Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Terrascope

Terrascope If there’s one thing I’ve learned during my first semester at MIT is that there is a difference between a bad question, a difficult question, and a rhetorical question. If I asked you what the meaning of life was, you could answer in a multitude of ways and I wouldn’t be able to say you’re right or wrong because the question could be answered subjectively . Or you could reply by declaring that it’s unclear what I am trying to ask you. What do I mean by “meaning”? Do I mean to ask what the meaning of the word life is, or what the meaning of the meaning of the word life is? You can’t prioritize to determine whether you should answer it as life as a biological process or an experience. This is the example of the bad question that is, in essence, unanswerable. Now, if you were a professor asking this difficult question to a group of incoming MIT freshmen for them to answer in a single semester: “How would you effectively prioritize the biggest issues facing our planet, develop feasible scientific, social, and economic approaches to addressing them, keeping biodiversity in mind, and present it all in a convincing manner?” Their rhetorical question-response would be: “Isn’t that like asking how I would save the world?!” Not to mention that some of their faces would look like the picture on the left for 70% of the semester, and like the one on the right for the remaining 30%. heehee. ,                                           How can I be so sure, you ask? The images you see above are actually visual representations of me  while working in a team to attempt to answer that very question. No worries, I enjoyed every minute of time-pressured-pondering-facial-contortion. ;D You see, Im part of a learning community open to freshmen called Terrascope. As part of being in Terrascope, you take Solving Complex Problems (12.000) in the fall, which is, designed to provide students the opportunity to work as part of a team to propose solutions to a complex problem that requires an interdisciplinary approach. This falls class, Mission 2015, answered the difficult question above, and each years class has the tasks of researching a major global issue, eventually proposing a multi-faceted solution in front of a panel of experts, and compiling a website to explain the problem and solution. Previous years topics range from the collapse of the global fisheries, to access to clean fresh water, to stemming the rise of greenhouse gases, to feeding nine billion people. The class is entirely self-taught, as students decide when to meet, what course of action to take, etc. Of course, there were Undergraduate Teaching Fellows (UTFs)* and mentors available to help us out when the going got rough and we asked for help on how to put everything together (they also helped by cooking food for our meetings [because the terrascope room has a kitchen] and give us scrumptious chocolate-covered coffee beans to keep us awake, pictured to the right). Being in Mission 2015 really made me think about the world as a complex system, and it helps me think about problems in general in a systematic and efficient fashion. With the right mindset, questions are not unphanthomabletheyre either just really difficult or simply bad. Also, its pretty awesome when your  classmates decorate the board in the Terrascope room such that you could come in one day and find this. When I asked why all the garbage was tacked onto the board, I was swiftly answered by Were plotting how much more food weve been consuming since we realized we only had a few days left until the presentation. I 3 MIT moment. Daww. In any case, even though Mission is over, the Terrascope experience can continue with two optional spring classes: 1. 1.016, Complex Environmental Issues, which takes some of the ideas that were developed in Mission in the fall and attempts to implement solutions. And 2. Terrascope Radio (SP.360), which develops a radio show to help spread the word about the years topic. I know for sure Ill at least be taking Terrascope Radio next semester, and I cant wait to experience what it has in store! If you have any questions about Terrascope, leave them in a comment! In the meantime, I shall be refraining from asking my little cousin (who was just explaining to me that aliens are going to attack the earth) why he would think karate is enough to rid the planet of aliens should they invade earth, and how he will convince everyone on the planet to learn karate given that there are so many other problems facing the world, and whether its even a possibility that aliens will come and invade our planet to begin with. I dont think hes quite ready to answer these questions, or give up the fact that karate isnt the magic solution to ALL threatening things. * UTFs are undergraduates who went through MIssion themselves as freshmen, and Mentors are usually graduates that were in some way involved with Terrascope. A big thank you to all of you! Post Tagged #Terrascope