It seems this semester I got into the groove of school more easily than I have in the past. I know what is expected, have become mostly desensitized to the workload and have been hopped up on caffeine for the past six weeks (partially because I've had so many things going on in my personal life, as well as my school life). Time management has been a critical skill to have. Thankfully, after this weekend (family outings!) and next weekend (celebrating my boyfriend and I's anniversary!) I will have one weekend where I don't have anything going on for the first time in almost three months. Hooray!
Anyways, so the biggest problem I've had this semester is dealing with one class: Data Analysis. First, we had to observe 50-75 people on their cell phones. That was easy enough to do around campus. But then I had to deal with Microsoft Access, which I believe to be Satan's high tech incarnation. And to those of you who read the previous statement who think that is a gross exaggeration have clearly never had to deal with that ridiculous program! So I entered my cell phone data, but because the class is divided into qualitative and quantitative sections, and I chose quantitative, I had to input my professor's data (I really have to question my sanity - I'm paying someone to teach me how to do all of this, but I'm also paying to do someone else work for them. There is zero logic to this, except to get to the point where I have grad students as minions, too.) into Access then put it into SPSS. Access began deleting information in my fields. Of course, it would input into SPSS wrong. I must have read my prof's data what feels like ten million times before I got it right (weeks later, I'm still finding mistakes!).
To make matters worse, SPSS is not the easiest program in the world to figure out, especially when you've never used something like that before. And certain mathematical things that this program does are not named the same as the equation. On the bright side, I can officially upload data into SPSS in my sleep since I've done it so many times. I've also run the statistics and histograms so many times I know exactly where to go. The bar charts and stem-and-leaf plots are getting there as well. I just did Chi squared for the first of many times today.
After I got out of class today, armed with a hazelnut iced coffee, I went to conquer more revisions. Prof told us that we could use a little thing in SPSS called transform to merge some data together. I had tried that earlier in the week and it messed up my male and female counts for the data I'm working with. I had the wrong numbers down to transform, but I didn't want to try to fix the data in SPSS to just screw everything up even more, so I go back Access to fix it. Besides that, I had to fix a few other things that I was unaware of (since it's not my data, nor my research interest I had no idea) that needed to be fixed at the Access level then had to import the data for the 2,039,894,854,897,109,328,586,343,785,908,347,198th time into SPSS. Fun was not had by me until two hours later when I finished.
To add to my "List of Things About This Class I Can Complain About," I despise statistics. I didn't understand it when I took it [probably because 1) I was taking two different statistics classes simultaneously, 2) math is not my forte to begin with] and I sure don't like it three years later. The only good thing that has come from statistics was, oddly (haha) enough, meeting my fantastic boyfriend.
I do realize that I will use this program, or, sweet little baby Jesus help me, one like it for the rest of my life. These are also skills that I will use throughout my career. They're just a wee bit frustrating to learn right now. Practice makes perfect and yada yada yada. It's not easy. But it will be easier the next time I have to do this, and the time after that, and so on until it becomes old hat.
At lease I know I'm not alone in my frustrations. Misery found in SPSS loves classmates for company. And that is quite comforting on pretty much all levels. Undoubtedly, there are a plethora of social science graduate students who are also ready to Office Space their computers due to frustrations caused by Access, SPSS and Daunting Research Questions.
Since I'm caught up on homework for one of my other classes and practically done with my assignment for Data Analysis, I should spend the rest of my time at work reading for my third class to get ahead so I can more fully enjoy my weekend!
Anyways, so the biggest problem I've had this semester is dealing with one class: Data Analysis. First, we had to observe 50-75 people on their cell phones. That was easy enough to do around campus. But then I had to deal with Microsoft Access, which I believe to be Satan's high tech incarnation. And to those of you who read the previous statement who think that is a gross exaggeration have clearly never had to deal with that ridiculous program! So I entered my cell phone data, but because the class is divided into qualitative and quantitative sections, and I chose quantitative, I had to input my professor's data (I really have to question my sanity - I'm paying someone to teach me how to do all of this, but I'm also paying to do someone else work for them. There is zero logic to this, except to get to the point where I have grad students as minions, too.) into Access then put it into SPSS. Access began deleting information in my fields. Of course, it would input into SPSS wrong. I must have read my prof's data what feels like ten million times before I got it right (weeks later, I'm still finding mistakes!).
To make matters worse, SPSS is not the easiest program in the world to figure out, especially when you've never used something like that before. And certain mathematical things that this program does are not named the same as the equation. On the bright side, I can officially upload data into SPSS in my sleep since I've done it so many times. I've also run the statistics and histograms so many times I know exactly where to go. The bar charts and stem-and-leaf plots are getting there as well. I just did Chi squared for the first of many times today.
After I got out of class today, armed with a hazelnut iced coffee, I went to conquer more revisions. Prof told us that we could use a little thing in SPSS called transform to merge some data together. I had tried that earlier in the week and it messed up my male and female counts for the data I'm working with. I had the wrong numbers down to transform, but I didn't want to try to fix the data in SPSS to just screw everything up even more, so I go back Access to fix it. Besides that, I had to fix a few other things that I was unaware of (since it's not my data, nor my research interest I had no idea) that needed to be fixed at the Access level then had to import the data for the 2,039,894,854,897,109,328,586,343,785,908,347,198th time into SPSS. Fun was not had by me until two hours later when I finished.
To add to my "List of Things About This Class I Can Complain About," I despise statistics. I didn't understand it when I took it [probably because 1) I was taking two different statistics classes simultaneously, 2) math is not my forte to begin with] and I sure don't like it three years later. The only good thing that has come from statistics was, oddly (haha) enough, meeting my fantastic boyfriend.
I do realize that I will use this program, or, sweet little baby Jesus help me, one like it for the rest of my life. These are also skills that I will use throughout my career. They're just a wee bit frustrating to learn right now. Practice makes perfect and yada yada yada. It's not easy. But it will be easier the next time I have to do this, and the time after that, and so on until it becomes old hat.
At lease I know I'm not alone in my frustrations. Misery found in SPSS loves classmates for company. And that is quite comforting on pretty much all levels. Undoubtedly, there are a plethora of social science graduate students who are also ready to Office Space their computers due to frustrations caused by Access, SPSS and Daunting Research Questions.
Since I'm caught up on homework for one of my other classes and practically done with my assignment for Data Analysis, I should spend the rest of my time at work reading for my third class to get ahead so I can more fully enjoy my weekend!
