Archive for the ‘Study Abroad’ Category

When we say we barely have free time in College, we mean it!

JP Park Monday, October 12th, 2009

Hey, its J.P again!! Sorry I haven’t been blogging much, but as the title says, College is extremely busy!!!!

In case some of you readers don’t know already, I’m studying in the mountains near Yosemite for a semester long program called “High Sierra”, which is sort of like a study abroad program. For my Leadership class I have here at the “satellite campus”(campus that is not on the legit APU college) the 22 students here had to go on a 6 day trek in Ansel Adams(sp?) which is part of Yosemite. For 6 straight days, we have no classes, no internet, no phones, no showers, and worst of all, NO TOILETS!! It was a great experience; One of those things that you do once n a life time.My trek group for the grueling 6 day trek consisted of 9 other classmates and professors.

Here are some pictures from my 6 day trek!Me on the 6 day trek for High Sierra

Looking out to YosemiteSLab Lake in Yosemite

Some people from my trek group summiting a mountain!!

Some people from my trek group summiting a mountain!!

The 6 day trek was tons of fun!! I had a “Solo”, where I was by myself in the wilderness with only my sleeping bag and a few other things. I spent 24 hours by myself, and chose to fast the whole day by choice. In the 24 hours while I was on my “solo” time during trek, I have never felt more closer to God in my entire life. I spent the whole day in solitude, and spent a lot of the day appreciating God’s majestic creation and basking in the sun by the lake(a picture of it is above here).

Now, I’m back on campus with the 22 or so other students, and have been trying to transition back to the groove of the dreaded 6 classes I’m taking here at High Sierra. Don’t get me wrong, I love the classes that Azusa Pacific offers and I learn tremendously. The teachers here are amazing and are like mentors. A few of them that I can name off the top of my head are Dave Williams, Mike Robbins, and Tom Dunn. They are some rad professors!

I have had a difficult time trying to juggle my time wisely. In college, countless temptations get thrown your way and at times, it will be very difficult to turn them down. Instead of doing homework, I’m tempted to hang out with friends, watch a movie, play a game or sport, or even procrastinate on facebook! I barely seem to have time to call my parents and siblings back in Virginia, and even my roommate back on the APU campus.

All in all, College is the most amazing place on Earth, besides a church of course. :) I have met some quality friends here, and I have learned so much just as a person, and also as a Christian.

To close off, I’ll just explain what I did today to give you a taste of what college life is kind of like:

I woke up around 11 am because I didn’t have any  classes today, and then chilled with a few friends until it was time for lunch. I didn’t get a chance to eat breakfast since I woke up so late(Breakfast is around 8am here at the High Sierra). Then, my friend Rachel Eblin trimmed my hair with her own personal hair cuttery kit. After my trim, I went on a mini “field trip” with about 8 other students to Starbucks to study/work on homework. We could of just stayed on campus, but the track team from Azusa Pacific is here at High Sierra for a team building weekend or something, so there is constantly a lot of noise because of how much fun their having. The few of us who couldn’t concentrate, and the students who wanted to leave campus for a while decided to go to Starbucks and I got a lot of work done. It’s relaxing to get away from campus and the whole college environment for a while and just relax.

Right now, it’s about midnight and I’m typing this blog in the dining hall, which is filled with at least half of the guys and girls from the APU track team. I’m about to work on some homework(story of my life) and get some sleep.

I plan to blog more often, sorry for the abscence. Like I said, I barely have any free time, but I’ll make this blog job one of my priorities. :)

Night, J.P

Stressed as a college student?? Same here!!

JP Park Friday, September 25th, 2009

Hey there guys!! J.P here again with a few words of wisdom!

Well in case you didn’t already know, I’m a freshman here at Azusa Pacific University. Ironically, I’m not on the campus (The campus is pretty dope!), I’m at the semester long program called “High Sierra” where we study in the mountains and get to do outdoors-y stuff like go on a 6 day trek in Yosemite (We leave this Thursday which means no school for 6 days! hah)

Here’s a picture of the 23 students and teachers/mentors/friends here at the High Sierra program. It’s an amazing community:

high, sierra, freshman, experience, jp, park, yosemite, trek,

high, sierra, freshman, experience, jp, park, yosemite, trek,

Anyway, even though I have only been in college for a couple of weeks now, I’m already starting to slowly get stressed and even more stress. STRESS  SUCKS!! In college, you tend to get so busy with countless things such as SCHOOL WORK, clubs, sports, extracurricular activities, friends, and so on.

The most helpful tips I found out were obvious, of course. Here are some of them:

1. PRIORITIZE!!!! Always start and finish the things that are most important like class work like essays and reading books. I procrastinate A LOT, so the faster you finish your work, the faster you get to all of the other fun stuff APU offers. I can’t “stress” enough about how important it is to get the most important stuff out of the way first.

2. Make a “To do list”/ Calendar —-I always make a to do list with my homework for each class, upcoming events, and planning what days I can go out and have fun and whatever else. It helps a lot to see what you have already completed but crossing them off the list, and what you still need to do.

3. DON’T PROCRASTINATE!!!!!!!—–It’s so easy for a friend to stop by your dorm and want to chill or go out to lunch or dinner. I know it is hard to say no when all of your friends urge you to do something, BUT there will be plenty of countless opportunities to hang out and socialize. You have 4 years to do that! Grades and academics come first!!!

I could say a lot more, but none can come to mind right now. Haha.

The faster you do your class work, the sooner you’ll be able to do this:

Me, (JP) sleeping in my dorm

Hahahaha! Naps are even more amazing in college, except when you constantly have people knocking on your door to hang. But I don’t have to worry anymore since I”m here in the mountains for High Sierra semester.

College isn’t all fun and games…Don’t get me wrong…I LOOVVVEEE college, but there has to be a balance between socializing and studying/doing homework.

Just last night, I had to read 5 chapters (50 pages worth) and while I was reading, my roommates asked me if I wanted to go kayaking in the lake. I really wanted to go, but I knew had to finish reading…. Being productive means making compromises. The more you say no to your friends, the more they will respect your studying time.

Hope this helped a bit, ha! I need to go work out for my Fit For Life class, so lataz!

Greetings from a Freshman perspective!!!

JP Park Monday, September 21st, 2009
Me (J.P) at Yosemite!

Me (J.P) at Yosemite!

Hey everyone!!! First off, my name’s J.P and I’m a freshman here at Azusa Pacific University! I’m from Virginia, so deciding to travel all the way to California was a HUGE decision, but I can say it has been the best decision I have made in my entire life.

For those of you who don’t know, there is a program at APU called the “High Sierra” program. For a semester, you get to live on the mountains at Bass Lake, CA with other students who can be in any grade level. You have the chance to rock climb, wake board, trek, hike, and even conquer Yosemite!!

Here’s a picture of the sunset here at High Sierra. It is so amazing

Sunset at Yosemite

Sunset at Yosemite

Since I’m an out of state student, I really wanted to stay on campus and study there and make tons of friends and just live the “freshman life”, but through a series of countless events during my first few days at APU, I decided to do the “High Sierra” program.

So………here I am with only 22 other students up in the mountains!! I love being here. The community is just as awesome as it is back on main campus, just fewer people for sure! I literally went from having over 40 hallmates in the Trinity Hall dorm back on campus to 4 here at High Sierra!! But hey…it’s a good thing because you get to become so close with the few people here. I love each and every person that’s here with me, but unfortunately, I get extremely “campus sick” sometimes when I think of being on campus at Azusa

I find it extremely weird and awkward that I miss being on campus when I have only been there for a week and a half. But during that week and a half, I met so many amazing people. The community at APU is amazing!!! You are destined to make friends no matter what.

I have so much to blog about and I really want to give you guys still in high school and future transfer students a glimpse of what life is really like here at Azusa Pacific University, and not to mention the awesome things I’ve been up to!

For now, here’s a picture of my first football game at APU with my friends. I’ll definitely keep blogging!

Me and my friends before our first APU football game

Me and my friends before our first APU football game

March and April in a nutshell

Ben Monday, April 20th, 2009

Hello again!

I apologize, as it’s been quite a while since we’ve last talked! So much has happened in the past month that I don’t know if there’s enough memory on our website to hold it all! I hope there’s still some readers that have stuck with me during the past few weeks while I’ve been away…

Well today is Monday, April 13 and Spring break has almost officially ended. Tomorrow its back to the grind as I work hard for the last three weeks of the semester and hopefully finish strong. A lot of great things are coming together for me in the near future, and the successes of the past few weeks have paved a path for me, but first let me tell you what I’ve been up to here at APU.

The last time we talked, I was preparing for my sister and her friends to come out and visit for their Spring break. We had a great time while they were here, and Kelly and I were able to show them around quite a bit! Santa Monica, Griffith Observatory, and Redondo Beach were some of the highlights for them. While they were here they even had the great opportunity to stay on my aunt and uncle’s boat at Redondo Beach for several nights. We had a great trip and it was such a blast to have my sister out here for a week.

After they left, it was time for the High Sierra Preview Weekend. As I’ve been working for the program this semester, I was able to drive up with the group and hang out at Bass Lake for the weekend! The student turnout was fantastic, and simply being able to see some old friends, relax in the woods, and eat some great food was such a wonderful time. Being back at High Sierra, even for just a weekend, and seeing potential students’ eyes widen as they explored the campus and learn about all the amazing things they’ll get to experience at Bass Lake reminded me of how amazing an experience that semester really was.

The following week was a big one for me, full of homework, presentations, interviews, and my 22nd birthday. On Monday I attempted to celebrate my birthday, but was so swamped with preparing for Tuesday’s interview and Wednesday’s presentation, that dinner with Kelly in the cafeteria was the extent of it. Tuesday was the day I had been preparing for (and worrying about) for weeks. I was interviewing for an internship in the Admissions Office – a highly coveted position here at APU that a large number of students apply and interview for each semester. For our interviews, we were required to “sell” something to the interviewing Admissions staff. In the past, applicants have sold such things as ‘why you should go to APU’, ‘why APU is better than Biola’, and ‘why monkeys make great friends’. In my case, I decided to sell something that was very close to my heart – ‘why more bike lanes in LA are needed and beneficial to everyone’. The presentation was one I knew backwards and forwards, but still worried about. The interview went well, though, and I heard back on Friday in a very interesting and stomach-twisting second interview that I had received the position – which means that next year you might see me talking about APU at your very own high school, at a college fair, or here on campus if you come for a tour!

After the busy week had finished, Kelly and I were finally able to celebrate my birthday by relaxing, eating out at the Yardhouse (my favorite restaurant in Pasadena), and going on a couple great hikes and bike rides. She also surprised me with tickets to the Sasquatch Music Festival in Washington – something I’ve been dying to attend for years now! She really knows me well :-)

As March came to a close and April began, only one thing was on my mind: Spring break. For the past several years, my good friend Brett and I have been dreaming up the trip of a lifetime. Every time we reunite during summer and winter breaks, we talk about how amazing it would be for him to come out and visit. Just in case he would ever be able to come, I had been planning where we might go and what we might see. And then this past January, he gave me the news that a recent business transaction had given him a free flight to Los Angeles. The time had finally come for our trip!

So on Monday, April 6 I picked Brett up from LAX and we began a week of touring around Southern California. Our first day was spent here in the LA area, and we visited Santa Monica, the San Gabriel mountains behind campus, and a great Italian restaurant in Venice Beach. The next day we packed up and headed north on the 101 freeway toward the coastal city of Santa Barbara. There, we spent the day exploring the city, enjoying some great food, and, at the end of the day, camped at the amazing Carpinteria State Beach. The next morning we woke up, tore down camp, and drove up State Route 154 north into Santa Barbara County wine country. We were blessed with amazing weather that luckily contradicted the weatherman’s predictions. As it was our first time in the mountains of Santa Barbara County, we decided to spend our day driving through the beautiful rolling hills, eating a great lunch in Solvang (where Lance Armstrong and the Tour of California recently rode through), and spending the evening exploring the region some more.

