The Chit Chat Chit Chat Thread

Goofyernmost

Well-Known Member
Hmmm, to me being called Chinese is like calling someone Caucasian. I guess I don't connect geography to ethnicity.
I guess you can, but, Caucasian relates to a race of people and, to me, Chinese is the country that an Asian person would be part of. That is the part that is geographical in my mind. It all gets very complicated and almost to the point of craziness if we let it. We should all just be people that would solve a lot of world problems. (Unfortunately, not all of them.)
 

MinnieM123

Premium Member
No, I'm sure there are others, it's just how I look at it. I don't see any reason why Native Americans is not a good and respectable label, if indeed any label is necessary. When you change a label to what someone thinks is better, it often times isn't, that's all. I'm sure there are varying degrees of what or how a label affects them. To me, having American Indian blood in me, feels that Native American tells the whole story and doesn't segregate in any negative way. To me the others do. A completely unnecessary PC change that made it worse instead of better in my opinion. Also when you consider that the only reason the are called Indians to begin with is because those explorers thought they made it to India, so even that is bogus. So Native means from here originally and Americans is what they were and are even if that word hadn't been coined yet.

Now this explanation I understand. I agree with the above.
 

StarWarsGirl

Well-Known Member
In the Parks
No
You said you had less classes and some time with nothing.
Hence why I asked.. you get paid by each class you give (as in individually per day). or you get paid BY hour?
or BY course?
Tuition covers you to take between 12-18 credits per semester. Most students take 15 per semester. Generally, courses are worth between 1-4 credits; most are worth 3. A credit hour is based on how much time you spend in class per week (except for online classes; those are a bit different). For now, I'm taking 12 credits of in class work and 3 online (5 courses total), but am spending about 23 hours per week on campus because of the way classes are scheduled. Next semester, I will still technically be in class for 12 hours (plus 3 online credits) per week, but will likely only be on campus three days a week instead of 4 and be there 17 1/2-18 hours per week (barring work, since I work on campus) since the classes are closer together. In MD, you need 120 credit hours overall for a degree. BUT...you also need to complete all the requirement for your degree audit, in other words, the courses that are on your degree audit. I basically have left on my degree audit (after this semester) one more management course, business ethics, a lab science, one more semester of chorus, one international business course, and four business electives.

So in answer to your question, basically, by course, but it's also the amount of time spent in class each week. So if you took three 4-credit courses and one 3 credit course, it's technically only four courses but 15 credit hours. My courses for next semester are one 4 credit course, one 2 credit course (chorus), two in class 3 credit courses (one once a week and the other twice a week) and one online three credit course. But it's not based on how many days a week you're in class or how much time you spend on campus.

College is complicated.:depressed:
 

StarWarsGirl

Well-Known Member
In the Parks
No
Still not ready to adult? ;)
Considering I somehow managed to lock myself out of my online banking, I don't think I'm ready to adult...
I got it back, but still

funny-couch-cushion-fort-adult1.jpg
 

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