Monday, April 23, 2012
Digital Stories
I have never been one that was super savvy when it came to technology. Sure, I can do the basics on Word and Powerpoint, but have never really been able to take advantage of the new technology that was developed in my generation. For the digital story project, I feel like that all changed. There is something about speaking and using visual sources to tell a story that makes it so much more than just words on paper. For my project individually, pictures were super helpful in order to portray everything I was talking about that dealt with the art of Sarah Brown. I don't think that text would have been nearly as affective. In addition to being able to portray a stronger message through the use of iMovie, I learned a lot about technology as well. I had to learn how to record my voice, incorporate a soundtrack, use pictures and transitions affectively, as well as learning overall how to use the program. I really think that this experience has helped shaped my writing style and it is definitely something that I would like to do again. It was a different way of writing, and a new way of learning.
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Digital Stories
I think that digital stories are very valuable
in academia. They are an affective way
to catch people’s attention’s with important stories of information. Just recently, I watch a digital story in my
psychology class that was to help prevent the pollution in the Pacific
Ocean. I think because of the rise of
technology in this century, digital stories are far more productive than plain
print in reaching students. Outside of
academia, I still think they are very important and valuable. Many commercials use this approach. For example, The ASPCA commercials use
digital stories in order to evoke extreme pathos to its viewers. Because of technology around the world, I think
digital stories are becoming more and more valuable because people are willing
to listen to them. For me, because I am going to be a teacher, it is especially important because teachers can use them as a way of lessons in order to reach their students more affectively. Overall, digital stories should be and are being used in both academia as well as outside it.
Sunday, March 18, 2012
Group Challenges
The main challenge that I find when working with a group on a project for a class is matching up the schedules of group members and finding time to meet. In college, students have a variety of class schedules and other activities that can make them really busy. In addition, it is very rare to find two students with a similar schedule. In this project, we had to collaborate with four different people's schedules in order to find free time. Fortunately, our schedules were pretty similar and we were able to find enough time to meet. In addition, my group worked well on their own time in order to get the group work done and the final product finished in a good amount of time. Another challenge is the similarity or dissimilarities of writing styles in a project such as this one. Four people putting work into one paper could cause for a very choppy, un-unified paper. Again though, my group did a good job at meshing our parts together as well as making it sound like one unified paper. If I could have done this project individually, it would have been a lot more work on my shoulders, but the outcome would have been on my time and in a single writing style.
Thursday, February 23, 2012
My Writing and Research Processes
The readings from the past two weeks have definitely made me
reflect on my own writing and research processes. For starters, Nathan’s piece really made me
look at what I do in regards to my academics and if any of it could be considered
“cheating”. I have always taken pride in
doing my own work and not taking the ideas of others to claim them as my
own. In addition, I always give proper
credit to work in my research papers. What
Nathan’s article really brought to my attention was the fact that many of the
students today engage in academic behavior that we do not view as cheating, but
that is in fact just that.
As far as
Sommer’s piece on revision strategies, her findings where not that surprising
to me. I had figured that student’s
revision strategies were less than structured as well as in clear stages. In high school, my English teachers were
constantly reminding us that in order to be a better writer, we have to be
constantly revising, and not just for grammar (which most of us were guilty of)
but for content and structure as well.
This is one of the differences that Sommer’s found between the student
writers and the experienced writers. I
think that in order to improve my writing, I have to open-minded. I think an important factor in order to improve
my writing, I have to try to model my writing process as well as my research
strategies on those that Sommer’s found in her studies.
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Nathan's view
Rebecca Nathan’s piece on cheating was a very
interesting read for me. Because it was
written from her first hand experience as a student at the school, I found it
to be quite accurate. The findings that
she compiles from asking students around campus revealed the same thoughts that
I generally have with cheating. A lot of
the time, as Nathan state, students don’t think of what they’re doing as
cheating (like working on homework together or checking answers with someone
else). In addition, I agree with her
proposition for each of us to define cheating with our own definition. Not everyone agrees that certain things are
morally wrong and could be considered “cheating.” I also agree with Nathan in the sense that I
believe that the students have a very different view of what is cheating that
perhaps the administration. The
administration would be a lot stricter in their definition of cheating than
most students would define it. Some
things that administration would consider cheating has become a daily occurrence
for most students. Even one of the
student in Nathan’s study stated, “everyone does it.” Finally, I agree with
Nathan that cheating is entangled with many other aspects; it’s not always a
black and white situation. Morality,
purpose, time, and the university are just some of the factors involved in
determining what is and isn’t cheating in today’s schools.
