research, to finish up with working with children for some charitable or non-profit organisation, and still get paid enough to live without financial worry.

Go forth in my stead

An interesting series of post-graduation workshops, known as the Work Your BA workshops, are coming up. They range from talking about resumes and interview questions to grad school opportunities. Alas, they are all on Tuesdays from 12:30 to 2:00, the exact time of my American literature class, so they are out of the question for me.

On that note, there is also a Career Services Superhero Training workshop that promises to be entertaining. It runs this coming Tuesday from 6:00 to 7:o0. Unfortunately, I again just realised I may not be able to make it; I’m beginning my Trek Learning Exchange placement this Tuesday. Theoretically it’s from 3:00 to 6:00; I’m allowed to ask to leave at 5:00, but I haven’t yet. As it’s downtown, I’m still not likely to arrive on time even if I do leave at 5:00. But you can go for me! It’s run by Angeli(! who is cool!) and Kevin(! who I recognise from somewhere but don’t remember exactly where, so he thinks I’m stalking him! but who is probably also cool since Angeli works with him!).

For those who are not interested in your career yet — though it doesn’t hurt to look early! — there’s a free movie showing in MASS (Buchanan D) for Africa Awareness Week at 6:00 to 8:30. Africa Awareness has a whole host of other really amazing and interesting events coming up.

Finally, for those who are after free food, there will be a crepe sale at MASS on Valentine’s Day at MASS from 11:30 to 1:30. I know I will be hunting it down; I’ve been empty inside ever since Cafe Crepe packed up and left. It will also be V-Day (as well as my last link). The Vagina Monologues are selling tickets for their performances from the 7th to the 9th. I encourage you to go on the 7th because that’s when I want to go.

Arts Career Expo

Because I am just such an up-to-date reporter, I write about an event almost as soon as I return from it. Also to prove that I have, you know, t3h sk1lls gained from going to the writers’ corner. But more on that later.

Overall, it was actually pretty good. I enjoyed it. At first, I wasn’t going to give a blow-by-blow account — it’s the middle of the week, after a long day of class (with the extra added excitement of a “police incident” at the Bio building — either a bomb threat or a gun threat, depending on who you ask — I was in class at the nearby Hebb Theatre during the whole affair so it didn’t affect me in the least), and I have to get up at six-something tomorrow for volunteering — but you know how long-winded I am.

The beginning and ending were slightly unfortunate. There were five hundred so people, so I am told, all stuck in the lobby of the Chan Centre. For some reason, the words “Chan Centre” deluded me into thinking we’d go inside where we can sit. My fault for not reading the print properly, I suppose. It was with some (negative) surprise, then, when the speeches commenced in the lobby itself, fifteen minutes late. The poor presenters had to rush, and you could tell the Dean was pressed for time. “She’s talking even faster than you,” a friend commented in an undertone to me.

I like our Dean. She seems genuinely enthusiastic about the value of an Arts degree and appears committed to providing the best support possible. That was my first impression on IMAGINE Day, and it’s still hanging around. The first Wednesday of every month is apparently when we can go to the Meekison Arts Students’ Space in Buchanan D to talk to her about the Arts degree. I may check that out next month.

At some point I admit I drifted off to admire the height of the trees outside the Chan Centre. It seems appropriate to be looking at trees on a day when they tell you to grasp your opportunities and to reach. On reflection, it might not have been the smartest-sounding thing to say, “The trees are tall”, when Genevieve asked what I was looking at. Coupled with my earlier observation — “Why are you so tall?” — while Genevieve and Cory were talking about U.S. politics, I might have sounded air-headed. Actually, I think that may be justified. I was trying to keep up with the discussion but the crick in my neck distracted me. (That reminds me that I need to look up voting sequences. Keyword: “primaries”. Says the person who only last year started finding out about how states vote for Congress and presidential elections. Sigh.)

The panels were pretty interesting. I enjoyed the non-profit one thoroughly, and the writers’ corner was kind of interesting to hear about people’s different experiences. The non-profit one was of interest because they gave some advice on how to get started, and there wasn’t anything I hadn’t really heard of from the writers’ corner.

Of course, the non-profit couldn’t really advise me on how to find where my passions lie beyond going out and trying things — in the end, it’s up to me to discover and focus. And writing is one of those things which I, at least, can’t keep asking other people about. It’s something I would do no matter what anyone else said because it’s what I do for myself. On the other hand, I have a perpetual dilemma about whether it can be something I can do for anyone else. Is sitting at home writing really going to help people in the way I want? That’s not something anyone else can answer for me, though guidance is always useful.

The career expo is probably something that is more helpful for people in upper years, or for people who at least have some idea of what they want to do. My ideas are currently vague: I want to help people (one-to-one), and I want to write. I’m good at school. Those are the limits of my self-knowledge. This is also the nice thing about being in first-year, however: you get to explore different things and test out the waters. I’ve not yet chosen the path I want to take, so I can’t yet ask the more specific questions about actually delving deeper into a particular field. Getting a general idea of what it’s like is still, however, useful: at least I know I’m not put off (yet), so I can keep looking into them. Knowing that you don’t want to do something can be just as useful as knowing what you might want to do.

As for the mix-and-mingle, I haven’t really got the hang of them yet. Generally I am hungry and hunting for edibles, so can’t stop to talk much. Or I look out for people I know, who introduce me to others, and I introduce people I know to others too. I’m still so used to being close to the people I talk to that I feel sad when I meet all these people I know I’ll probably never really get to know.

Finally, barring the fact that the Chan Centre lobby is not the easiest place to put five hundred-so hungry people — I pity the waitresses — the food was very good.