Showing posts with label student. Show all posts
Showing posts with label student. Show all posts

Wednesday, 23 September 2015

International Greentech & Eco Products Exhibition & Conference Malaysia 2015 (IGEM 2015)

The International Greentech & Eco Products Exhibition & Conference Malaysia (IGEM) is here again in Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre (KLCC) from 9th to 12nd September 2015! For IGEM since year 2011,  Expomal International Sdn Bhd had been the host until this year, when this annual event was taken over by the Ministry of Energy, Green Technology and Water Malaysia (KeTTHA) (The first IGEM was held in 2010 by Green Purchasing Network Malaysia). The theme for IGEM 2015 is Powering The Green Economy which covers the following 5 key areas:
Untitled
Compared to the previous two years which I attended, the theme this year looks more interesting but the number of exhibitors are much more lesser (I believe it was due to the economic crisis we are facing now where many companies pulled out), in which a lot of the exhibitors are from the solar energy section. I would like to feature one company from each of the key areas above.

Saturday, 16 May 2015

Where Does Your Rubbish Go? (Part 2) - Jeram Sanitary Landfill


After ending the somehow painfully long site visit at Shah Alam Transfer Station, we moved on to Jeram Sanitary Landfill in Kuala Selangor which is quite some distance away from UPM. Operated by Worldwide Holdings as well, Jeram Sanitary Landfill is 1 out of 12 sanitary landfills existed in Malaysia as stated below (information not complete):

Sunday, 10 May 2015

Where Does Your Rubbish Go? (Part 1) - Shah Alam Transfer Station

Environmental students love field trips where you can get out from the class and go to somewhere interesting and play. However there are always some places that we are reluctant to go. All of you know what I mean. It must be some nasty places. Well, I have gone to an open dumping site during the trip to Chini Lake last year. A transfer station should be better, right? Oh you have not heard of a transfer station? Neither do I, until this semester, hahaha. 
The view of the main building from bus. You can see a path on the left that leads towards the building. It is where the rubbish trucks go to unload their content.
This building looks nice. But the smell? Err..

Wednesday, 1 April 2015

Dish Motion - Wednesday Soup Delivery

Personally I enjoy soup very much and I like to drown my nice with soup (hey don't judge!). It is not difficult to have soup during meals when I am studying in UPM because there are two economic rice shops at old flat serving Chinese-style soup for free! I have tried bittergourd soup, old cucumber soup, ABC soup (tomato, potato, onion soup basically), corn soup etc. but all of them have one similarity - you feel thirsty after having them. 

I came across this Facebook page named DishMotion which makes dinner delivery on every Wednesday, and it is specifically soup with tomato rice (the one that was quite popular on internet last time, hahaha). At first, I thought it was another project of a student taking business management course who are required to sell something as part of the course (since it is a compulsory course I will have to face it sooner or later). After talking to a friend who has ordered the delivery, it is actually a personal business started by a third-year student of UPM. What attracted me the most about this dinner delivery is that they use good quality containers which are non-disposable! Being an environmental student I feel rather uneasy using disposable container. Can you imagine how much plastics or polystyrenes you are going to throw away each time you take away food?

Tadaa! The lovely containers that serve me nice and warm food! 

Saturday, 23 August 2014

It Turned Out to Be Something I Want [guest post]

For Nature and animal lovers, there might be a problem when choosing they want because there are many courses which are animal or plant related such as Veterinary (which often come first into mind), Animal Science, Zoology, Botany, Forestry etc. And usually, Environmental Science will not pop into our mind because it does not sound as related as much as other courses. Soil, water and air that we are using are directly related to the Nature. So do the animals and plants which often succumb to human development. Quality of the environment should be monitored so that our life will be balanced with life of flora and fauna which might live just adjacent to us or even within us.

This is a guest post from a second year student of Bachelor of Environmental Science from University Malaysia Sabah (UMS). There are not much public universities (and also private ones) that offer this easily-overlooked course. As far as I know, besides UMS, only University Malaya (UM), University Putra Malaysia (UPM), University Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM), University of Nottingham and University of Monash offer this course (I believe that there are more). In this course, one of the thing we do (no matter which university we are studying in) is to go into Nature.    

Tuesday, 19 August 2014

This Course Was Not One of My Choices [guest post]

There is a chance where students received offer for a course which is not in their priority list when applying for public universities due to competition among so many pre-university graduates. Some of them might get courses that are not that well-known such as material science, forestry, instrumental science and also environmental science. Basically students who did not put these courses as one of their choices will react in either of these ways:

1) Oh my goodness what is this??? Why do I get this course??? *overcast sky*

2) Ok... Well, since I don't know what I want to study I will just go for it. *positive aura*

It is not surprising to see juniors asking around on Facebook about this course, looking for guidance from seniors. And probably there are some who do not ask at all because they are shy or they just lose hope and want to change the course as soon as possible. I can't help to have empathy towards juniors as there are not much information regarding this course in Malaysia, at least, not yet. They could be lost and worried about what is coming ahead and how do their futures look like. There are less than two weeks left until the orientation week of universities. While doing the final preparation, mental preparation is also important so that you will not get stressed out even before you enter the university. Having a light and excited mood throughout the orientation week is always a good start, you know.

