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AgSci Ambassadors

New AgSci Ambassadors ready to help!

AgSci Ambassadors in front of Manndible 4_11_web

Last Thursday, AgSci Ambassadors held their first event since recruiting nine new members–a pre-enroll help session for current Agricultural Sciences students in Mann Lobby. This week the group of 14 ambassadors will call new admitted students, answering questions and assisting with visit plans for Cornell Days.

Email ambassadors to learn more!

Orientation 2010

We’re growing by leaps and bounds!  On August 23, the AgSci Ambassadors welcomed 21 new freshman, 5 transfers, and 1 Australian exchange student to the major.  Our new students got to know each other by playing some creative icebreaker games.  Check out the video!

After a good dose of laughter, faculty advisors joined the group for lunch and a game of faculty-student bingo.  To wrap up the event, the Ambassadors walked the new students through the inner workings of the major, from course enrollment to the internship requirement.

Toilet Paper Fashion Show

Toilet Paper Fashion Show

So, they feed you well here...

So, they feed you well here...

Are you a faculty member who has children?

Are you a faculty member who has children?

New Students: Useful Websites & Resources

Hello incoming Ag Sciences students,

Last year AgSci Ambassador Adrienne Masler compiled a list of useful links and sites to help you feel more comfortable with the sea of new information. We are re-publishing this blog post to help with all those questions.

See you soon–Kari Richards, Agricultural Sciences Coordinator
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A quick guide to useful CU sites, thanks to the Ambassadors at today’s orientation.

CALS website: find out about the college, CALS distribution requirements, opportunities in research and internships, the Career Development Office, and more. Link to the Registrar and DUST.

AgSci website: information specific to the major, such as classes, curricula, internships, and more. Link to the blog.

AgSci major and internship blogs: Current events, useful information (like this post!), and reports from student intern bloggers.

Student Center: Enroll in or drop classes, view grades (at the end of the semester), update your contact info, check the amount due on your bursar bill, and much more. Quick link: type “jtf.cornell.edu” in your browser.

DUST: view enrollment info, find classes to fulfill distribution requirements, view transcript, track progress toward degree fulfillment, and more.

Blackboard: used in many courses to distribute course info, submit papers, and much more. You can search for your classes ahead of time, but professors will tell you if you need to sign up for their class on Blackboard.

Ag Sciences on Facebook: Find club events and other kids in the major!

CUinfo: find course descriptions and rosters, event calendars, search for clubs/activities/professors, find dozens of useful links… as Will said today, it’s kind of like Google for Cornell.

SAO: Student Activities Office. Search for clubs to join by interest or alphabetically. Quick link: type “sao.cornell.edu” into your browser. Also check out the Club Fest this Sunday in Barton Hall – details should be in the orientation schedule.

CU Dining: Figure out where to eat and how to pay for it. Quick link: type “dining.cornell.edu” into your browser.

Schedulizer: Helps you organize your schedule when selecting classes for the next semester. Shows you all possible schedules based on your course selections. Not affiliated with Cornell but generally accurate and easy to use.

Still have questions? The Ambassadors are here to help! Email us at agsciambassadors@cornell.edu or find anyone you recognize in class or on campus. Kari (ksu2), Toni (ad97), and the other advisors are also great resources.

Have something else to add? Please do – become a blogger (ask Kari) or contact me.

Take care,
Adrienne (amm428)

Getting to know Uppsala

January 14, P1140115Hej (that is Hello in Swedish) I have been here for three full days now and I still cannot believe I am really here however I am reminded anytime I look around.  Everything is different.  The hardest thing for me has been getting around the language.  Everyone speaks the national language which is Swedish but most (especially the younger generations) know english as well.  It is new for me to have to get along in these social situations but I feel that I am starting to get the hang of it after getting to know a few swedes.

The weather is not too favorable at all.  It has been in teens (in Fahrenheit)just about everyday and it is a cold that just shoots right through you.  I am very thankful that it is not windy as well.  Since there is little wind here, I believe the winters of upstate New York are a bit worse.  The frigid temperatures in combination with the lack of wind results in a little ice crystal lattice that covers everything.  You see it on the leaves of this plant.  The people of Sweden are an interesting bunch.  I was told by a Swede that they are very reserved.  That they are outgoing only when the time is right (like when they are celebrating and consuming alcohol).  Other than those times, they look with disfavor open those that try to interact with others.  I feel that I will often get this but it okay because I am American and therefore it is acceptable that I am different.  The older generations are the most reserved and are traditional in this fashion.  Out of all the Swedes, the elders know the least English.

