Thursday, July 30, 2020

A Summer to Remember Interphase

A Summer to Remember Interphase Summer Vacation  /'s?m?r/  /va'kaSH?n/ Defined as the period between grades where life is at its best. Where one stays up until 4am, not out of necessity but out of enjoyment, and wakes up when it can no longer be considered morning. Summer is a time for pools, Pokemon, and playing in no particular order. While my last summer was spent cooped up in a cubicle for 40 hours a week, I never lost that boyish charm when it comes to the two and half month periods that defined my childhood. For the first time in three years I didnt have a book to read, a paper to write or a set of problems to get started. But for the first time in three years I genuinely wanted something to do.   MIT is no walk in the park and I wanted an opportunity to preview the material, get study habits down and start college life early. The answer? The Interphase Program. So what is Interphase? According to the OMEs Website Interphase is a rigorous seven-week summer residential, academic and community-building program for admitted MIT freshmen that instills subject mastery of calculus, physics and chemistry, and helps them explore their cultural identities through reading, writing and discussion. but I find this definition is lacking in a few places (like, when they say rigorous they neither joke nor kid). So to fully describe Interphase, I have to break it up into three categories The Academics, The Exposure and The Fun. The Academics Academics during Interphase is broken up into four classes that are supposed to model your first semester at MIT, Calculus, Chemistry, Humanities (Writing), and Physics. Your Calculus and Chemistry classes are then also broken up into sections. Calculus had three sections that model 18.01(Single Variable Calculus), 18.01A(Accelerated Single Variable Calculus), and 18.02(Multi Variable Calculus)  while Chemistry had two sections that model 5.111 and 5.112. I was in Calculus 2(18.01A), Chemistry 1(5.111), Physics(8.01), and Humanities(21W.XXX), so Ill take you through a day in the life of an Interphaser. Physics Taught by Dr. Eric Hudson, a past 8.01 teacher and one of the best lecturers Ive ever met, Physics started the week off at 9:30, bright and early. This was the one class that was in a large lecture hall (54-100) and had everyone in Interphase together. We sat in groups of  two and learned in a style similar to that of TEAL(Technology Enabled Active Learning). While there werent weekly experiments, clicker questions and demonstrations were the norm. We also had four wonderful teaching assistants who made understanding the material a walk in the park and who took two days out of the week, and a few evenings, to translate the foreign language that was lecture. Calculus 2 Taught by Dr. Chris Dodd 11, PhD in Mathematics at MIT, Calculus 2 was also known as PROVE ALL THE THINGS. Following an intense session of Physics, Calculus 2 never ceased to turn your world upside down. Thought you knew Riemann sums, spent a few months on Taylor Series, a master of integration? Think again. Chris Dodd was the first person to give me that this is MIT feeling. Genuinely proving every concept he wrote on the board (including the Law of Exponentials) I cant imagine learning math any other way. In true MIT fashion, Calculus 2 taught you math from the ground up and thoroughly kicked our butts on that path. But thanks to two amazing TAs, life was made bearable and math was made fun. Chemistry 1 Taught by ESGs(Experimental Study Group) own Dr. Patti Christie, PhD in Chemistry at MIT, Chemistry was one of my favorite classes. As someone who came into MIT with nearly no background in the topic (I think we got up to naming?), this was the class I feared the most.  Learning from one of the best teachers I have ever had, Chemistry took on a whole new meaning. Finding enjoyment in the daily CLICKER QUESTIONS and gaining a new found   respect for the macroscopic world, the GIR I was destined to hate became my favorite. Humanities(Writing) Taught by Dr. Steven Strang, Director of the Writing and Communication Center here at MIT, Humanities was a place to discuss different topics and see how peoples cultural differences shined through in their opinions. Dr. Strang also teaches 21W.754 (Rhetoric) and our humanity class had a large emphasis on teaching us Aristotles Art. We learned how to weave words to do our bidding and analyze articles to avoid manipulation. The Exposure One of the largest parts of Interphase that leaves all of its attendees better off for MIT is what I would call exposure. Exposure to 10+ companies at a miniature career fair, exposure to MITs UROP and Internship opportunities at a Lab Tour, exposure to the resources that would benefit our lives here at MIT (eg. S^3), and exposure to the faculty (including Chancellor Eric Grimson whose 6.00 Lectures made CS fun for me).   These study breaks and trips were a great wealth of knowledge that opened up my eyes to the multitude of opportunities MIT has. The Fun The last part of Interphase, it was also one of the most powerful. With dozens of late nights, it was Mandatory Fun and the new people we met that kept us sane. In true MIT style we worked hard and played hard. Now, I could describe the fun that was had in words, but theres no fun in that. So heres the fun of Interphase through pictures and videos, make sure to read the alt-tags! (Picture Credit to Teri O. 15 Mari K. 15) And there you go. Interphase in a Nutshell. The Office of Minority Education is providing 70 MIT Students a year an invaluable experience and I recommend everyone apply. Interphase was both the hardest and most rewarding summer of my life and I couldnt recommend it enough. Post Tagged #Interphase EDGE