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“A lesson learned”: Uni student lands herself in an overdue book nightmare

<p dir="ltr">A university graduate student received the shock of her academic career when an email arrived in her inbox to inform her she owed her school’s library a whopping $11,900 in overdue book fines. </p> <p dir="ltr">Hannah took to TikTok to share her story, posting a snippet of the horror email, and the news that her library account had amassed a debt of “$11,9000 owed for 119 lost books”. The books had been declared lost, though Hannah was quick to note that she was “still using” each of them, and had every intention of returning them once she was finished with her studies. </p> <p dir="ltr">To drive home the fact that the books were not missing, and instead safely in her scholarly possession, Hannah panned around the various piles of tomes stacked around her home, with a caption reading “the books aren’t lost, I’m just hoarding them until I finish my dissertation.” </p> <p dir="ltr">The email itself explained the books were marked as lost in the library’s system if they exceeded 30 days overdue, and that there was a flat rate of $100 per book in such instances. And according to the library, it was up to each patron to renew their books, and that Hannah “received overdue notices on the following dates prompting you to renew your library books before they are declared lost.”</p> <p dir="ltr">As she explained to <em>The Daily Dot</em>, she had checked out her collection three years prior while she’d been preparing for exams, and confirmed that she had received four reminders to either renew or return the books, but she’d put it off each time. </p> <p dir="ltr">“Then I got the automatic email,” she added, “saying all of the books were marked as lost and my account was charged $100 per book.” </p> <p dir="ltr">Hannah’s woe drew a mixed response from her audience, with some surprised that her library had even let her withdraw that many books in the first place, others unable to wrap their heads around the fact she could have let her situation get so bad, and many quick to defend the librarian, who they declared had only been doing her job. </p> <p dir="ltr">“My library only lets me check out 5 books at a time,” one wrote.</p> <p dir="ltr">“That’s why keeping library books past their due date is considered stealing,” another said, to which Hannah responded to promise her lesson had been learned. </p> <p dir="ltr">“Only 30 days over due??? Damn give a lil more time,” said one, with Hannah informing them that she’d had the books for years by that point. </p> <p dir="ltr">It wasn’t all bad for the budding scholar though, with Hannah explaining in another comment that “it was hunky dory”, as the library had waived her fees as soon as she’d responded to them, and that she’d been allowed to keep all 119 for an additional year. </p> <p dir="ltr">And, as she told another follower, “I’ve never replied to an email faster.”</p> <p dir="ltr"><em>Images: TikTok</em></p>

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Your home, office or uni affects your mood and how you think. How do we know? We looked into people’s brains

<p>Think of a time when you felt vulnerable. Perhaps you were in a hospital corridor, or an exam hall, about to be tested. Now, focus on the building you were in. What if, without you knowing, the design of that space was affecting you?</p> <p>We study <a href="https://psychology.org.au/community/advocacy-social-issues/environment-climate-change-psychology/psychologys-role-in-environmental-issues/what-is-environmental-psychology" target="_blank" rel="noopener">environmental psychology</a>, a growing field of research investigating the relationship between humans and the external world. This includes natural, and human-made environments, such as buildings.</p> <p>Researchers could just ask people what they feel when inside a building – how pleasant or unpleasant they feel, the intensity of that feeling, and how in control they feel.</p> <p>But we use neuroscience to see how the brain is stimulated when inside a building. The idea is for people to one day use that information to design better buildings – classrooms that help us concentrate, or hospital waiting rooms that reduce our anxiety.</p> <p><strong>Why study buildings this way?</strong></p> <p>We spend <a href="https://www.health.vic.gov.au/chief-health-officer/healthy-indoor-environments" target="_blank" rel="noopener">at least 80% of our lives</a> inside buildings. So it is critical we understand whether the buildings we occupy are affecting our brain and body.</p> <p>Buildings – hospitals, schools, offices, homes – are often complex. They can have various contents (fixtures, fittings and objects), levels of comfort (such as the light, sound, and air quality). Other people occupy the space.</p> <p>There are also a range of design characteristics we can notice inside a building. These include colour (wall paint, chair colour), texture (carpet tiles, timber gym floor), geometry (curved walls or straight, angular ones), and scale (proportions of height and width of a room).</p> <p><strong>What did we do?</strong></p> <p>We wanted to see what effect changing some of these characteristics had on the brain and body.</p> <p>So we asked participants to sit in the middle of a virtual-reality (VR) room for 20 minutes.</p> <p>We designed the room with a door (to show height) and chair (to show depth), keeping it empty of other cues that might influence people. We modelled the room using dimensions set by the local building code.</p> <p>Other studies have compared <a href="https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvp.2019.101344" target="_blank" rel="noopener">complex environments</a>, which are more realistic to everyday life. But we chose to use a simple VR room so we could understand the impact of changing one characteristic at a time.</p> <p>To measure brain activity, we used a technique called electroencephalography. This is where we placed electrodes on the scalp to measure electrical activity as brain cells (neurons) send messages to each other.</p> <figure class="align-center zoomable"><em><a href="https://images.theconversation.com/files/485808/original/file-20220921-13-7qqec9.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=45&auto=format&w=1000&fit=clip"><img src="https://images.theconversation.com/files/485808/original/file-20220921-13-7qqec9.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=45&auto=format&w=754&fit=clip" sizes="(min-width: 1466px) 754px, (max-width: 599px) 100vw, (min-width: 600px) 600px, 237px" srcset="https://images.theconversation.com/files/485808/original/file-20220921-13-7qqec9.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=45&auto=format&w=600&h=429&fit=crop&dpr=1 600w, https://images.theconversation.com/files/485808/original/file-20220921-13-7qqec9.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=30&auto=format&w=600&h=429&fit=crop&dpr=2 1200w, https://images.theconversation.com/files/485808/original/file-20220921-13-7qqec9.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=15&auto=format&w=600&h=429&fit=crop&dpr=3 1800w, https://images.theconversation.com/files/485808/original/file-20220921-13-7qqec9.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=45&auto=format&w=754&h=539&fit=crop&dpr=1 754w, https://images.theconversation.com/files/485808/original/file-20220921-13-7qqec9.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=30&auto=format&w=754&h=539&fit=crop&dpr=2 1508w, https://images.theconversation.com/files/485808/original/file-20220921-13-7qqec9.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=15&auto=format&w=754&h=539&fit=crop&dpr=3 2262w" alt="Fitting cap of electrodes" /></a></em><figcaption><em><span class="caption">Participants wore a cap covered in electrodes to detect electrical activity in the brain.</span> <span class="attribution"><span class="source">Donna Squire</span>, <span class="license">Author provided</span></span></em></figcaption></figure> <p>We also monitored the body by measuring heart rate, breathing and sweat response. This could reveal if someone could detect a change to the environment, without being consciously aware of that change.</p> <p>Lastly, we asked participants to report their emotions to understand if this matched their brain and body responses.</p> <p><strong>What did we find?</strong></p> <p>We published a series of studies looking at the impact of room size and colour.</p> <p>Making the room bigger resulted in brain activity usually linked to <a href="https://doi.org/10.1523/ENEURO.0104-22.2022" target="_blank" rel="noopener">attention and cognitive performance</a>. This is the type of brain activity we would see if you were doing a crossword, your homework or focusing on a tricky report you were writing for work.</p> <p>A blue room resulted in brain activity associated with <a href="https://doi.org/10.1111/psyp.14121" target="_blank" rel="noopener">emotional processing</a>. This is the pattern we’d typically see if you were looking at something that you felt positive about, such as a smiling face, or a scenic sunset.</p> <p>Changing the size and colour of a room also changed <a href="https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.26061" target="_blank" rel="noopener">brain network communication</a>. This is when different parts of the brain “talk” to one another. This could be communication between parts of the brain involved in seeing and attention, the type of communication needed when viewing a complex scene, such as scanning a crowded room to spot a friend.</p> <p>The rooms also changed the participants’ autonomic response (their patterns of breathing, heart activity and sweating).</p> <hr /> <figure><iframe title="YouTube video player" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/dPHOQvLOCD4" width="100%" height="400" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen"></iframe><figcaption><em>Your brain and body give away what you feel and think about different rooms, even if you can’t tell us yourself.</em></figcaption></figure> <hr /> <p>Despite these brain and body responses, we found no change in what participants told us about their emotions in each of these different conditions.</p> <p>This suggests the need to shift from just asking people about their emotions to capturing effects they may not be consciously perceive or comprehend.</p> <p><strong>What does this mean for designing buildings?</strong></p> <p>This work tells us that characteristics of buildings have an impact on our brains and our bodies.</p> <p>Our next steps include testing whether a larger room affects brain processes we use in everyday life. These include working memory (which we’d use to remember our shopping list) and emotion recognition (how we recognise what different facial expressions mean).</p> <p>This will enable us to understand if we can design spaces to optimise our cognitive performance.</p> <p>We also want to understand the implications on a wider population, including people who may be experiencing poor mental health, or diagnosed with an underlying condition where the environment may have a larger impact on their response.</p> <p>This will help us to understand if we can change our built environment for better health and performance.</p> <p><strong>Why is this important?</strong></p> <p>Architects have long claimed buildings <a href="https://theconversation.com/build-me-up-how-architecture-can-affect-emotions-22950" target="_blank" rel="noopener">affect our emotion</a>. But there has been a lack of brain-based evidence to back this.</p> <p>We hope our work can help shape building planning and design, to support the brain processes and emotions we might require under different circumstances.<!-- Below is The Conversation's page counter tag. Please DO NOT REMOVE. --><img style="border: none !important; box-shadow: none !important; margin: 0 !important; max-height: 1px !important; max-width: 1px !important; min-height: 1px !important; min-width: 1px !important; opacity: 0 !important; outline: none !important; padding: 0 !important;" src="https://counter.theconversation.com/content/189797/count.gif?distributor=republish-lightbox-basic" alt="The Conversation" width="1" height="1" /><!-- End of code. If you don't see any code above, please get new code from the Advanced tab after you click the republish button. The page counter does not collect any personal data. More info: https://theconversation.com/republishing-guidelines --></p> <p><em><span id="docs-internal-guid-f8f5c00a-7fff-7782-8b2d-8aed485da047">Written by Isaballa Bower. Republished with permission of <a href="https://theconversation.com/your-home-office-or-uni-affects-your-mood-and-how-you-think-how-do-we-know-we-looked-into-peoples-brains-189797" target="_blank" rel="noopener">The Conversation</a>.</span></em></p> <p><em>Image: Getty Images</em></p>

