you are going for a graduation ceremony... write a diary entery
Answers
Explanation:
please mark me as a brainliest.
Explanation:
It’s funny because I don’t remember the first day of junior year at all. I mean I can remember where I was living, what classes I had etc. but nothing about the actual day stands out in my mind. When it comes to the first day of senior year however, I see it as a memory that will stick semi-permanently in my mind. Facing the inevitable “last first day of school” was as unpleasant as I thought it would be. Walking down Renshaw Ave. toward my first class I realized that seventeen years of schooling has come down to this: my senior year in college. This is the year when I’m supposed to figure everything out and be excited about entering into the real world. Why is it then, that when I look at the scared and timid freshmen, I want nothing more than to be in their shoes? Maybe it’s the insane amount of fun I’ve had so far at Linfield getting involved with Residence Life, Linfield Activities Board, Math Club, study abroad, trips to the beach, movie nights…..and the list goes on. It might also be related to the tight-knit community that surrounds every student at Linfield. I feel so welcomed and safe here on campus that I’m slightly nervous to leave my Linfield support system that I’ve so carefully crafted during the past three years.
I can tell already that a partial theme of this year is going to be transitions/changes. This became evident to me at 8 a.m. when I walked into “my classroom” on my very first day of student teaching. Luckily the students would not start class for another week, so I had a chance to wrap my head around my new role in the classroom: student teacher Ms. Foltz. My student teaching experience has also led to my transition out of the Linfield academic community. During part-time student teaching I will only be taking math class and an education class at Linfield. This is very strange considering most other semesters I find myself with 4-5 classes and hours spent on campus. Since I’m no longer enrolled in any LC classes the number of peers that I interact with on a daily basis has diminished significantly. I can already tell that this “isolation” will be difficult for me and I worry a bit about full-time student teaching when I won’t have any Linfield classes at all