Articles Written Within Life

My Colleges and Careers Blogger: Kate Lehnhof

August 13th, 2009 by Kate Lehnhof

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In case you are wondering this fantastic, witty,  amazing blog is written by Kate Lehnhof and Alex Ingersoll.  I know, you have lying awake at night wondering who this Kate Lehnhof person is. Allow me to introduce myself:

Miss Kate Lehnhof

Hello everyone! I am a senior at BYU studying Communications and I will be graduating this December. I have been working for My Colleges and Careers for more than four months and it is quite the plush gig I must say. But enough about silly matters like that.

Important Things you Should Know About Me:

  • I have a tendency to get a little bit obsessive about historical figures, musicians, and celebrities when I first discover them.  For instance, this week I checked out The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath from the library.  Since then I have already researched her entire life on wikipedia, exhaustively looked at pictures of her on google images, listened to Ryan Adam’s song “Sylvia Plath,” like fourteen times, and rented the movie with Gwyneth Paltrow about her life.  I get really into learning about people and their lives.
  • One of the coolest things I have ever done is live in Jerusalem.  There is nothing is more enlightening than singing Jewish hymns in a synagogue in Israel or talking politics with a man named Dr. Musallam.
  • Pandora knows me SO well.
  • The best work related task I have ever been asked to do is hire a magician.
  • My favorite hotel ever is the Viceroy in Palm Springs.
  • I’m a huge advocate for enjoying things you are interested in no matter how uncool or obscure it might be.  One time me and my Dad got into the hobby of  “bird watching,” and we bought books and would drive around swampy regions looking for rare breeds. If you are into something, you should do it and make no apologies.  Why would you not do something you like just because other people don’t think it’s cool?

The Last Word: History Making Commencement Speeches

August 5th, 2009 by Kate Lehnhof

College Graduation.

Some students tempted to just scrap the whole thing and hit the ground running without so much as a glance back at their tiny hometown college.

Others relish in the moment.

The moment that puts a formal punctuation mark on the crazy four years (or ten years, depending on how much you crazy you get) we call the university experience. Commencement speeches are often riddled with cliche upon cliche. “You are the future,” or “Seize the day,” or silly little phrases like “You can change the world.”   We hear these prosaic declarations, the rolling of eyes ensues and we think, “Oh yeah, i’m sure changing the world will just fall into my lap during the hours of nine-to-five in my corporate job.”

Sometimes though when we give our  brothers cynicism and better judgment the cold shoulder and alllow ourselves to enjoy and believe in those dramatic, romantic notions you will be inspired. Yes, inspired. Not “motivational-workplace-poster” inspired, but the real thing.  For just an instant, allow yourself to believe in all those dramatic, romantic notions.

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Commencement Speeches

America’s Best College Graduation Speeches

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Popular Majors: West Coast Vs. East Coast

July 28th, 2009 by Kate Lehnhof

Do you want to spend your college weekends on the beach with sun-kissed blondes on the West Coast?

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Or are you partial to the cool factor that the tree-lined streets of the east coast is dripping in?

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Do you know how to work that wool peacoat or would rather year round t-shirt weather? Are you more Beach Boys or Velvet Underground?

It’s a paralyzing decision for some. Remember that OC Episode where Summer and Seth debate over Brown and Berkley? Serious stuff people. My Colleges is committed to giving you the skinny on West Vs. East debate, starting with major selection. Have you ever wondered what types of majors are most popular on the east and west coasts? So did we and with that burning question we got up to our elbows in researching popular majors of over 30 universities and colleges from both sides of the divide.

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My Colleges and Careers: The Sweater Vest Awards

July 27th, 2009 by Kate Lehnhof

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My Colleges and Careers proudly announces it’s first ever “Sweater Vest Awards.” The award recognizes collegiate level professors and to be honest there are no requirements. We don’t care what why teach, how you teach, why your teach or even if you are good at what you do. Our only requirement? You are amusing  enough to get me to read the second page of results when I google your name. Drumroll please…

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Obama is over the “community college” stigma. Now it’s your turn.

July 15th, 2009 by Kate Lehnhof

Ok all you My Colleges and Careers Fans, It’s 4:30 on a Wednesday and I’m feeling outspoken.obama

Growing up in Utah sometimes I heard jokes about going to Utah Valley State College and people calling it “High School by the Highway.” A few years and a good deal of refiner’s fire induced maturity later, that “High School by the Highway,” is now Utah Valley University and nobody needs to defend choosing to go there for college. It has programs that other more erudite Universities in the area don’t like Aviation and their education program is highly competitive.

I’ve grown to respect community college and when I saw Slate.com this afternoon I saw that I just got a HUGE endorsement. From Mr. Obama himself. In a speech Tuesday in Warren, Mich., he proposed sinking nearly $12 billion into revamping the country’s community-college system. The proposal allocates $9 billion in grant money to boost academic programs and raise graduation rates, plus another $2.5 billion to upgrade school facilities. It would also fund open-source online courses so that schools can do more classes online.

And no, I’m not suggesting that the College of Rural Town, USA is going to comparable to Harvard. I don’t think many are under that illusion either. The truth is that many of the nation’s hardest most intelligent workers come from all walks of life. You don’t have to be a Vanderbilt anymore. So it’s time we started supporting more money on the Johnsons and the Smiths.

I don’t want to make any hasty generalizations so take the following statement with a grain of salt: Community colleges are filled with people who actually want to go to college.

The Slate article describes it perfectly, “We live in a knowledge economy, and we’ve set up education as if we’re an agrarian culture. It used to be that you could educate the top 10 percent, he said, and the rest of the population would get unskilled jobs. But in a global economy, where even professions like cashier or truck driver require constant upgrades in technology and information, a high-school diploma is not always enough. That said, a pricey Ivy League degree may not be necessary, either. Community colleges fill that hole….With jobs going overseas at ever-faster rates, America needs an educated, flexible work force ready to change jobs on short notice. That work force is more likely to emerge from community colleges than from, say, the Dartmouth English department.”

So whether you are currently writing your thesis on Milton over at Harvard or if you take online classes after work, embrace your inner Don Henley and “Get Over It.” Community College is here to stay.