One of my coursemates has written a short article of her experience when she enrolled in this course and she did not know much about this course either. Hope that it can give you some inspirations and motivations to keep going. Cheers!

Thursday, 14 August 2014

A Little Opinions about The Future of Environmental Students

Morning view in UPM (there are too many trees in UPM that I forgot which place is this LOL)

It is the time of the year when people receive their offering letter to pursue their study in university! Congratulation to all who got the course that they want while for others who are not that lucky, it is just another window leading to a bright new world for you. Before you slam the window close, try looking out the window and feel it, at least for one semester. You will not know whether this is the thing you have been wanting for your future career or not because you have not seen it or heard about it. Yes I am going to focus on environmental studies again because the same thing always happen. It happened on me, and it happens to the following new batches of students coming into this faculty, the Faculty of Environmental Studies in University Putra Malaysia (for other universities, this course might be placed under the Faculty of Science)

I should take this picture from a lower angle.

Don't panic if you got this course out of nowhere. Students who chose this course as one out of the four priorities are RARE. It is not surprising if more than half of the students are offered this course because they can't get the one they actually wanted. The most concerning question regarding the course is: What we will be after we graduate? Those who study Medicine will become a doctor; those who study Law will become a lawyer; those who study Education will become a teacher. This is what generally people know. How about courses like Material Science, Wood Science, Forestry etc.? I don't know either since I have never investigated their backgrounds and not many people talk about it. Now we have university graduates everywhere who are looking for jobs. Some even ended up doing something unrelated to what they have studied for three or four years (which is kinda sad). So what am I going to do after I graduate with a title of Bachelor of Environmental Science and Technology?

One of the corner of my faculty. The place I like the most when the scorching sun is not high up there yet.

Here is a situation I have read somewhere else some time ago.
Company W wants to recruit a university graduate who holds a degree in Microbiology; Company X wants to recruit someone who studied Genetics; Company Y wants to recruit a person in Zoology field. So if you own a degree in Biology, you can apply for all the three companies because what you have studied covers Microbiology, Genetics and Zoology. Actually what matters is not the title you get after you graduate but the content of your course. Employers will see what you can give to the company instead of simply showing a piece of paper saying that you graduated from this course. This is the list I copied from our faculty's website (besides what have been listed down there, there are actually more which have not been updated here).

Course Offered
  • Environmental Health
  • Environmental Measurement Technique and Method 1
  • Principles of Environemental Biology
  • Hydrology and Water Resource
  • Meteorology
  • Water Pollution Control Technology
  • Toxic and Hazardous Waste
  • Coastal Processes
  • Professional Training
  • Project
  • Hydrogeology
  • Man and Environment
  • Chemical Principles In The Environment
  • Principles of Environmental Physics
  • Principles of Drinking Water Treatment
  • Air Pollution and Noise
  • Environmental Chemistry
  • Solid Waste Disposal Technology
  • Pollution Biology
  • Energy Systems
  • Environmental Seminar
Basically our course covers all three main sciences: Biology, Chemistry and Physics because when we study the environment, we cannot separate the air from the water, or the plants from the soil. Everything is interrelated. So according to the list above, we can be involved in various industries because many factories need to use water in some of their processes (cooling, rinsing, cooking etc.) and they will produce industrial wastes that need to be carefully disposed of. Precautions have to be made to minimise pollutions as well. If you like Nature more, you get involved in conservation and preservation of natural habitats or endangered species. Get into the jungle, dive into the ocean or skate through Antarctica (maybe?). Besides, you can be an environmental forensic officer who examine the samples taken to see whether they contain excessive amount of certain chemicals which should not exist (we call them pollutants) and identify who is responsible of the pollution. If you do not want to straight away hop into workforce after graduate, you can continue to do scientific researches in Master or PhD to prove the happening of global warming, to investigate the threats caused by persistent organic pollutants found in pesticides, to renovate better solar energy generator or to come out with a greener technology. Out of all the choices above, if you are not interested in anyone of them, you can be an educator to educate the public regarding importance of sustainability in our lives and spread the awareness. You can also just be a science teacher because you have the knowledge of all the sciences.

Me and my coursemates during our first fieldtrip.
The only three Chinese in my batch. Guess what, this course was our first or second choice when we apply for university. *proud*
What I have stated above is just my two-cent opinion which might not be 100% accurate. I am just a second year student-to-be and have yet to go through another three years in my university to graduate. If you ask me what I want to become in the future, I am still uncertain of which way to go. I chose this course as my first choice because I know this is what I want. At the end things do not turn out as simple as it is. There are so many paths that I can go that I innocently thought that I just want to be an 'environmental scientist'. Well I guess this is not the time for me to think about it before I study deeper into this course. 

I hope I have answered this tricky question which I may not be able to answer orally because I don't know where to start. So I prefer to write it down. Spread the words and I wish you all the best in pursuing your new journey in the university. =)  

Me when I just entered UPM.


Extra readings: