So, you want to hear something random? I decided to take fencing lessons. They only went from September to the end of October, but it was really fun. Don't ask me why I decided to do it, I just did. You should've seen Travis's face when I told him I wanted to take fencing lessons. "Oh! Uh...okay...are you serious?"
It's much harder than it looks. I came home sore every Wednesday night and was limping around my classroom every Thursday.The class started out with about 6 students, but one by one they dropped out, and only two of us survived...champions of the beginning fencing class! What can I say? I'm a natural! Luckily, we were both left-handed, so that made fighting easier...easier for me to find my target and STRIKE! (by the way, in the bottom photo it looks like the epee [sword] is bent...it's actually supposed to be like that!)
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Friday, October 16, 2009
Wedding Weekend
Some of you were already aware of this, but my littlest sister, Sessely, got married last Friday to her husband, Chance. Everything went beautifully, and it was so great to see family and friends again. Travis and I were so blessed to watch the ceremony in the temple, and it reminded us of our own sealing just over a year ago in the same temple, and how we've grown to love each other even more since that day. I am so excited that my sister and new brother-in-law are able to be with each other for time and all eternity. What a blessing that is to have as members of the church! The luncheon was delicious (yay for pasta!), and the reception was awesome with ice cream sundaes and, of course, a dance/lip-sync by the siblings! Even Travis joined in, and he looked great! We recorded it on Travis' camera, and were going to post it for all our friends and family to see, but it "accidentally" didn't end up recording any of it. Sure... :)
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
The Best Birthday!
Yesterday, I officially turned a quarter of a century years old! Woo-hoo! I thought it would be a typical day with maybe a little cake and ice cream on the side...but then again, I married Travis!
When I got to school yesterday, I opened up my laptop and noticed a small envelope taped to it. Inside, I found a 3x5 card with a romantic poem written on it. It was the beginning of a scavenger hunt which led to about 7 other poems (these were not short poems, either!), each one written by Travis, giving me a clue to where we were going to eat that night. He hid them in the freezer, under the mail box, in drawers, closets, in the car, everywhere! It was so much fun, and each poem was very creative and so cute! The clues led me to his office, where he presented me with 3 storage buckets (to store rice, flour, and sugar- I've been wanting these for quite some time!), and a really nice Camelback! We had some car problems, but one of our best friends insisted that we borrow their car and go out to eat. We ate at one of my FAVORITE places, Barbacoa. Anyway, it was so wonderful, I feel like the luckiest girl in the world! I love you, Travis!
When I got to school yesterday, I opened up my laptop and noticed a small envelope taped to it. Inside, I found a 3x5 card with a romantic poem written on it. It was the beginning of a scavenger hunt which led to about 7 other poems (these were not short poems, either!), each one written by Travis, giving me a clue to where we were going to eat that night. He hid them in the freezer, under the mail box, in drawers, closets, in the car, everywhere! It was so much fun, and each poem was very creative and so cute! The clues led me to his office, where he presented me with 3 storage buckets (to store rice, flour, and sugar- I've been wanting these for quite some time!), and a really nice Camelback! We had some car problems, but one of our best friends insisted that we borrow their car and go out to eat. We ate at one of my FAVORITE places, Barbacoa. Anyway, it was so wonderful, I feel like the luckiest girl in the world! I love you, Travis!
Sunday, October 4, 2009
Harvest Time!
Monday, September 28, 2009
Fall Colors on the Heber Creeper
Sunday, September 20, 2009
GMAT Exam
I graduate with my undergraduate work in mechanical engineering next summer, and then it’s off to grad school! BYU has a graduate program in Product Development where, upon completion, you receive both a masters degree in mechanical engineering and also an MBA. The program usually takes 3-4 years to complete. Product development is the process of creating/inventing/designing a new product (that’s where the engineering comes in) and then building a company around the product to market it, sell it, and profit from it (that’s the business side). I love engineering and I love business, so this program has been very appealing to me.
To get accepted, you have to apply and get accepted independently to both the MBA program and the mechanical engineering masters program. This means I have to take both the GMAT and the GRE. As the business school is much more competitive to get into, I’ve been more worried about the GMAT. I’ve been studying for it over the course of the last month.
