Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Journal 8: Class assessment


I enjoy English as a whole.  I enjoy writing and love to read.  I can honestly say that blogging is a new venture but not one that I could keep up on a regular basis unless I was paid for it. Watching the documentaries this semester both thrilled and disturbed me.  I was thrilled to be watching films that I could formulate essays from.  The films took away from the chance for writer’s block that I often got when picking my own topic.  I, on the other hand, was deeply disturbed by some of the subject matter of the films especially Forgiving Dr. Mengele.  I cried during many of the films but to watch children be tortured by a sick person tore away part of my very soul.  I do not understand how someone could be as evil and demented as to perform experiments of children or people in general.  I understand the need to medical research but do not believe it should be tested on animals or people.  The idea of diving in a dumpster to retrieve discarded food was gross to me.  I am a germaphobe and there were parts of the Dive that disgusted me and made my stomach turn.  The film about the education system in low income areas struck a cord with me as well. Thankfully my family is fortunate to live in a middle class area with a great education system for my stepchildren to attend.  Watching the children in the film sit and wait to not have their number called made me cry because they like all children deserve and chance at a better education and not being a statistic.  I am glad that I was able to take Professor Warren for both ENC 1101 and ENC 1102.  She is a great professor with a great sense of humor.  I hope to see her around campus in the future.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Education Today, Waiting on Superman Essay



Today’s education system isn’t so different from what I viewed in the documentary, Waiting for Superman.  Many lower income neighborhoods depend heavily on charter schools to help better educate their children.  In contrast, there are some areas that do not have charter schools to offer, like many Florida counties.  Children should be offered the best possible chance to succeed no matter where they come from.  Scores on standardized testing in public schools represents that many areas of study need more emphasis from caring teachers who love their chosen careers.
            Studies conducted by nationally prominent research institutions show that public charter schools are successfully closing achievement gaps for students of color, English language learners, and students in poverty. Stanford’s CREDO study found that charter schools helped English language learners and students in poverty achieve more than traditional public schools.  Studies by Stanford and Harvard have found that English language learners and low-income students perform better in public charter schools than in traditional public schools. (Stand.org)  After watching the film, it appeared that the lower income children suffered in their learning because of lack of funding for the schools they attended.  The charter schools that are in the lower income areas select potential new students in a lottery type system from a pool of applicants.  It broke my heart to watch the children in the film sit and wait to not hear their names called.  Their dreams for a better life were dashed in a matter of hours waiting, only to be let down. 
            More than one-third of Florida’s 67 counties did not have a charter school during the 2010-2011 school years, according to a StateImpact Florida analysis of state data.  As of the 2010-2011, Clay County was the largest district in Florida to not have any charter schools.  Clay County consistently earns an “A” on state report cards; one reason school officials say there is little demand for charter schools.  In Clay County, high school students can study aerospace, information or agricultural technology at one of twelve specialized academies. (npr.org)    For the most part, it seems as though Clay County schools are performing well enough that charter schools aren’t really needed.  Both of my stepchildren attend “A” schools in Clay County and they are both on the honor roll.  It makes a difference that my husband and I make sure our children get the best education they can.  
In addition, scoring for standardized testing ways very heavily on the grading that many schools achieve on a yearly basis and it impacts each student.  Many schools rely on the scoring from the testing to impact their budgets for each year.  The schools that consistently fail the yearly testing lose money and it negatively impacts the education of their students.  It is my belief that it is partly the educators fault for why children don’t perform well on such testing as FCAT and partly the child’s inability to learn or retain the material presented to them.  There is so much pressure on children to do their best that it can cause stress and make them do more poorly than under normal circumstances.   In view of the nation's substantial curricular diversity, test developers are obliged to create a series of one-size-fits-all assessments. But, as most of us know from attempting to wear one-size-fits-all garments, sometimes one size really can't fit all. (ascd.org)  You cannot expect every child tested to perform the same on standardized testing due to the fact that each one learns differently; thus they retain information differently.   Consequently, standardized testing can hinder a child’s academic growth as much as it can help.  Having teachers and administrators who genuinely care about each child’s educational development makes a huge difference when it comes to helping them achieve the skills they need to do well on yearly testing.
In summary, the United States needs help in its education system as a whole.  There should be as many educational opportunities in lower income areas as there are in some of the higher income areas.  No child should be left behind because of money.  Every child has a dream of becoming something great and they need the help to get there from their schools just as much as they do from their parents.  Standardized testing should not be the deciding factor for how much money a school receives.  If a school is consistently failing because of standardized testing maybe a new idea should be put in place to help that school achieve greatness.  How is society supposed to raise their children into successful adults if they are stunted educationally?  What choice do the children have?  Children are the future and so many are truly still “Waiting for Superman” to save them. What can you do to help?

Works Cited

Multiples sources. "Facts on Public Charters." Web. <http://stand.org/evidenceoncharterschools>.

O'Connor, John . " Charters Not A Choice in Many Florida Counties | StateImpact Florida ." NPR StateImpact: Issues That Matter. Close To Home.. StateImpact, 13 Oct 2011. Web. 16 Apr 2013. <http://stateimpact.npr.org/florida/2011/10/13/charters-not-a-choice-in-many-florida-counties/>.

Popham, W. James. "Why Standardized Tests Don't Measure Educational Quality." Educational Leadership, Volume 56, Number 6, Using Standards and Assessments Pages 8-15 , Mar 1999. Web. <http://www.ascd.org/publications/educational-leadership/mar99/vol56/num06/Why-Standardized-Tests-Don%27t-Measure-Educational-Quality.aspx>.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Waiting for Superman Journal Entry



            Having recently watched the documentary, