"In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." –John 16:33

Month: January 2014 Page 1 of 2

Dueling invitations

Day 893 of 1000

Well, Christian’s second invitation has now arrived from the Electrical Engineering department at UCSD. How sad would it have to be to go to school at the beach in San Diego. They want him to fly out to visit the school at exactly the same time as the Arizona State invitation.  The professor who invited him is from what looks like a very interesting lab. Maybe there will be more, but he feels pretty grateful for these

Betty Blonde #58 – 10/06/2008
Betty Blonde #58
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Narcissism

I had occassion to read this article titled “Don’t date a girl who travels.”  It talks about the type of woman who is solely devoted to her own pleasure to the exclusion of everyone and everything else.  Her life is all about her.  She wants this. She wants that. You are boring. The money about always going where she wants, when she wants, doing what she wants, in the end, makes for a wasted life.

Chances are, she can’t hold a steady job. Or she’s probably daydreaming about quitting. She doesn’t want to keep working her ass off for someone else’s dream. She has her own and is working towards it. She is a freelancer. She makes money from designing, writing, photography or something that requires creativity and imagination. Don’t waste her time complaining about your boring job.

Don’t date a girl who travels. She might have wasted her college degree and switched careers entirely. She is now a dive instructor or a yoga teacher. She’s not sure when the next paycheck is coming. But she doesn’t work like a robot all day, she goes out and takes what life has to offer and challenges you to do the same.

In their travels, many of these people do not have a high enough level of education nor literacy to understand what they were seeing because they are too busy thinking about where they want to be or what they want to be doing rather than productively learning something or working in a way that benefits society. Sadly, their curiosity generally extends to what they learn “in the moment” so they know little or nothing about the places they visit.

I have traveled a lot to places like Taiwan, Korean, Japan, Mexico, Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong, England, Czech Republic, Israel, etc. The reason I have had time and opportunity to travel was not because I spent all my time and resources on myself.  Rather it was because I was willing to forgo doing the “fun” stuff like being a dive instructor or yoga teacher (as if yoga were fun or interesting).  I got to travel because of hard work at school in a hard degree and a steady job so I could contribute productively to society. My company sent me, sometimes along with friends or family to all these places.

This is one of those things about which we warned our children.  Cheap and easy is not even gratifying in the short term.  Think of a life lived like that and how it culminates in little worth having. People are more important, interesting, and gratifying than places. Those who are dedicated solely to their own fulfillment and “things” like travel are destined to live boring lives.

100 days until commencement

Day 892 of 1000

We are now only 100 days away from commencement for Kelly’s and Christian’s graduation.  Both of the kids have signed up for graduation.  All they have to do is pass their current courses and they are done.  The crazy thing is we do not yet know what will happen next.  The one thing that has been confirmed is Kelly’s return to the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory for a second summer internship.  Everything else is speculative.  We want to sell the house to move back out West, but who know how that will go.  We are pretty sure Christian will get a PhD offer somewhere out West.  We are not pretty sure Kelly will get a PhD school offer because she is aiming at a degree that usually requires years of work experience.  Still, it is great to be so close to a long term goal.

Betty Blonde #57 –10/03/2008
Betty Blonde #57
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Grandpa José passed away last night

Day 891 of 1000

Don Jose and his children

Don José Rodriguez Cavazos died last night at age 93. He took his final deep breath and died in the arms of his oldest daughter Grandma Conchita.  Don José was the family patriarch in the very best way possible.  He loved, served, and guided his family with every fiber of his being.  He was defined more than any other way by how he loved and served God. His contemporaries called him Chepo. His grandchildren in Mexico called him abuelito.  Kelly and Christian called him Grandpa José.  Virtually everyone else called him Don José.

Don José’s first wife by whom he had all his nine children died at age 57 and he married Irlinda not to long after that.  Don José was the very first person I met from Lorena’s family.  I met him and Irlinda standing in the cafeteria line at a church convention in New Mexico in 1989.  Little did I know at the time that he would play such a huge role, not only in my life, but the life of my extended family.  I remember him as a very colorful, happy, friendly person.  I will write a few things about him in some future blog posts as I want to record some of the colorful stories that he told and that were told about him.

Don José and Grandpa Milo were kindred spirits.  They could not speak each other’s language but got along famously and spent the short amount of time they had together patiently listening to translators help them share stories.  Both of them grew up during the depression in large close knit families.  I remember them giving each other a big old bear hug every time they met.  Grandpa José liked to finish that hug by bouncing us a couple times off his belly.