After a great couple days, we made the astonishingly short drive back to Los Angeles. On our way into town, we stopped at the industrial location where the television show The Office is shot. It took a little searching on forums and blogs, but we found the exact location and it was so neat to see the “Scranton Business Park” sign outside the “Dunder Mifflin” building.

The rest of break was spent watching movies, eating great food, celebrating Easter Sunday at Sierra Madre Congregational Church, visiting with old friends, enjoying the great weather we had all week, and of course, getting a little homework done.

Now, Spring Break come and gone, I anxiously await the last day of finals. My homework load is heavy and my scholarly drive weak, I have quite the journey ahead of me. I’ll update you all in about a week here once the most of it has passed. Until then, enjoy this warming weather and study hard! And for those of you who are wondering what there is to do out here at APU, I hope this blog has shown you just a taste of the amazing things you have to look forward to!

Santa Barbara wine country

Some sprouting grape vines

Doing a little bouldering in Joshua Tree NP

Brett and me on the Santa Barbara Pier

A lonely flower in the desert of Joshua Tree NP

Scranton, Pennsylvania? Nope - Van Nuys, California.

Keeping busy and riding my bike

Ben Saturday, February 28th, 2009

Someone informed me yesterday that the semester was already half over. It took me about five minutes and looking at several calendars to finally realize that this semester really was pushing into its second half. 

I can’t believe it.

Part of the reason its moving so fast for me is that I’ve been maintaining a very busy schedule since I returned to Azusa. It didn’t take long for me to get back in the swing of things here at main campus. Right away I started working at both of my new jobs: one as a representative for the High Sierra Program in the Study Abroad Office, and the other as the Photo Editor for the school’s newspaper, The Clause. 

As a representative for the High Sierra Program, myself and another alumni work together promoting the program through class visits and presentations, informational meetings, advertising around campus, and also working closely with the students interested in the semester by helping them line up their class schedules and securing everything for them to be able to make it up to Bass Lake. I’ve had such a great time working this job so far and its allowed me not only the opportunity to stay in touch with everyone from the program, but also the privilege to just talk to students and share about my experience and get them excited about it.

My other new employer, The Clause, keeps me busy with taking photos at big events here on campus such as basketball games, concerts, and conferences. Every monday we have a staff meeting where the editors and supervisors get together and discuss the last weeks publication, what the next week’s publication will look like, and what stories will be written. After the meeting we head over to the office where we continue the week’s work on the current issue, which is released every Wednesday after chapel. My job requires me to look at all of the photos taken during the week by myself and the writers, decide which ones will make it in the paper, and then edit them using Photoshop. This job has been great as well in that it has kept me shooting photos this semester on a regular basis and allowed me to continue doing something that I love.

Like I said, these jobs have been great, but they’ve definitely made life much busier than I was used to last semester. It’s been an adjustment getting used to the pace of life again down here in Southern California. Every day I’m forced to be on top of my game. I have a planner that helps me know where I need to be when and what I need to be doing. 

Life here and life at Bass Lake are pretty radically different, but I don’t know if I could say that one is better than the other. I loved having the solitude, the quiet, and the time to spend solely on studies and relationships. But on the other hand, maintaining a busy schedule and working jobs that help influence the entire campus is something that I’ve found to be really fulfilling. 

What I’ve found to be most helpful, though, in maintaining a sense of clarity and calm have been my bike rides. I’ve managed to fit in three or four great rides a week that take me up Glendora Mountain Road (what most Southern Californian’s claim to be one of the best climbs in the area).

Four miles up the road in Glendora, a beautifully paved road cuts into the foothills. Curving and switching back, it crawls gently, and sometimes not-so-gently, toward Mt. Baldy in the Angeles National Forest. The road is maintained on a regular basis by the City Works department, keeping rockslide and obstructions off the road and making it safe for cyclists. After climbing for about ten miles, the road forks, one direction taking you further up to Mt. Baldy, and the other back down to Azusa. 

