Q's View from MIT Ep. 3: Frankie Peña - Free Educational videos for Students in K-12 | Lumos Learning

Q's View from MIT Ep. 3: Frankie Peña - Free Educational videos for Students in k-12


Q's View from MIT Ep. 3: Frankie Peña - By MITK12Videos



Transcript
00:0-1 Hey welcome to M I . T . I'm Quentin
00:01 Macarthur , the associate director of admissions uh but I
00:05 actually prefer the title Director of overall inspiration . Are
00:10 you ready for this , my love . Yeah ,
00:20 no . Yeah , yeah , I'm here with Frankie
00:39 pena from Mcallen texas Frankie is a dancer and he
00:44 is a graduating senior in brain and cognitive sciences .
00:49 Good to see you , likewise was mighty . Always
00:52 the dream or did it come about a little bit
00:56 later on in your thinking ? Until I got to
00:59 ninth grade , I didn't even know about mitt .
01:01 I come from a family where my parents didn't even
01:03 go to college . My father worked from a very
01:06 young age but he's always been very hardworking and how
01:08 he , he opened up his own business and my
01:10 older sisters did go to college and they went to
01:12 University of texas pan american so they could still live
01:14 from home . And so it seemed like that's what
01:17 I was going to do , I was just gonna
01:18 follow in their footsteps and then I got to the
01:22 ivy school and it's basically a concentration of all the
01:26 nerds and um . Sound familiar . I saw this
01:33 one student that I just related to a lot ,
01:36 he was from a low income background and he was
01:38 mexican , he's so relatable and his name is jesus
01:41 zuniga . Um yes right here is quite 16 .
01:49 Yeah I told him about this , he told me
01:52 he was taking all the card math classes and he
01:55 got into MIT that year he was a senior but
01:58 then I found out what it was and it was
01:59 just awesome school for people interested in math and science
02:02 and I thought if he could do it probably try
02:09 . Yeah there there's there's just a switch that year
02:13 um and I just got really focused , I was
02:15 like this is not an easy place to get into
02:17 , I've got to really focus , I'm gonna have
02:19 a set plan , we're gonna take all the math
02:21 classes I'm going to do um as much as I
02:24 can and I'm gonna make it happen . So that
02:26 must have been really exciting for you getting into M
02:29 . I . T . Now , you said your
02:31 parents hadn't graduated from college and uh you know ,
02:37 may not have known all that much about mitt .
02:40 Did they have any reservations about allowing you to come
02:42 out here to the East Coast in their mindset and
02:45 their culture was you stay at home until you get
02:48 married and then you go off and do your job
02:51 , but you stay at home with your family because
02:53 that's that's so central to what's important in life And
02:58 to them this idea that I would go 2000 miles
03:01 away . They almost took it personally at first because
03:03 I didn't even know about it . And and so
03:05 I had to tell them how I just I have
03:07 this dream and I want to pursue it . Um
03:10 And that helped them realize well it's not about leaving
03:13 us it's about you pursuing your dream and we're more
03:18 than happy to support you and doing that . But
03:20 it was a talk at first and now they were
03:22 obviously still super proud and stuff so that they brag
03:25 about it to their friends and things . But uh
03:27 at first tell me about you know your major at
03:32 M . I . T . Because it sounds like
03:33 you started out in physics and then you transition .
03:36 When I was in high school a friend introduced me
03:38 to this book called The Fabric of the Cosmos .
03:41 It's physics for a popular readers . So I didn't
03:44 go to technical details but to the extent that he
03:47 could he explained huge steps the whole history of physics
03:51 today , like how Newton came up with classical mechanics
03:55 and then how people totally flipped the story with quantum
03:59 mechanics and then how at the same time , people
04:01 like Albert Einstein flips that story as well about general
04:05 relativity and so what they hope to get to is
04:09 a theory of everything . Um so something that explains
04:12 not just what's happening out in the Galaxies and how
04:15 they rotate or have they gravitate , but also how
04:17 things going on at the levels smaller than an electron
04:21 , how those events also occur . But marrying those
04:27 two huge levels , there's been a huge struggle of
04:31 physics for the last decades . And so that's where
04:35 they were going . And I thought I thought maybe
04:38 I could be a part of this . So I
04:40 came into my t thinking , you know what ,
04:41 I'm gonna do physics and I'm going to help with
04:44 the theory of everything um or something , some part
04:48 of this huge story of physics and then I took
04:53 the classes and there are a lot more difficult than
04:56 the high school classes . Uh but but is it
05:01 okay ? And in particular , I got involved in
05:04 a research group led by Alan Booth who basically put
05:09 the bang in the big bang theory . And so
05:12 I was like , wait God , this is gonna
05:15 be so cool . It turned out that what what
05:17 what brian Greene writes about is all the cool parts
05:21 , after all the hard work has been done and
05:23 after people have done all the technical details and for
05:26 me getting into the nitty gritty of the of the
05:29 equations and the math lab programming or whatever programming use
05:33 , they ended up not being my cup of tea
05:35 I suppose . I realized that there's still so much
05:38 more to explore it at my team that summer .
05:41 I read another book this time by steven Pinker called
05:45 how the mind works . He didn't talk about the
05:48 biology of the brain . He talked about for example
05:50 , why do we love and how to , how
05:52 does that work or why do we have emotions at
05:55 all ? A lot of interesting things . And I
05:58 thought , but that's that assumes that the brain is
06:02 a black box and I want to know what's in
06:03 that black box and there's some pretty interesting researchers here
06:07 at MIT doing that . So , um , I
06:10 started going in that path and I have loved it
06:13 ever since . I know you're affiliated with a fraternity
06:16 here on campus . Could you tell me a little
06:18 bit about your fraternity community ? So I'm part of
06:21 the New Delta opportunity . It is mitt exclusive .
06:25 There's no other chapter . I got to know the
06:28 brothers of New Delta and it just seemed like the
06:32 kind of people I don't want to hang out with
06:33 . We were comfortable with each other . I ,
06:35 I immediately felt like I could tell a few friends
06:37 with all these people so that got me interested .
06:39 And then I think the real reason that I joined
06:42 was also because I like being in a home .
06:45 That's how I always felt in Mcallen . And The
06:49 dorm life didn't seem too much like that . At
06:52 least in my perspective , it seemed like this building
06:55 with 400 strangers and I wanted to be a part
06:58 of a home with everyone knows me and I know
07:01 them and we hang out often . Delta is good
07:05 . I like New Delta Cody . Coleman is an
07:07 alumni of New Delta . That's episode one . Yeah
07:10 . Do your history so Frankie . Have any of
07:14 the MIT faculty members been particularly helpful or supportive of
07:18 you ? You know , since you've been here ?
07:20 Yes , I could not have gotten into graduate school
07:24 without waving . Sushi's the professor whose lab I've joined
07:29 two years ago now . Um and when I told
07:33 her that I'm interested in graduate school , she immediately
07:35 was like , there's this bar here and you're gonna
07:39 meet it because I know I see it in you
07:41 , you're gonna meet it . Well actually the bar
07:43 was over here . That reminds me of a very
07:46 famous quote by uh it was a social psychologist who
07:50 was a guy named Asa Hilliard who is a professor
07:53 at Georgia state . And he said , I see
07:55 the genius in you , right ? And like that
07:58 , it was like a motto that he had for
08:01 educators to really help empower students . You know ,
08:05 I see the genius in you and I am not
08:08 going to let you fall short of that , like
08:10 you are going to not just meet but exceed ,
08:13 you know , the standards that I have for you
08:15 because sometimes , you know , like especially when people
08:18 are young , they don't always , you know ,
08:20 carry their dreams for themselves . Yet sometimes it requires
08:23 parents or teachers or mentors , you know , to
08:28 see the greatness in the person before they see it
08:32 in themselves . You know , it works best when
08:34 they see themselves from , you know , day one
08:36 , but you know , we all need some time
08:38 to grow and develop , but it's important to have
08:40 those people to like , we can't do it on
08:42 our own . Not at all . There's so many
08:44 people that have helped me , my teachers in particular
08:49 , best part of your mitt experience , mocha moves
08:54 , you know why I joined when I was a
08:55 sophomore and I still ended . And what is smoke
08:58 moves ? It's a hip hop team . Is this
08:59 place where I can forget about all the P sites
09:02 and the research and just on top of that also
09:05 go into my hip hop alter ego . So Frankie
09:08 , what is your hip hop dancing mocha moves ,
09:13 alter ego , Name FX . So we're here with
09:20 FX and he's about to show us some of his
09:23 mocha moves . So FX understand that you are excellent
09:28 at a number of different types of dance , but
09:30 you are going to teach me a little bit of
09:32 salsa . Okay , I'd love to know . Who
09:36 is this ? This is Sonora Dean Amita , which
09:40 roughly translates to sound of dynamite . Dynamite sounds .
09:45 Yeah , yeah , yeah . 1123123123 So you can
09:53 watch frankly . This is what I do and do
10:03 the little , but I do a little back .
10:05 Yeah , no , they are so move move .
10:32 If you want to go into hip hop , we
10:33 can do that at some other time . Okay .
10:37 We'll work on that . Have no moves to teach
10:40 Frankie Frankie is the Master Fx . We could do
10:42 some freshman to L . A . Oh , jesus
00:0-1 .
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