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"She sat on a throne of blood": Uni professor launches another attack on Queen Elizabeth

<p>A controversial university professor has doubled down on her celebration of Queen Elizabeth's death, claiming she "sat on a throne of blood".</p> <p>Uju Anya, a linguistics professor at Pennsylvania's Carnegie Mellon University, <a href="https://oversixty.com.au/news/news/uni-professor-slammed-for-wishing-the-queen-excruciating-pain" target="_blank" rel="noopener">came under fire</a> earlier this week for a series of controversial tweets in which she hoped the Queen was in "excruciating pain" as she died. </p> <p>Now, the Nigerian-American lecturer has reiterated her claims on a podcast, saying, "This was a ruler. The very crown she had on her head signified the fact that she's a monarch was made from plunder. Diamonds. Blood diamonds."</p> <p>"The throne that she was sitting on is a throne of blood... Her very position as a monarch, the palace she lived in... were all paid for by our blood."</p> <p>She stood by her controversial tweets, which she admitted were an "emotional outburst", but said, "I said what I f****** said."</p> <p>"I was triggered by this news. It went deep into pain and trauma for me. Due to my family experience with the rule of this monarch."</p> <p>Anya also shared her thoughts on the Queen's role in the Nigerian Civil War in 1967 by showing support for the turbulent government. </p> <p>She said, "People expected me to be calm or to be... when the person who literally paid money for bombs and guns and military supplies to come and massacre your people is dying, you're not supped to dance."</p> <p>Anya's claims forced her employer to say in a statement, "We do not condone the offensive and objectionable messages posted by Uju Anya today on her social media account."</p> <p>"Free expression is core to the mission of higher education. However, the views she shared absolutely do not represent the values of the institution, nor the standards of discourse we seek to foster," they concluded.</p> <p>Despite thousands of people being up in arms over her comments and demanding an apology, others have jumped to the professor's defence. </p> <p>Over 4,000 people have signed a petition defending Anya, saying her posts on Twitter spoke to personal anguish the scholar still feels about atrocities by the British Empire decades ago that touched her family.</p> <p>Refusing to apologise, Anya once again tweeted, "If anyone expects me to express anything but disdain for the monarch who supervised a government that sponsored the genocide that massacred and displaced half my family and the consequences of which those alive today are still trying to overcome, you can keep wishing upon a star."</p> <p><em>Image credits: Getty Images / Youtube</em></p>

Caring

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Uni professor slammed for wishing the Queen “excruciating pain”

<p>A linguistics professor has come under fire after tweeting that she hoped the Queen's death was "excruciating". </p> <p>Uju Anya, a critical race theory professor from Pennsylvania, posted on Twitter last week, "I heard the chief monarch of a thieving raping genocidal empire is finally dying. May her pain be excruciating."</p> <p>She went on to say, "That wretched woman and her bloodthirsty throne have f***** generations of my ancestors on both sides of the family, and she supervised a government that sponsored the genocide my parents and siblings survived. May she die in agony."</p> <p>Her original tweet was deleted by the social media platform for violating their guidelines. </p> <p>Since going viral and thousands of people calling for Anya to apologise, she doubled down on her stance, saying she has nothing but "disdain" for the monarchy. </p> <p>Again unleashing on Twitter, she wrote, "If anyone expects me to express anything but disdain for the monarch who supervised a government that sponsored the genocide that massacred and displaced half my family and the consequences of which those alive today are still trying to overcome, you can keep wishing upon a star."</p> <p>Her employer, private university Carnegie Mellon, said in a statement, "We do not condone the offensive and objectionable messages posted by Uju Anya today on her social media account."</p> <p>"Free expression is core to the mission of higher education. However, the views she shared absolutely do not represent the values of the institution, nor the standards of discourse we seek to foster," they concluded.</p> <p>Despite thousands of people being up in arms over her comments and demanding an apology, others have jumped to the professor's defence. </p> <p>Over 4,000 people have signed a petition defending Anya, saying her posts on Twitter spoke to personal anguish the Nigerian-born scholar still feels about atrocities by the British Empire decades ago that touched her family.</p> <p>The online petition and accompanying letter claim the professor was well within her right to speak freely over the matters, and had just cause to do so. </p> <p>“As colleagues at other institutions, one thing that sticks out to us is that universities have nothing to gain by calling out individual employees on free speech—especially when they can be seen doing it selectively—as is the case for CMU. Professor Anya’s Twitter clearly states: ‘Views are mine,’” the letter reads in part.</p> <p>“Yet, her institution took up the charge to admonish a Black woman professor, calling her response to her lived experiences of the real and tangible impacts of colonialism and white supremacy, ‘offensive and objectionable.’ This is unacceptable and dehumanising."</p> <p>Since the passing of Queen Elizabeth, many have mourned the loss of the monarch, as she was revered as a leader of grace, longevity and resilience.</p> <p>However, her death also has brought to the surface lingering bitterness in parts of Africa, Asia and the Caribbean, according to reports by <a href="https://apnews.com/article/king-charles-iii-africa-caribbean-slavery-50f9175b541f307adb2e494fcccc80f5" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Associated Press</a>. </p> <p><em>Image credits: Getty Images / Carnegie Mellon University</em></p>

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"Stealthing" officially criminalised in the ACT.

<p>Stealthing, the non-consensual removal of a condom during sex, entered the cultural lexicon relatively recently but damaging consequences for victims have been prevalent for years.</p> <p>Canberra Liberal leader Elizabeth Lee introduced new legislation on Sunday to amend current consent provisions under the crimes act. The changes explicitly state that a person’s consent is negated if the other person intentionally misrepresents using a condom.</p> <p>The legislation was passed unanimously – which in the current global climate for women’s safety is hugely welcomed fact.</p> <p>The new legislation means that any “intentional fraudulent representation” about the use of a condom during sex will now be recognised as a crime.</p> <p>Sparked by an ongoing stealthing case in the Victorian courts, Ms. Lee strove to secure the bill in order to avoid similar, drawn-out legal processes.</p> <p>“We cannot wait for cases to come before the courts before stealthing is specifically outlawed”, she said.</p> <p>“We need to act proactively and send a clear message to community that his behaviour in unacceptable, and crime.”</p> <p>Lee acknowledges that having concrete laws regarding consent issues such a stealthing is a positive start, but that the issue runs deeper.</p> <p>“There is a reluctance to talk about consent openly and frankly. This needs to change, with effort from all sectors – community organisations, policymakers, law makers, law enforcement, educators.”</p> <p>Teach Us Consent, a platform lobbying for and providing holistic consent and sexual education created by Chanel Contos, shared anecdotal evidence of the physical and psychological impact of stealthing on victims.</p> <p>One such experience submitted to Teach Us Consent stated: "He gave me HPV which has associated impacts leading me to be put through four years of specialist gynaecologist visits costing 100s of dollars and significantly impacting mentally, physically and emotionally.”</p> <p>This anecdote is sadly not an anomaly.</p> <p>A Monash University study of more than 2,000 people in 2018 found that, of those surveyed, one in three women who'd had sex with men had been stealthed.</p>

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"I went back to uni at 71"

<p><em><strong>Now 84-years of age with three books under her belt, this is Doreen Wendt-Weir’s story about her shy young self who didn't think studying was an option, and how she grew into a woman who plucked up the courage to go to university at 71-years-old.&nbsp;</strong></em></p><p>I have done this, not for myself, if this can be understood, but for that timid little person that I once was… that shy young girl who was so eager to please, so hungry to meet approval; whose vision was so narrow, and who was not endowed with, nor did she develop, any great degree of courage.</p><p>Terribly meek, often wary, she hardly spoke to any adults who might have visited their dairy farm, but viewed them silently from behind her father’s trouser-leg, her chubby arms encircling his lower limb, eyes almost lost behind the deep, dark fringe that fell into the obligatory “basin-cut” of those depression years. The feet were always bare and brown; the handed-down dress was mostly too long or too short, and sometimes a cotton bloomer leg, elastic broken, would dangle below the hem-line.</p><p>She felt secure enough, there was no doubt. Sometimes her father’s fingers touched her small shoulder as he engaged in conversation with a friendly caller, but she was not included in any way in the exchange. She was seen and not heard. However, her father was there. Just to be able to feel his sturdy thigh through the dungaree was a great comfort; to hear his well-modulated, though still quite “country” voice meant all was well with the world; there was no need to feel afraid of anything… not snakes, or angry bulls; vicious dogs or boogie men. Her sister, older by two years, was “Mummy’s little helper”. Named Joan, this fair-haired sibling set the table, folded the clothes and helped her mother make the beds. She had a wide, attractive smile and an easy way about her. Joan was indeed a lovely girl, her mother always said.</p><p>It was to her father that the younger, dark-haired sister gravitated. When he was not planting corn, or ring-barking, or checking the dry paddock, but when he was herding the cows for milking, or feeding the pigs, or even when he was knocking the innards out of the plates from old car batteries, so that the remaining lead frame could be melted down to form an ingot of saleable metal, she would be there with him, mostly silent, but intently observing, always noticing the slightest detail of what was being done. Not many words passed between them. He was not a teacher, but he included her in his work.</p><p>“Pass me that jam tin, Muffet,” he would say as he prepared, on the forge, an iron ladle filled with molten lead. “Out of the way now…” as the liquid lead ran into the old tin, to be followed by another, and another. Then the glistening row of tins would be lowered, one by one, held fast by huge metal tongs, into the old galvanised bath tub, half filled with precious water. Here they would sizzle and steam angrily until all the heat had gone from them. When they were cold and set and hard, and he had the time, her father would cut the tin away.</p><p>“Hand me the snips now,” he would say to her… leaving a block of solid lead that would be sold to a metal merchant next time they were in the city.</p><p>They had a tennis court, which he had made himself out of ant bed. It was their only luxury, and once or twice a year, a group of friends would gather to have a few serious games. But first, the court must be prepared, which meant the nutgrass had to be removed, the holes filled in with more ant bed, the whole thing rolled with his homemade roller, and the white lines marked where they should be. The little girl was sent to get some coarse salt from her mother’s adequate pantry. Carrying the tin of salt, she would follow her father around the court as he prised the nutgrass gently, so gently as he dug deeper to retrieve all the nuts that clung to the earth. He put the despised grass into a wooden box, as she proffered him the coarse salt. Taking a handful, he funnelled his fist to allow the dry salt to run into the hole thus made.</p><p>“This’ll fix that old nut grass, Muffet,” he would say as he smoothed over the ant bed.</p><p>I suppose you could say that she actually did learn a lot. She finally was able to carve an aeroplane propeller out of a small length of pine, using an old kitchen knife. Attaching the propeller to a slender wand of wood was another acquired art. She knew better than to forget about the washers that were needed to get it to spin in the wind as merrily as she hoped it would. At aged four, she was given her very own cow to milk. Adelaide was black, with a white star on her forehead, and could be relied upon not to kick the heavy bucket from between the little knees that endeavoured to hold it firm. Getting the milk to flow seemed to come naturally to a small country girl. After all, she had watched her parents for long enough as their capable hands induced the milk down with sweeping, competent movements. In only a few years, in a good season, she would be milking a dozen or so cows each morning, before breakfast and the three-mile walk to school. Husking corn, feeding pigs and poddy-calves were all fine things to know about, but this knowledge was not much help when she finally went to school in the city, and did not know what ‘interval’ was when the school went on an excursion to the local picture theatre, thereby causing much merriment and derision.