Hello everyone! Sorry I haven't written for a while but it's all
been extraordinarily busy recently! As this blog aims to demonstrate what it is like to study Physics at university, this seemed like a fairly obvious topic to begin with. However, seeing as this weekend marks International Women's Day I felt I ought to say a little on what it's like to study Physics as a female. In a nutshell, it's getting better. More and more girls are feeling able to go away and study Physics at whatever level they want to. More high profile science is being done by women. People are gradually accepting that females can study Physics and can be as good at it. I mean, you still come across some idiots who think that if you are studying Physics you are either a) deluded about being good at a 'male' subject or b) just looking for a husband. Thank goodness times are moving ahead and we are beginning to reach a stage where a woman can feel confident about entering a male dominated subject. International Women's Day is such a brilliant way to celebrate the many, diverse achievements of women from across the world, but also to highlight areas in which progress still needs to be made in terms of gender equality. However, that's enough for now. I will be doing a proper blog post about being a woman in Physics in the next few weeks so watch this space!
Anyway... what is it like doing a Physics
degree? Firstly: BUSY! During your degree you really do learn what being busy really
means. You will probably have one of the highest number of contact
hours of any subject (around 20 hours a week). That doesn't sound too bad you
think? I mean school has about 25 hours a week? The difference is in the amount
of work you have to do outside of the the teaching hours, and how much more
intense the teaching really is. There will be days when you really start to
resent your friends on other degree programmes, who might just about manage to
get in for 5 hours teaching time per week. Reading they say, we have to do lots of
reading. And they're right, they do work hard too. But you know the unfair bit?
The physicist also has to read - if they have time that is! As well as
the aforementioned contact hours (lectures, lab sessions, tutorials and
workshops), each week there are multiple problems to complete and hand in, each
of which will probably take hours to do. Add in a couple of lab reports a term,
some computing projects and some poster presentations (which will inevitably
all be due in at the same time) and you already have a very busy timetable.
Then add the reading that we're meant to do (otherwise you'll have no
idea what is going on in the course) and there are suddenly no spare hours in
the day.
Credit goes to Gary Larson, creator of The Far Side cartoon series. |
However this in turn has its own benefits.
One way of looking at it? You're getting much better value for your tuition
fees. And university really is all about hard work and learning at the end of
the day. Physics is HARD, there are no two ways about it. But there are rewards
in the end. At the same time you also do learn to make the most of the time you
have. You find you can actually fit an awful lot into the day and still have
time to join societies, go out, make friends and enjoy your time. Even if it
means having occasional frantic panics about work. It's still worth it. For example, as well as my degree I enjoy music, including singing in my
college choir. I enjoy swimming, yoga and archery. I participate in folk dance,
including a recent weekend trip to Edinburgh
for IVFDF - the Inter Varsity Folk Dance Festival which was great. This is as well as being involved with many other societies and activities; and spending time with friends. So despite all the busyness there's a lot
else to get involved with and a lot of fun to have. I mean, university is about
trying new things too. It's just a case of learning how to use your time.
Secondly: Studying Physics at university level is nothing like studying it at school. Gone are the days of A level Physics where it was all about passing exams. Passing those exams are also a distant memory - no longer are questions short, no longer does the paper lead you towards the answer they want and memories of formula booklets are now fading fast. Exams are now 3 hours long but have far fewer questions. It is no longer a memory test; instead it is a test of your understanding of the actual Physics. Instead of being given some variables that you just plug into a formula you may or may not need to remember you are expected to derive different formula. You need to use MATHS to just get towards a solution to the problem in terms of many variables before you even think about maybe plugging real numbers in. And of course your answer might not have much to do with real life at the end of it anyway. I guess that is one of the biggest differences - Physics at university is all about the maths. If you are considering a Physics degree make sure you a) actually enjoy maths just for the pure maths-y-ness of it and b) are pretty good at it. You will suddenly discover all the varied and wonderful uses for all those things you learnt at A level about which we all said "But yeah, when am I going to have to use this in real life?". I'll tell you where - in a lecture where you write several long pages of notes but never write a single word, except maybe the title. Sometimes not even then. Expect to be pretty much perpetually confused, desperately hoping everyone else is as confused as you are. Sometimes it's worse when you actually think you understand it, you can't help feeling you must have missed the point. Not even joking, questions sometimes look like this when you're feeling lost: "A roof is sloped at 42.7 degrees. A ball is dropped from a height of 1.63m. Remembering the assumption that we are working in just 3 dimensions; when an orange lorry drives past at 99.9% of the speed of light, what is the probability that a pineapple will be produced when the system is observed for the second time? Can we tell what colour it will be?"
However it's not all that bad. Lots of the degree is confusing and will make you tear your hair out but equally it will fascinate you too. You get to break out of the limitations of the physics you learn at school and learn about some really cool stuff. And feel pretty darn smart and smug when you get to quote Physics at other people. To put it briefly - it is all worth it. Yes you spend a lot of time wondering what is going on, and wondering whether you're actually going a little bit mad or whether maybe someone is playing a massive joke on you and this stuff really is just made up. But then there are moments like working out a particularly nasty solution to a complicated integral and finding that suddenly the solution you are meant to get out "just falls out so beautifully and neatly and IT JUST IS SO BEAUTIFUL". Or getting more than a little excited about how particularly stunning your graph turned out to be. (Yes. I get excited about graphs.) Or the moment when your code works so you run through your house proclaiming "IT WORKS. AND IT IS THE MOST MAGNIFICENT THING I HAVE EVER CREATED". These are all the moments that make it worthwhile - despite the fact that you may look a little bit like a total weirdo. Oh well - weird is good. At least it's fun!
Credit to the creator at twisteddoodles.com |
So yes, as with any degree Physics has it's ups and downs. There are plenty of boring bits (at least to you - you have to try and remember that someone somewhere thinks this is the most fascinating subject of all) but they are made worth it by the bits where everything suddenly makes sense and you finally feel like you're on top of everything. It's a bit like life really. So is it worth it? Why yes, of course!
What about you? Are you interested in pursuing Physics as a degree? Are you like me currently in the middle of it all? Or have you finished? Has your opinion changed at all? Feel free to ask any questions or add your own thoughts below!
You just made me remember my years at university trying to derive formulas and the excitement of finding solutions or about a chart or programme you created, totally true! Also the great times with my mates, staying till late studying in the library but also having lots of fun... Really miss those times, especially with my friends... University is definitely one of the best times of your life! Thanks Helen!
ReplyDeleteOh I'm glad you had fun reading this and that looking back you remember your university days with fondness! I think that's what I keep having to remember when I'm stuck in the middle of loads of work - on balance university is much more fun than stressful!
ReplyDeleteSuch a fun post and very apt at this time of year when Year 13s are anticipating where they're going next. I sent it to my son's school!
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