Thursday, February 9, 2012
Reading Aloud
Along with
finding a lot of grammatical errors in my paper, reading aloud benefitted me in
other ways as well. My peer members had
commented on my paper changing topic or going off topic towards the end but I didn’t really pay attention to their comments because I felt that I had changed the
subject on purpose. Upon reading it
aloud, I realized how much weight I put on the second topic and that was not needed
for my paper. I realized that I had said
way too much about it and that it upset the balance of my paper. Now, I will be able to go back into my paper
and notice all of the excess that I can delete, and narrow my focus.
I was able to catch grammar and sentence structure errors as well
because I was reading the mistakes and it clearly sounded wrong. Generally, I think reading papers out loud is
a good thing to get in the habit of doing because I think it gives you more of
an objective point of view to make your paper better because it gets it out of
your head. It forces your ears to listen
to the mistakes, whether it is grammatical or stylistic, and is easier to
recognize the changes that need to be made.
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Sources
McIntosh,
Ewan. “Blogging Improves Young People’s
Confidence in Their Writing and Reading.” Edu.blog.com. December 19, 2009. http://edu.blogs.com/edublogs/2009/12/blogging-improves-young-peoples-confidence-writing-reading.html
According to Ewan McIntosh, social
networking has given young people not only the opportunity to write more as
well as read more than ever, but has improved their attitudes towards it as
well. In research conducted four years
ago, blogging proved to improve writing by providing an audience to the student
as well as improving reading. According
to BBC, the percentages of student that feel more confident in their writing
are those that blog or use other social networking. They found that it is a direct positive trend
between the amount of forms of communication and strong literacy skills.
I think
this source had good information, but I don’t think it was presented in the
best way. When reading it, I was a
little confused as to what was happening.
In addition, I don’t think the author transitioned between each topic
that they were covering. He/She made
good points but it could have been organized a lot better. With this being said, I understand that it is
a blog online so its purpose might not have been to present the information in
a formal manner, but I think it would have been a lot easier to pull out the
necessary information for someone to use.
Sutherland,
John. “Can u txt?” The Guardian. November 10, 2002.
According
to Sutherland, “hurry sickness” is a major problem of our time and texting,
because it’s quick, is a go-to for communication, especially in the UK. He compares texting to “Snot-talk” by which
he means it’s a one-time thing. Because of the 160-character limitation,
abbreviation is key when texting. Up to
date (only 2002) it was seen as being a mainly European trend that the US
hadn’t caught on to yet. Sutherland
continues that the language used in text messages is “bleak, bald, sad
shorthand.” He blames the take-off popularity of texting on mental laziness and
its ability to mask poor literacy skills and makes a point that the fad will be
gone within a few years, once they come up with a newer technology. Lastly, he brings up the point that writing
is taking over speech in today’s world.
Where in the 13th century there were very few “scribes”,
today everyone is a scribe.
I do not
agree with Sutherland. Some texting may
be unsophisticated and bleak as he says, but I do not think it is affecting our
ability or desire to write. Nor is it taking
over our ability or desire to speak. I
realize that Sutherland wrote this article in 2002, before the real wave of
texting had erupted, so it was seen more of a treat than it actually is. His whole argument is based on what he thinks
that texting is doing to people’s communication and is not backed by any
concrete support. He has a cynical tone
that would offend some people that didn’t necessarily agree with him. He should have written it more objectively,
with facts to prove his point. In the way
that he wrote, he will not be able to convince any audience that has a
differing opinion from his own, but instead probably only enrage him. For this preason, his piece has no real
purpose, because he isn’t aiming to convince or change anyone’s thought. It seems as though he is writing simply to
write.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
New Literacy
Blogging has become a new way of communication
of this century. Even within this class,
right now, we are blogging our thoughts for an audience, in this case our
classmates. In my own writing
experiences as well, outside of all school and classroom settings, I blog. My Tumblr is a way for me to express myself
daily. I have daily posts about what
happens to me during my day, or my thoughts or feelings toward something specific. Even pictures and quotes are a way of written
expression. I have followers that read
my blog as well as people that I follow their blogs and keep up with what is
going on in their lives. That is what is
so important about blogging. The
audience. Just as Thompson says, “the
fact that students today almost always write for an audience gives them a
different sense of what constitutes good writing.” Obviously I’m not going to have the same
format in my blog as I would a research paper for a class. This is because the audience that students
today write for develops their entire style and tone of a piece of
writing. As well as posting my thoughts,
I can respond to other’s blogs as well.
In this way, it makes the conversation public and therefore, according
to Thompson, close to the ancient Greek style of argument. My blog is just one specific example that
supports Thomspon’s views on new literacy.
In addition, I use Twitter, which according to him the text in tweets
adds up over time. There are many more
other solid examples in my life that back up Thompson’s views.
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