VNCS n Page 1 , a senior mat nigh he has not s in action, he 3 e-math coul a for math roblems worked beats just seeing •k of the book, how you did it it ion gives izzes and teststs en that typeois know what ins le said, here is a differs i process and! it information dy on only seeij i,” he said. “Wf is learning thei to use it. Youct i crutch.” 'he Battalion Aggielife Page 3 • Monday, November 29, 1999 Let the countdown begin: 5 students seek motivation for class as semester ends BY HEATHER BRONDY The Battalion !r. £o erhaps the most tragic semester in Aggie history is finally coming to a close, and many students wearily approach the end of school with bleary ;s and blurry heads. But the fact is, re are still seven class days left in the nester and another two weeks of read- days and finals. Kelly Harvey, a junior history major, d the reasons to attend class these last days are obvious. “We’ve made it this far — we might | well finish and use this last week to i best advantage,” she said. “If you n’t go, you may miss a review, or if j’re borderline and the professor sees t you’re not coming, then it could an your grade. Besides, what’s one re week?” Dr. Douglas Brooks, an assistant pro- sor of English at Texas A&M, saidget- g students to attend class should be rt of professors’ responsibilities. “It is important to understand that dents have by this point in the se mester nearly exhausted their capacity SHou‘5 MCI teftake in new information,” he said. —\\«“As such, professors have an obliga- ~^v-tipn to build on what the students have eady learned and to find ways to show tljem how that knowledge can be ap- )|ed to new material being taught late the semester. “It can be extremely exciting for stu nts to see that all of the hard work they’ve done had a kind of intellectual payoff, and I think professors would work especially hard during the last few (weeks of class to generate that kind of ■excitement. If they do, students will want to come to class. ” Of course, generating excitement for academia, no matter what the payoff, can be a challenge. Brent Vabis, a senior journalism ma jor, said his professors seem to under stand why many students may continue to have trouble these next seven days de spite their creative efforts to make class more interesting. “Normally, professors throw in spon taneous reviews where you can catch up on some of the ideas of what you should know for finals,” he said. “But this semester is different. People are coping in different ways, and some people may just not be ready to go back [to class]. Professors seem to be very un derstanding to this. My sociology pro fessor actually brought in a counselor to talk to us after the Bonfire tragedy.” Many professors and counselors say it is in the best interest of students to at tend class because of the support indi viduals are finding there. Tim Novak, director of the Forsyth Galleries and a history professor said stu dents should use the remaining class days, because of the support fellow Ag gies give to each other. “You know, it’s not a normal semes ter,” he said, “and students can find more support being at A&M — going to class es, and being where there are people who understand and can support them, then they can find anywhere else.” Brooks said it is on the shoulders of A&M professors staff to encourage stu dents to go about their normal activities, class included. “It is our responsibility to encourage students to see that it is in their best in terest to continue on with the routines of classes and study, even if they don’t think they can,” he said. “Such routine gives our lives structure, and structure can be a source of great comfort and strength in times of crisis.” Brooks said A&M should not ignore the school’s duty to educate, especially in light of a tragedy bound up in such Ag gie Spirit. “I taught class last Friday,” Brooks said, “and told my students that in the spirit of what Bonfire stood for, we had an obligation to uphold this school’s commitment to education, to do the best we could to focus on why all of us were here in the first place. ” Novak said this semester has been a learning experience. “[Tragedies] like this, as horrible as they are, teach us and remind us how to be supportive to everyone around us,” he said. “No matter who you are or what organizations you’re affiliated with — this is an opportunity for Corps members and fraternities and athletes to unite and lend each other support. Barriers are be ing broken down, and people you’d nev er normally talk to are suddenly becom ing your friends.” Brooks said simply going to class, even to the boring ones which might not affect an individual’s major, is an im portant discipline to acquire. “There will be a lot of boring and seemingly irrelevant tasks you will have to complete in both your person al and professional lives,” he said. “And getting through that class with a mod icum of dignity will have been great training for you. “Moreover, if the Zen masters are right, then it is precisely the most tedious and mundane aspects of any endeavor which, when completed, serve as the foundation for mastery.” B -lit' * RUBEN DELUNA/Thi: Battalion LltC£ Wi£'- DA KITE! HMi j HADE,.. 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