A week ago on Saturday, I went up to Draper to take the test. It was kind of interesting how tight the security was! I almost felt like I was going into a high-security prison, or something. You have to show them your ID, and they take your picture. They take your fingerprints, and they even have a little device you put your hand on that reads the vein patterns in your palm. I half-expected the DNA testing to come next... :) Then you have to pass through the security station. You have to store all your belongings in a locker. You have to (literally) turn your pockets inside out. If someone has a long-sleeve shirt, they make you roll up the sleeves to prove you aren’t hiding any notes. They check your arms and hands for writing. Then they escort you through the electronically-locked doors into the testing room.
The actual testing room is triangular-shaped. Two legs of the triangle are lined with about 7 computers each separated by divider walls. Each station has video and audio recording. The third side of the triangular room is a big glass wall. On the other side of that glass wall, a man sits and watches your back the entire time you take the test. For notepaper, they don’t use paper; instead, they give you a little spiral-bound notebook with about 8 laminated sheets of paper in it, and they give you an erasable marker (almost like an overhead projector pen). When you complete the test, they again check your ID, lookup your picture in their system, and take another palm vein pattern reading. Your fingerprints, photo, palm pattern, and the four hours of audio and video of you taking the test are all sent to back to GMAC with your exam answers.
The test itself has three sections: writing (essays), quantitative (math), and verbal. The quantitative and verbal sections are both graded on a scale from 1-60, and these two scores get combined into your composite score (out of 800). The writing score is reported separately. I was pleasantly surprised and very pleased with my scores!
So, now we basically have a lot of decisions to make and options to consider. The middle 50% of applicants accepted for the MBA program at Harvard Business School scored between 700-760 for the class on 2012. I may still apply for the joint product development program at BYU for next fall, or I may work a few years after graduation and apply to Harvard or some other top business program.
To get accepted, you have to apply and get accepted independently to both the MBA program and the mechanical engineering masters program. This means I have to take both the GMAT and the GRE. As the business school is much more competitive to get into, I’ve been more worried about the GMAT. I’ve been studying for it over the course of the last month.
A week ago on Saturday, I went up to Draper to take the test. It was kind of interesting how tight the security was! I almost felt like I was going into a high-security prison, or something. You have to show them your ID, and they take your picture. They take your fingerprints, and they even have a little device you put your hand on that reads the vein patterns in your palm. I half-expected the DNA testing to come next... :) Then you have to pass through the security station. You have to store all your belongings in a locker. You have to (literally) turn your pockets inside out. If someone has a long-sleeve shirt, they make you roll up the sleeves to prove you aren’t hiding any notes. They check your arms and hands for writing. Then they escort you through the electronically-locked doors into the testing room.
The actual testing room is triangular-shaped. Two legs of the triangle are lined with about 7 computers each separated by divider walls. Each station has video and audio recording. The third side of the triangular room is a big glass wall. On the other side of that glass wall, a man sits and watches your back the entire time you take the test. For notepaper, they don’t use paper; instead, they give you a little spiral-bound notebook with about 8 laminated sheets of paper in it, and they give you an erasable marker (almost like an overhead projector pen). When you complete the test, they again check your ID, lookup your picture in their system, and take another palm vein pattern reading. Your fingerprints, photo, palm pattern, and the four hours of audio and video of you taking the test are all sent to back to GMAC with your exam answers.
The test itself has three sections: writing (essays), quantitative (math), and verbal. The quantitative and verbal sections are both graded on a scale from 1-60, and these two scores get combined into your composite score (out of 800). The writing score is reported separately. I was pleasantly surprised and very pleased with my scores!
Section | Score | Percentile |
---|---|---|
Quantitative | 49 | 87 |
Verbal | 44 | 97 |
Total | 760 | 99 |
Writing | 4.5 | 37 |
So, now we basically have a lot of decisions to make and options to consider. The middle 50% of applicants accepted for the MBA program at Harvard Business School scored between 700-760 for the class on 2012. I may still apply for the joint product development program at BYU for next fall, or I may work a few years after graduation and apply to Harvard or some other top business program.
We Made a Blog!
Welp, we finally broke down and did it. I can't say we're going to be the most dedicated people when it comes to updating it (neither of us have Facebook for that very reason), but we'll see how it goes.
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