They are very “green” here as I think most of Europe is.  I saw reusable towel roll in the public bathroom of the airport in Copenhagen and it really grossed me out.  Bikes are a very popular mode of transportation.  I got one myself.  I am really proud of it.P1140128 It is in fairly good condition for being made in 1992!  I bought it for 1000 krona (about $150) which, believe it or not is a good deal because bikes are in such a high demand.  I have two locks for the thing because they are often stolen.  Do not be surprised if a later post describes just this (hope not). That brings me to another point that I have had a hard time getting used to- the currency.  The Swedish krona is worth about a seventh of the value of a dollar so something simple like lunch could easily cost 100 kr.  and when they say this, at first I think they must be crazy but then again I remember- I am not in the states.

Another thing about swedes- they love their gummies.  Any shop will have a wide selection of gummy candies and I believe this is where they got the “swedish fish” from.  However when I asked my Swedish friend, Per,  about their national fish-candy, he thought I was crazy.  He has never heard of the swedish fish candies.  I have had many conversations with Per about this and other facets of American and Swedish culture.  Also, very interesting, Per along with all other Swedes have never heard of a “swedish massage”.  He has no idea where that came from nor has he ever heard the term before I told him.  For swedes, he says, Thai is the exotic massage to get.  Swedes also love Thai food.

So far this week I have been staying at a hostile in Uppsala because my housing contract does not start until Monday.  I have been staying in a coed dorm room and I thought that it would be difficult because I would be staying in the same room with so many others but it is not so bad.  I worried about my stuff maybe being stolen but, in general, you will not have to worry about that in Uppsala.

Here are a few pictures of my hostile. cozy. P1140131 P1140129P1110002 This weekend I will be staying at my “buddies” place that she offered as a cheaper place to stay. The program at SLU set me up with a current student at the university to help me get along and my buddy, Frida, has been a lot of help for me.

There is so much more I could write but I am quite tired; the jet-lag is done but just from being in the cold walking and biking. btw- biking in this cold is ridiculous.  I do not know how they do it.  Also, I have been having some crazy dreams.  I don’t know why, maybe the water-which is really good, but I dreamed one night that I got to know Carl Linneaus really well and he was a boy genius in his younger thirties.  For those of you that do not know Carl Linneaus is a famous botanist of the 18th century and he is from Uppsala.  There is something of a shrine here for him with garden that I will have to check out in the spring when it is open.

A few of my photos of my trip I posted here but if you really want to see all of them then friend me (if you haven’t already) on facebook.  They will all be up there.  I could always use more friends.

An AgSci Guy Goes to Sweden

Hi all, This is the first post of my blog for my study abroad experience. For those of you that do not know me, my name is Daniel Demeree and I am a junior at Cornell and ambassador of the Agricultural Sciences major. I have decided to study in Sweden this spring semester of 2010 at the Swedish University of the Agricultural Sciences (SLU).

I decided to study abroad because it is an experience that I could not pass up. I am with the CALS Exchange program and they have made the whole process very easy for me. The idea of going to a foreign culture and country is really exciting to me. I will be leaving for Sweden in just two days on January 10 and I am getting feverish thinking about what I am about to undertake. I have to control my emotions in the airport, or people might think wrongly of me. I am leaving out of Newark Int’l, after all. I will be taking four ag science courses at SLU. They are ag cropping systems, animal nutrition, production and utilization of forages, and tropical livestock systems (there is irony here).

These courses will take care of some requirements for the major at Cornell. I did not decide to study abroad for the academics involved. After all, Cornell is already a world class education. The main reason why I wanted to study abroad is that I wanted to experience a foreign culture. I do not have much to say in this first post seems how I have not left the home farm yet. I hope to be able to post once a week throughout the semester and use this blog to journal my experience.

This is my first blog and I do not know what kind of learning curve is involved, so bear with me. I hope to get creative with it.  I have added the theme song to students of the town in Sweden I am headed to- Uppsala. It is pretty catchy, I think you will enjoy (youtube vid). Kirsti on being a student in Uppsala, Sweden Kari- you will love it. Also, feel free to comment and make this blog a two-way street.

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