The picture the accompanies this post is of Don José with his wife Irlinda and seven of his nine children.  The one’s in the back row from left to right are Gudelia, Betty, Nena, Nelda, and Abel.  In the front row are Grandma Conchita, Irlinda, Don José, and Mina.  The two missing are Tomás and Blanca.

Grandpa José was Lorena’s last living grandparent.  He will be greatly missed, but he was a faithful man and is in a better place.

Betty Blonde #56 –10/02/2008
Betty Blonde #56
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First PhD telephone interview

Day 890 of 1000

Christian has his first interview with a prospective professor in a few minutes.  Those kinds of things can be pretty nerve-wracking the first time you do them.  He has this and one more telephone interview scheduled in addition to his trip to Arizona State.  The sense we have about his situation right now is that there is a category of Electrical Engineering research professors who need graduate students with deeper math skills than the normal Electrical Engineering undergraduate student has time to take.  So, for those professors, Christian’s background is particularly attractive.  Our sense is that this category of professors make up  a small, but not insignificant minority in most of the universities to which Christian has applied.

Another thing we have learned is that it is not so common that he would get contacted so early in the process.  Most of the phone interviewing appears to starts in February and goes on through early March.  It also seems that early to mid-March is when the first round of accept/reject letters go out with April 15 as the date when students have to decide to accept/reject any acceptances they receive. So, there is another round starting in April where schools whose students did not accept their offers can be backfilled with previous rejections.

It is all pretty nerve-wracking.

Betty Blonde #55 –10/01/2008
Betty Blonde #55
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The joy of air travel

Day 889 of 1000

My flight to Phoenix arrived seven hours late yesterday, so I did not get to bed until 4:30 (6:30 Raleigh time) this morning.  It was not nearly as bad as it seems.  I slept about three and a half hours on the plane and got another three before I went into work.  This was a good reminder of why it will be nice to start living in the same town where I work.

Betty Blonde #54 – 09/30/2008
Betty Blonde #54
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Feminism, career women, and the stay at home mom

I wrote this post on career women a little over a week ago and got some interesting responses.  Matt Walsh very thoughtfully responds to a blog post titled I Look Down On Young Women With Husbands And Kids And I’m Not Sorry that characterizes the attitude about which I wrote.  Feminism is going to have to confront and defeat that kind of thinking if it is ever wants to be taken seriously, let alone capture the pro-life, high moral ground held by the early suffragists in America.

Time to start some house dealing

Day 887 of 1000

I am at the last of what has turned into over a year of travel, two weeks at a time out to Arizona.  I help doing some kinds of programming I do not normally do in the spirit of getting our first product out the door.  My real job entails development of algorithms to analyze images produced by our first product.  The reality is that I have very much enjoyed the robotic control programming I have done for the last year.  If it were not for the insane hours and all the travel, it is one of those programming things one might do as a hobby.

All this time on airplanes and in hotel rooms has given me time to reflect.  Lorena and I have not yet decided where we want to land if and when we can sell our house in Raleigh.  All the information about our options is not yet in–we know neither where the kids will be nor what makes sense in terms of my work. The only thing we know for sure is that we want to head West.  The most viable options are the Willamette Valley in Oregon or Prescott, Arizona, or Phoenix, Arizona.

We have good friends in all those places, but Oregon would not really be within driving distance to the kids unless one or both of them go to University of Washington which is fairly unlikely at this point even though both the kids have applied there.  At this point, we are leaning toward Prescott, but that changes on a minute to minute basis.  We do know that we need to get the house on the market pretty soon if we plan to sell it this spring or summer.  Lorena has started to prepare the house and I plan to start looking for an agent during my next trip home.

Betty Blonde #53 – 09/29/2008
Betty Blonde #53
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Wake Technical Community College reunion

Day 886 of 1000

Kelly and Christian made good friends when they went to Wake Technical Community College.  Of their three closest friends from that time, two entered five year co-op programs, so will graduate next year with a boat-load of engineering experience.  The third is an Iraq war vet name Mike who is nothing short of amazing.  We expect to hear very big things about him some day.  I hope it is in my lifetime.  He will graduate this May the same time as Kelly and Christian with a degree in Computer Science.  They have all maintained very high grades since the arrived at NCSU at least partially due the stellar preparation they received at community college.  I guess I never expected these kids would stay in touch.  Actually, the kids from the community college seem to be significantly more mature both in their studies and in the way they live their lives than the kids that started out at NCSU as freshman.  We are glad and thankful the kids started at Wake Tech.