</p><p>From a one teacher, one roomed school of eighteen pupils, she was thrust into a class of some thirty or more children. Although she knew about the geography befitting a senior student, and could recite poems from the School Readers several classes above hers, she had no idea what mental arithmetic was, let alone how it was done! So she was put in the front seat with the dunces, having one on either side of her. She became quite used to the order, “Hands on heads!” when the answer was presumed to be known, and to the further “Answers down!” when the final number was written on the slate. It took a couple of months, but one day, every one of her answers was correct. When her hand shot up first, a very surprised, kindly teacher perused her results. And gently and quietly enquired had she copied them from someone else? But there was nobody in her near vicinity that had arrived at even a few correct answers. Her upwardly mobile journey had begun.</p><p>The subject of English was a firm favourite with this young person, and Parsing and Analysis was a complete revelation! The old country habits of saying “I done,” and “I seen,” were soon discarded, Composition became an eagerly awaited assignment, and Latin Roots seemed to take precedence over all. The school nurse who visited once a year discovered the serious short-sightedness that had probably plagued her all her life, and suddenly, life and learning became easy!</p><p>World War II had been raging in Europe for several years by the time our student went to High School, but it was the fall of Singapore that caused the most chaos in the lives of school-goers. Slit trenches were mandatory, air-raid alerts with wailing sirens became feared and schools were closed altogether for some time. She was one of the lucky ones. Being considered a bright student, she was sent to a country boarding school to continue her education. Many fellow students simply ended their schooling thus, and sought jobs, being part of the war effort.&nbsp;</p><p>Finally back home, with a good Grade Ten pass and an Extension Scholarship under her belt, it was, nonetheless, a foregone conclusion that she would enter the workforce. The advance of the Japanese through the Pacific, rapid and terrifying, meant the end of her education. Not the end of her learning, but the finish of schooling.</p><p>After spending two years establishing and running an army library for technical manuals, this young person went on to a nursing career, marriage and four children.&nbsp;</p><p>Finally, alone, as the elderly person that I have become, I seem to have reviewed my life backwards, ending with that little girl who forever hugged her father’s leg, too shy by far to come forward.</p><p>At 71, I considered that I deserved to have a university education, to exercise my active brain. I had earned the right, at least, to discover what academia was all about. I had learned so many things in life; I should be able to cope with this next adventure. And I did.</p><p>I worked hard at my assignments, gaining a grade point average of six out of seven. I obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree, going on to achieve an Honours degree a year later.</p><p>This accomplishment has not only been a help in my writing career; it has helped me to understand myself, to realise that I am a capable, intelligent human being who has much to offer...a far cry perhaps from the shy little girl who grew up on a dairy farm on the Logan.</p><p><strong>Doreen’s tips on studying as a senior</strong></p><ul><li>When taking notes, have plenty of white space.</li><li>Always believe that you can do it!</li><li>Remember, even the young ones face hurdles.</li><li>Just keep pushing your boundaries.</li><li>Instead of saying “Why?” it is oft times better to say '”Why not?”</li></ul><p>Doreen has written three books – <a href="http://www.sexinyourseventies.com/content/knee-deep-logan-village-paperback" target="_blank">Knee Deep in Logan Village</a>; <a href="http://www.sexinyourseventies.com/content/barefoot-logan-village" target="_blank">Barefoot in Logan Village</a> and <a href="http://www.sexinyourseventies.com/content/sex-your-seventies-0">Sex in Your Seventies</a>. To read more about Doreen, visit her <a href="http://www.sexinyourseventies.com" target="_blank">website</a>.<a href="http://www.sexinyourseventies.com"><br></a></p><p><em><strong><a href="https://www.open2study.com" target="_blank">Click here</a>&nbsp;</strong>to read about the wide range of FREE courses offered by&nbsp;<strong><a href="https://www.open2study.com" target="_blank">Open2Study</a></strong>.</em>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>

