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Monday, August 10, 2020
Somebody Else
Somebody Else And now for something completely different. Sam is allowing me (Ruth 07) to write a guest blog entry. It might not make for the best guest spot of all time, but I did lift the title of an obscure yet underrated song for the entry title. As the most Humanities-oriented student at MIT, having just wrapped up an STS UROP, now contemplating a second major of Urban Planning, having declared a HASS concentration in Economics, and continuing to tell the world that Political Science at MIT is ranked 10th in the country, its about time I was allowed to blog. Read on to learn of my harrowing adventures tutoring writing for the Media And Technology Charter High School and working in MITs Lewis Music Library. Also, juicy details on what its like living next to Sam Maurer for a summer, as told by his surrogate Mitra. First things first, Sams only letting me write this so I can talk about the MATCH school. Its one of the many Community Service jobs available to MIT students. Its probably the best paying, though. Last summer, when I hugged squirrels for Keep Covington-Newton Beautiful, I learned that Federal Work Study means the Fed forks over 75% of the students pay for community service-type jobs. This is important for some jobs. I may be the only person who enjoys paint recycling jobs (did I mention Im anosmic?). But other jobs, like the MATCH school, dont have hazardous conditions or oppressive heat. The high pay good conditions combination leads to a plesant work environment, high competition for job placement, and high retention rate among tutors between summers. The schools mission is to prepare its students, that arrive a few grades behind, for a 100% college graduation rate. So for four hours, four days a week, for five weeks, MIT, BU, and Wellesley students tutor incoming freshmen in math and English to begin catching them up. Most people do this I teach rising sophomores in writing. Let me tell you, for those that havent read The Color of Water, itll make 200 pages of Veto Bargaining a piece of cake when you take 17.20 Introduction to the American Political Process. Seriously though, its really fun to take some of your own enthusiasm for learning and force it upon younger people. It kind of reminds you why youre here at MIT in the first place. In my case, having returning MATCH students is really nice, too, because theyre already indoctrinated to the discipline and dress code, and they behave so very well. Ive got the sweetest kids, ever. And Ive been responsible for quite a few children in my day. Ok, thats the boys side of camp, but that cabin greatly resembles one I stayed in for a few summers during high school with 4H. Moving on I mentioned that MATCH has a good retention rate among tutors. Returning tutors are invited to be team leaders. The team thing is important to explain, too. The school has lots of ways to motivate its students, so they pit the tutors against each other in a Harry Potteresque competition. You earn and lose points for your team based on your tardiness, originality, enthusiasm, and general ability to suck up to the program coordinators. Speaking of sycophancy, Jon 06 is a lead tutor for the MATCH school this summer, and the second person I met at MIT. That was way back in Fall 2002, before the Admissions page told you anything useful, except how to be a hosted prefrosh. Jon and my host lived on Conner 2, and enlisted me to help with their Freshmen Dinner and Apple Bake. Those were good times. 10s that are reading this, you should seriously considering visiting MIT in the fall. Ok, moving on. After the two tutoring sessions, we have tutor meetings and discussions, and then Im off to my second job in the Lewis Music Library. This is my desk: [] People will tell you that the sweetest (cushiest) jobs at MIT are working desk in your dorm. Secondary to working for Admissions, of course. The basic idea is that youre sitting down, theres not a lot of physical labor, and a wide range of highly interesting people stop by for you to conversate with. Theres only so many desks to work, so those tend to get filled up fast. Something not many people think about though, is the libraries. MIT has tons, all with their own desks and cushiness and conversations. I chose the Music library for its awesome architecture and offbeat subject matter. Offbeat at MIT just means not science. Theres only so much engineering a person can take, but I have a high tolerance for music. I dont know as much about Maria Callas and Tchaikovsky as I should, though I did spell Tchaikovsky just now without dictionary.com. I am comfortable making recommendations in the Pop collection, and weve got 13,000 CDs, so I cant be expected to know them all, anyway. And 70-something thousand scores. And a bajillion books. And 5 iPods, but those arent ready for circulation yet. This is my favorite Opera CD. So, life with Sam. Thats actually a picture from last summer. Sam, Beckett 05, Moria 05, myself, and Morias blueberry tart 04 went to Boston Common for a picnic and A Midsummer Nights Dream. As you can see, Moria is an excellent chef. Unfortunately, shes in Michigan. But without Moria, we will carry on and see Hamlet in the Common tonight. You see folks, Sam feels a duty to you, his stalkers, to do interesting things to blog about. Thats how dedicated he is. Who knows, maybe next week hell take the wrong MBTA bus at midnight and blog about his walk home. Or choreograph a dance to Toxic. Or prepare potatoes in a way that even I will eat. Theres no telling with this kid. Thats it for me, until Admissions gives me my own blog. Until then, Miller Out.
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