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Tuesday, March 19, 2019

A Glimpse of Culture From the Eyes of an Engineer :: Personal Narrative Cultural Essays

The 850 a.m. chime rings. Thirty faces musical note up at the board. The Refrigeration cycle begins with refrigerant R-134a proceeding to ... approximately pencils are hard at work, pickings diligent notes. Some students look into the board, attempting to imprint the entire schematic of the Refrigeration cycle into their memories. Others take a shot of Mountain Dew to clear the mental passages, or wake up from the previous evening. Concentration levels run high, as we all endeavor to jump at what we have been doing for the last some(prenominal) years -- pursuing an engine room degree. Each student in that Thermodynamics classroom had by this point in his or her undergraduate engineer career settled comfortably into the American engineering lifestyle. We had all gone through Statics as freshman, struggled with Dynamics as sophomores, and went on to tackle the curriculum that lay ahead. Gradually many of us became involved in campus organizations or committees. We bought organi zer calendars, and watched the days fill up with meetings and activities that quenched our thirst for involvement and drove us to achieve in and out of the classroom. We dove into the crazy, driven and exciting pace of life at a very reputable Big Ten University, ready to attract all of the benefits that an undergraduate degree has to offer. As one of the thirty students in that very classroom, I had come to know this lifestyle well. To me it was the best and some intense of all worlds that I had seen up to that point in life, and it was the around satisfying. Yet being comfortable in the realm of undergraduate engineering arose in me a curiosity about other worlds. The curiosity true into an urge to deviate from the well- launched path, and risk stepping into a complete unknown. The wheels began to turn, the plans formed, and several semesters later I was sitting in a somewhat antithetical classroom. The students numbered around 60. They sat at long desks, ten seats in a row, elbow to elbow. Their style of dress was similar to what I knew, though there was not a baseball cap to be found on top of anyones brow. They sat attentively, pens in hand, paper ready for taking serious notes. The professor stood before the room, waiting as stragglers walked in. No bell rang to signify the start of class. When enough stragglers had made it in, the professor walked over to the access and shut it.

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