Betty Blonde #52 – 09/26/2008
Betty Blonde #52
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It is easy to forget that I am not that smart

Day 885 of 1000

I have been reminded the last couple that it is hard to learn new stuff.  The sad part is I am trying to learn a bunch of old stuff and it is still hard.  At work, we use a Linux server with a Wiki, a file server, and a bunch of other handy tools to communicate with each other, share files, record stuff in a common place we might easily forget, etc., etc.  I decided I should do this at home now that the kids are about to head out so we can have a common place for stuff we want to share.  The process of installing this stuff is currently owning me.  I am going to do this, but it might kill me in the process.

Betty Blonde #51 – 09/25/2008
Betty Blonde #51
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A sighting of our favorite Lemonade–Lorina–in Hong Kong!!!

Day 884 of 1000

Our buddy Jon found himself in Hong Kong eating pizza sandwiches and drinking Lorina lemonade!  He was kind enough to forward us the picture because he knew that lemonade was our favorite doble sentido.  What he probably did not know is that if he sent me a picture like this there would be no way we could avoid trying to duplicate this meal.  Guaranteed, it probably would not taste as good in Raleigh as in an exotic place like Hong Kong and we probably will not be as good as that looks, but it seems to me even if is only a shadow of what Jon ate, it will still be some mighty fine eating.  Now all we have to do is remember where we bought that Lorina here in Raleigh…

Jon drinks Lorina in Hong Kong with his pizza sandwich

Betty Blonde #50 – 09/24/2008
Betty Blonde #50
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Lorena is an upholstering frame of mind

Lorena fixes the barstools

We have had two barstools in the kitchen that featured seats with torn fabric that moved around because they had worked their way free from the frame.  She fixed all that yesterday and today.  She is a born fixer-upper.  We plan to get her a house on which to ply her skills when we move out West, hopefully this spring or summer.

The reality is I am guilty of this

Here is a great article in the Wall Street Journal about verbal “tee-ups” as prefixes to statements.  They say it is a sign of insecurity.

“To be honest…”
“I want you to know…”
“I’m just saying…”
“I hate to be the one to tell you this…”
“I’m not saying…”

I think they are right on all counts and, furthermore, I confess my guilt.

Self-teaching: Kelly’s comic strip

Day 883 of 1000

We took down Kelly’s old comic strip site.  We wanted to have a home for the comics she drew for two years from ages 14-16.  Over the last couple of days, I was reminded of when how she learned to draw the strip.  Of course the start was our homeschool art with Kistler’s Draw Squad, but there was a lot more than that.  She and Christian drew lots of cartoons before Kelly even got started.  Then, Kelly started picking up cartooning books at bookstores and reading everything she could find about cartooning.

One of the things she learned and that I noticed in yesterday’s and today’s comic is that she often experimented with angles, distances, foregrounds, shadows, and a ton of other stuff.  The comic got a lot more interesting to me when she started pointing out the different techniques she used to make the drawing interesting, pull interest a certain direction, set the tone of a given panel, etc.

Some of the stuff I am noticing was from her earliest work so the implementation is a little rough, but she is definitely experimenting with stuff she has read or seen in other comic strips.  Here is yesterday’s strip.  Notice the third person view through binoculars in the third panel.

Now in today’s strip she tries a couple of different techniques.  The first panel shows the kids talking in the foreground with interesting stuff in the background to set the scene.  The las three panels are from a balcony or stadium point of view with a narrator at the top.  I love it.

There are lots and lots of different things she tries.  Some of it has to do with the narrative and different ways to show people talking to each other–how they are positioned, their angles, etc.  I am enjoying looking at these again as I re-post them.  I really hope she takes up her comic stripping again very soon.  I know she wants to start a new strip.

Betty Blonde #49 – 09/23/2008
Betty Blonde #49
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Not college material?