With all the rain we’ve had down at lower elevations recently, the snow has been incredible in the mountains. My last several rides have been magnificent. As I reach the summit of the climb, the canyon opens up into the backcountry of the Angeles National Forest and the snow-covered mountains dominate the view. I took a few pictures to show you guys what I’ve had the privilege to see lately:

 

Some snow-capped mountains

Some snow-capped mountains

 

My bike and some snow on the way up to Mt. Baldy

My bike and some snow on the way up to Mt. Baldy

Me at the top of Glendora Mountain Road

Me at the top of Glendora Mountain Road

 

Besides my amazing bike rides, I’ve got some very exciting times on the horizon: Next weekend my sister and some of her friends are flying out to visit me for their spring break. That same weekend my girlfriend and I will be attending our second concert at the incredible Walt Disney concert hall in downtown Los Angeles. The weekend following that I get to head up to High Sierra for Preview Weekend and visit campus and some old friends. And finally, at the beginning of April, my good friend Brett will be flying out to visit me for our spring break, on which we will be taking a road trip up and down California.

I’ll have much to be writing about in the coming weeks, so stay tuned!

 

Kelly and I in Altadena after a storm

 

I snapped this photo of downtown LA from a hill in Altadena during a storm

I snapped this photo of downtown LA from a hill in Altadena during a storm

 

 

Another storm over downtown seen from a hill behind campus

Another storm over downtown seen from a hill behind campus

It’s Oscar Time…

Ben Friday, February 20th, 2009

Now I understand that the Oscars have very little, if anything, to do with my academic life here at Azusa Pacific University. 

But I’m a film lover. A lover of films. And I’ve been spending quite a few of my recent weekends at the local AMC. And let me tell you – I am excited for this year’s Academy Awards more so than any other year in recent memory, and that is because this year, I’ve seen almost every major film nominated. Now that’s a feat – an expensive one at that (especially at ten bucks a movie…whatever happened to five dollar movies? or at least a five dollar matinee?!)

So on February 22, myself and a number of my closest friends will be sitting in front of the television, ballot in hand, tuned into ABC at 5:00 PM Pacific Time to watch Hugh Jackman (don’t ask me why) host the 81st Annual Academy Awards.

So to prepare for the big night, I’ve filled out my own personal ballot of who I think will win the awards. And here it is:

Actor – Mickey Rourke (The Wrestler)
Supporting Actor – Heath Ledger (The Dark Knight)
Actress – Kate Winslet (The Reader)
Supporting Actress – Amy Adams (Doubt)
Animated Film – WALL-E
Art Direction – Benjamin Button
Cinematography – Slumdog Millionaire
Costume Design – Benjamin Button
Directing – Danny Boyle (Slumdog Millionaire)
Documentary Feature – Man On Wire
Documentary Short – The Witness
Film Editing – Slumdog Millionaire
Foreign Language Film – Waltz with Bashir
Makeup – Benjamin Button
Music – Slumdog Millionaire
Music (Song) – “O Saya” Slumdog Millionaire
Short Film (Animated) – Presto
Short Film (Live Action) – New Boy
Sound Editing – The Dark Knight
Sound Mixing – The Dark Knight
Visual Effects – Benjamin Button
Writing (Adapted Screenplay) – Slumdog Millionaire
Writing (Original Screenplay) – Milk
Best Picture – Slumdog Millionaire

 

Now, every year it’s a struggle between who I hope wins the award, and who I think will actually end up winning. I vote based on who I think will be chosen by the Academy, but a couple awards this year, such as actress Anne Hathaway’s brilliant performance in “Rachel Getting Married” (and really “Rachel Getting Married” in general), the best picture category’s lack of nominating “The Dark Knight”, and best original screenplay for “In Bruges” are all awards that I hope will win. 

Come Sunday night, we’ll all find out!