Mind

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"I went back to uni at 71"

<p><em><strong>Now 84-years of age with three books under her belt, this is Doreen Wendt-Weir’s story about her shy young self who didn't think studying was an option, and how she grew into a woman who plucked up the courage to go to university at 71-years-old.&nbsp;</strong></em></p><p>I have done this, not for myself, if this can be understood, but for that timid little person that I once was… that shy young girl who was so eager to please, so hungry to meet approval; whose vision was so narrow, and who was not endowed with, nor did she develop, any great degree of courage.</p><p>Terribly meek, often wary, she hardly spoke to any adults who might have visited their dairy farm, but viewed them silently from behind her father’s trouser-leg, her chubby arms encircling his lower limb, eyes almost lost behind the deep, dark fringe that fell into the obligatory “basin-cut” of those depression years. The feet were always bare and brown; the handed-down dress was mostly too long or too short, and sometimes a cotton bloomer leg, elastic broken, would dangle below the hem-line.</p><p>She felt secure enough, there was no doubt. Sometimes her father’s fingers touched her small shoulder as he engaged in conversation with a friendly caller, but she was not included in any way in the exchange. She was seen and not heard. However, her father was there. Just to be able to feel his sturdy thigh through the dungaree was a great comfort; to hear his well-modulated, though still quite “country” voice meant all was well with the world; there was no need to feel afraid of anything… not snakes, or angry bulls; vicious dogs or boogie men. Her sister, older by two years, was “Mummy’s little helper”. Named Joan, this fair-haired sibling set the table, folded the clothes and helped her mother make the beds. She had a wide, attractive smile and an easy way about her. Joan was indeed a lovely girl, her mother always said.</p><p>It was to her father that the younger, dark-haired sister gravitated. When he was not planting corn, or ring-barking, or checking the dry paddock, but when he was herding the cows for milking, or feeding the pigs, or even when he was knocking the innards out of the plates from old car batteries, so that the remaining lead frame could be melted down to form an ingot of saleable metal, she would be there with him, mostly silent, but intently observing, always noticing the slightest detail of what was being done. Not many words passed between them. He was not a teacher, but he included her in his work.</p><p>“Pass me that jam tin, Muffet,” he would say as he prepared, on the forge, an iron ladle filled with molten lead. “Out of the way now…” as the liquid lead ran into the old tin, to be followed by another, and another. Then the glistening row of tins would be lowered, one by one, held fast by huge metal tongs, into the old galvanised bath tub, half filled with precious water. Here they would sizzle and steam angrily until all the heat had gone from them. When they were cold and set and hard, and he had the time, her father would cut the tin away.</p><p>“Hand me the snips now,” he would say to her… leaving a block of solid lead that would be sold to a metal merchant next time they were in the city.</p><p>They had a tennis court, which he had made himself out of ant bed. It was their only luxury, and once or twice a year, a group of friends would gather to have a few serious games. But first, the court must be prepared, which meant the nutgrass had to be removed, the holes filled in with more ant bed, the whole thing rolled with his homemade roller, and the white lines marked where they should be. The little girl was sent to get some coarse salt from her mother’s adequate pantry. Carrying the tin of salt, she would follow her father around the court as he prised the nutgrass gently, so gently as he dug deeper to retrieve all the nuts that clung to the earth. He put the despised grass into a wooden box, as she proffered him the coarse salt. Taking a handful, he funnelled his fist to allow the dry salt to run into the hole thus made.</p><p>“This’ll fix that old nut grass, Muffet,” he would say as he smoothed over the ant bed.</p><p>I suppose you could say that she actually did learn a lot. She finally was able to carve an aeroplane propeller out of a small length of pine, using an old kitchen knife. Attaching the propeller to a slender wand of wood was another acquired art. She knew better than to forget about the washers that were needed to get it to spin in the wind as merrily as she hoped it would. At aged four, she was given her very own cow to milk. Adelaide was black, with a white star on her forehead, and could be relied upon not to kick the heavy bucket from between the little knees that endeavoured to hold it firm. Getting the milk to flow seemed to come naturally to a small country girl. After all, she had watched her parents for long enough as their capable hands induced the milk down with sweeping, competent movements. In only a few years, in a good season, she would be milking a dozen or so cows each morning, before breakfast and the three-mile walk to school. Husking corn, feeding pigs and poddy-calves were all fine things to know about, but this knowledge was not much help when she finally went to school in the city, and did not know what ‘interval’ was when the school went on an excursion to the local picture theatre, thereby causing much merriment and derision.