Day 882 of 1000

I am a big fan of Matt Walsh and an even bigger fan of the idea that not everyone should go to college.  That being said, this blog post that explains why Matt did not go to college seems very wrong-headed in one of its premises.  It is an excellent post worthy of a read.  I am in complete agreement with him on his decision not to go to college.  I have described my belief that many very capable people would be much better served by apprenticeships, community college training, working in an industry to learn the business, then starting their own, etc., etc.  Matt has made quite a cogent case for those who are gifted writers to write rather than matricule.  I agree with all that.  The part with which I do not agree is this:

I think it was ninth grade, or maybe tenth, and I was sitting in afterschool detention. I’d been sentenced to hard time for being late to class, even though I had a valid excuse. See, I was only late because I hated school with a burning passion. I dreaded every class, every assignment, every test, every worksheet, every mound of busywork, every shallow and forced interaction with peers I couldn’t relate to or connect with or understand; every moment, every second, every part, every inch of every aspect of my public educational experience. I hated it. I hated all of it. I was suffocating.

It had been ten years of public school up to that point and it wasn’t getting better. It never would, and I knew it. I was able to hang on for a long time, managing adequate grades, even an ‘A’ here and there. I was “passing,” at the very least. But in high school that changed. I started failing and failing miserably. We’d take tests, I’d try my hardest, but often I’d still get zero answers correct. ZERO. Fifty questions — all wrong. It was humiliating. Eventually I earned a reputation. I was the kid who “didn’t care” and “didn’t assert himself.” I decided to go with that image — false though it was – because I’d rather be seen as the smart slacker than exposed as the moron who actually tried and still failed.

Wow. To my way of thinking, based on Matt’s very articulate blog, this is more an indictment of the government school education system than of any lack of ability on Matt’s part. We ran into any number of situatons during our homeschool years where we were frustrated our kids were not learning.  The kids were frustrated, too.  Sometimes we found a way to work around it and sometimes we fought through it just to get to a minimum level of competence that was “good enough.”  It seems to me that our society needs to educate our children to a certain level of competence whether they plan to be a PhD rocket surgeon, a millworker, a beautician, or a lawyer before they start into career training.  Probably it should only take until about eighth grade, but the government steals an extra four years of our kids lives and still cannot get the material into their heads.

So, I think the answer to students like Matt might be to try a different approach.  That is one of the things for which homeschool is better suited than any other learning environment about which I am aware.  There are probably others, but I think we are hammering a lot of round kids into square holes these days.  I am glad we got our kids out of the system sufficiently early that they did not have to suffer like Matt.

Betty Blonde #48 – 09/22/2008
Betty Blonde #48
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Answers to homeschool questions Part 3 – An overview of some of our homeschool curricula

Day 881 of 1000

Answers to Homeschool Questions Series Index

A blog friend, Kendra, has asked a series of questions about how we did our homeschooling with a particular interest in how to use CLEP testing and other tools to skip high school, or at least parts of it.  This is the third in the series of questions.

(1) I have the 7th grader (great reader) and 6th grader (hole digger) :) I would like to have my 7th grader do Algebra in 8th grade. If that’s successful, what would be your suggested schedule for the upper grades? By that I mean, Algebra II, Geometry, etc. What order and what curriculums? We are currently using Saxon math.

One of the things on which we had agreement with our children was that they could do whatever they wanted in graduate school, but because they were still essentially of high school age during at least the first two years of college, they needed to study something hard.  That meant there would be a very strong focus on mathematics.  As I have mentioned in other places in the blog, Kelly is in the last semester of a degree in Statistics and Christian is in the last semester of a degree in Applied Mathematics.  So, with three months left, Kelly’s grades are currently at the level to graduate Magna Cum Laude while Christian is on schedule to graduate Summa Cum Laude with an honors degree.  I only said that to say that the way we did Mathematics in our homeschool appear to have been good preparation for Mathematics intensive degrees.  I should note that we got great prices at Sonlight, so we bought these programs there.  So here is what we did:

Singapore Math – We started with Saxon Math in elementary school.  It worked well for us, but it did not create a lot of excitement with the kids, so I did research over the summer and settled on Singapore Math.  We absolutely loved it.  It seemed to allow the kids to learn the material faster at the same time it was more interesting to them.  We did about a year and a half worth of Singapore Math each year and that did not seem to be an onerous work load for the kids.  They still loved the program when we finished it at the end of the (Singapore Math) sixth grade year.

Teaching Textbooks – We tried to use the Singapore Math offering when Kelly finished up the last of the Sixth Grade books.  After about a month, we gave up and looked for something else, because it was just not working.  I did an investigation, found several options that looked OK and decided to take a chance on what was not a completely mature program at the time, Teaching Textbooks.  It was nothing short of awesome.  The kids both did Pre-Algebra, Geometry, Algebra I, Algebra II with Teaching Textbooks.  We purchased the Pre-Calculus program for Kelly when she got to it, but it was very immature at the time.  I have heard that it has been dramatically improved and we probably would not have changed if that program had been better at the time.

Thinkwell Math – When we knew we needed to switch from Teaching Textbooks for Pre-Calculus, I went through another investigation phase and received very good reports about Thinkwell Math.  It is an online course that is absolutely excellent.  Kelly went through their entire Pre-Calculus program in conjunction with the REA Pre-Calculus CLEP preparation book.  She easily passed the Pre-Calculus.  Christian got through almost exactly half of that course before he had to take the Community College Mathemetics placement test.  That half year was enough to place him into Calculus I where he did well.

(2) What is your opinion on an 8th grader attempting biology? We are using Apologia science. We are working through their prescribed 7th grade book now. They offer an 8th grade science which looks like an Earth science type subject. I considered having my 7th grader begin the 8th grade book over summer and try to complete 8th and biology by the end of his 8th grade summer. I do realize that biology would be a grade for a HS transcript.

Like you, we used Apologia starting with Physical Science and going on to Biology both of which appeared on both Kelly’s and Christian’s high school transcripts.  That was the last of their homeschool science.  Kelly then spent six months going through the REA Biology CLEP preparation book and was able to pass that test with a fairly high score.  Neither Christian nor Kelly had any problem with Biology in college.  That being said, Christian had to do some pretty serious preparation to be able to handle Chemistry in college, but his strong Mathematics background made Physics pretty straightforward for him.  Kelly did not take Chemistry or Physics in college.

(3) History – I like the history we have picked (Mystery of History) in the fact that it’s fun to read. I feel it will not prepare us adequately. What history program would you recommend? I would like something better than just a date-and-name curriculum but want the curriculum that will get the job done.

History was a little bit of a problem for us.  Kelly brute forced her way through the REA CLEP preparation books to pass four CLEP history tests (Western Civilization 1 & 2 and US History 1 & 2).  Christian took Western Civilization 1 and 2 at the community college and did well in them based on the preparation he got in homeschool.  We think the Sonlight programs served our children very, very well in this regard with one exception.  We think Sonlight’s high school US History program based on the Joy Hakim books is abysmal.  We put a US History program together for ourselves that we absolutely loved.  I discuss what we did here, here, here, here and here.  All this being said, unless your kids are memorization machines, the CLEP History exams can be pretty rough.  Kelly is a pretty gifted/disciplined memorizer, but passing all those tests was a chore and Christian really enjoyed his History at the Community College because he got a great teacher.

(4) My goal would be to try the CLEP tests with English, beginning histories, and some maths. I believe I need to start working towards that goal now.

This does not seem like a bad goal with the cavaet about the History.  The REA CLEP preparation books were our friends in passing the tests.

(5) I remember you saying that a passed CLEP test gives college credit as opposed to a grade. How does that affect their college GPA? Do you know if there is an age requirement for taking the CLEPs?

Big State U (in our case North Carolina State University, but I know this to be true about the vast bulk of Univerisities in the country) gives credit but not grades for passed CLEP tests and Community College classes.  I know when I started college at Big State U (Oregon State University), I was academically, but not mentally nor social prepared for college, so my grades suffered greatly the first two semesters.  I spent my entire Bachelor’s degree trying to make up for those semesters.  Our kids did better than me during their first too semesters, but have done dramatically better since then.  The upshot is that all one has to do to get the credits for the CLEP test is to get the minimum score accepted by the University.  All one has to do to earn credits for the Community College is to get high enough overall grades to get accepted at the University of choice.  Anything that is a C or above gets converted to a PASS.  The kids get a clean slate GPA-wise when they enter Big State U.  That was a very good thing for us.

(6) Our local junior college allows students who are duel enrolled to attend tuition free – a big savings that would be a huge help. HOWEVER – if my boy(s) could pass a CLEP test I don’t see the point in them spending the time to take a class just to utilize “tuition free.”

This is a very good point.  If we had this to do over we would have studied for only those CLEP tests the kids did not enjoy, so they did not have to deal with it any more.  Because of our errors, we got Kelly into Community College (with a boatload of credits) after her Sophomore year of high school.  We would have put her in after her eight grade year with that do-over.

I hope that helps!  Loved the questions!

Betty Blonde #47 – 09/19/2008
Betty Blonde #47
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Grandma Sarah’s and Aunt Janet’s 83 birthday

Day 880 of 1000

Grandma Sarah and her twin sister, Aunt Janet celebrated their 83rd birthday on January 18, 2014.  A lot of the cousins got together.  I think there were only two or three missing.  My cousin Neil was kind enough to send us some old pictures and a few of the event.  It sounds like they had a great time.  Here is their picture when they were in first grade:
Grandma Sarah and Aunt Janet as little girls

Here is a picture at the birthday party on Saturday (that is Aunt Jean on the right):
Aunt Janet, Grandma Sarah, and Aunt Jean

Betty Blonde #46 – 09/18/2008
Betty Blonde #46
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How cool is Raleigh–Redhat edition

Day 879 of 1000

I sat by two different guys from Red Hat on the flight home from Phoenix to Raleigh yesterday.  They had been at a conference and both told me about how much they loved both Red Hat and the home of their world headquarters in Raleigh.  We are trying to figure out what to do next now that Kelly and Christian are scheduled to graduate this fall.  Every time I think about leaving, I am reminded of how great it is to live here in Raleigh.  Christian was already a Linux geek by the time we moved out East from the Portland, Oregon area.  He was kind of saddened by the fact that he would be leaving the town that Linus Torvold’s calls home.  Also, the home of the Open Source Lab is at Oregon State University, my alma mater in Corvallis.  We kind of figured we would not have so much access to Linux info and infrastructure in Raleigh as we had in Oregon.  We could not have been more wrong.  Raleigh is the home of Red Hat Linux.  I even think NCSU has one of the oldest Linux Users Groups in the world.  Why would we want to think of leaving.

Betty Blonde #45 – 09/17/2008
Betty Blonde #45
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Interesting discussion with a career woman

Day 878 of 1000

Night before last I was had a long discussion with a colleague at work who had just joined the company as a high level executive.  After we had talked about business for a good while we started talking about our families.  She has very accomplished children, similar in age to Kelly and Christian.  I mentioned that Kelly had applied to several universities for a PhD program in Management, but probably wanted to be a stay at home mom after that.

I think the woman was a little bit offended.  She admonished me that I should encourage her to do what she loves.  I told her Kelly loves the idea of being a stay at home mom, but she would kind of like to finish a graduate degree first (or after she gets married but before she has kids).  For awhile my colleague did not get it.  She could not believe that someone might place a higher priority on her family than in a career.  She told me how she had spent really big money on great nannies to take care of her kids while she was not there.  She used the old canard of quality time being more important than the quantity of time one spends with their children.

All this made me thankful for Lorena who has been the gold standard of all role models for how a woman can set her priorities to maximize the impact of her life by caring for her children and her husband in the home.  I am beyond grateful for all that she has done in that regard.  I hope Kelly is able to acheive that level of contribution to her family and society.  Anybody can be a company executive if they work hard and stay focused.  It takes a lot more to be a stay at home mom.

Betty Blonde #44 – 09/16/2008
Betty Blonde #44
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Management PhD’s require experience

Day 877 of 1000

In all this applying for PhD’s we have found that if one wants to do a Management PhD, it almost always requires 5-10 years of business experience and often it requires a Masters degree.  Kelly wants to get a PhD in Marketing in parallel with a Masters degree in Statistics.  It is a little bit of an iffy deal.  She is pretty uniquely prepared to perform the kind of research required for a Managment PhD because of her Statistics degree and her Statistical internship, but we are not sure if it is sufficient to overcome her need for experience. We have spoken to a couple of schools where she has applied and believe she has a fairly good chance of getting accepted at one of them in particular.

When I say pretty good, I would put the odds at only about 55/45 right now.  It is very painful waiting for the accept/reject letters and we are at peace with the fact that Kelly might have to go to work for a couple of years.  Her experience at her Johns Hopkins internship has shown her she really likes that.  Still, it would be great to break the mold a little and start into a Management PhD program right out of her Bachelors degree.  We have checked at her favorite school and they generally send out the first round in mid-March with the earliest notifications going out in late February, so we have another couple months of opportunity to work on our patience.

Betty Blonde #43 – 09/15/2008
Betty Blonde #43
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