</p><p>From a one teacher, one roomed school of eighteen pupils, she was thrust into a class of some thirty or more children. Although she knew about the geography befitting a senior student, and could recite poems from the School Readers several classes above hers, she had no idea what mental arithmetic was, let alone how it was done! So she was put in the front seat with the dunces, having one on either side of her. She became quite used to the order, “Hands on heads!” when the answer was presumed to be known, and to the further “Answers down!” when the final number was written on the slate. It took a couple of months, but one day, every one of her answers was correct. When her hand shot up first, a very surprised, kindly teacher perused her results. And gently and quietly enquired had she copied them from someone else? But there was nobody in her near vicinity that had arrived at even a few correct answers. Her upwardly mobile journey had begun.</p><p>The subject of English was a firm favourite with this young person, and Parsing and Analysis was a complete revelation! The old country habits of saying “I done,” and “I seen,” were soon discarded, Composition became an eagerly awaited assignment, and Latin Roots seemed to take precedence over all. The school nurse who visited once a year discovered the serious short-sightedness that had probably plagued her all her life, and suddenly, life and learning became easy!</p><p>World War II had been raging in Europe for several years by the time our student went to High School, but it was the fall of Singapore that caused the most chaos in the lives of school-goers. Slit trenches were mandatory, air-raid alerts with wailing sirens became feared and schools were closed altogether for some time. She was one of the lucky ones. Being considered a bright student, she was sent to a country boarding school to continue her education. Many fellow students simply ended their schooling thus, and sought jobs, being part of the war effort.&nbsp;</p><p>Finally back home, with a good Grade Ten pass and an Extension Scholarship under her belt, it was, nonetheless, a foregone conclusion that she would enter the workforce. The advance of the Japanese through the Pacific, rapid and terrifying, meant the end of her education. Not the end of her learning, but the finish of schooling.</p><p>After spending two years establishing and running an army library for technical manuals, this young person went on to a nursing career, marriage and four children.&nbsp;</p><p>Finally, alone, as the elderly person that I have become, I seem to have reviewed my life backwards, ending with that little girl who forever hugged her father’s leg, too shy by far to come forward.</p><p>At 71, I considered that I deserved to have a university education, to exercise my active brain. I had earned the right, at least, to discover what academia was all about. I had learned so many things in life; I should be able to cope with this next adventure. And I did.</p><p>I worked hard at my assignments, gaining a grade point average of six out of seven. I obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree, going on to achieve an Honours degree a year later.</p><p>This accomplishment has not only been a help in my writing career; it has helped me to understand myself, to realise that I am a capable, intelligent human being who has much to offer...a far cry perhaps from the shy little girl who grew up on a dairy farm on the Logan.</p><p><strong>Doreen’s tips on studying as a senior</strong></p><ul><li>When taking notes, have plenty of white space.</li><li>Always believe that you can do it!</li><li>Remember, even the young ones face hurdles.</li><li>Just keep pushing your boundaries.</li><li>Instead of saying “Why?” it is oft times better to say '”Why not?”</li></ul><p>Doreen has written three books – <a href="http://www.sexinyourseventies.com/content/knee-deep-logan-village-paperback" target="_blank">Knee Deep in Logan Village</a>; <a href="http://www.sexinyourseventies.com/content/barefoot-logan-village" target="_blank">Barefoot in Logan Village</a> and <a href="http://www.sexinyourseventies.com/content/sex-your-seventies-0">Sex in Your Seventies</a>. To read more about Doreen, visit her <a href="http://www.sexinyourseventies.com" target="_blank">website</a>.<a href="http://www.sexinyourseventies.com"><br></a></p><p><em><strong><a href="https://www.open2study.com" target="_blank">Click here</a>&nbsp;</strong>to read about the wide range of FREE courses offered by&nbsp;<strong><a href="https://www.open2study.com" target="_blank">Open2Study</a></strong>.</em>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>

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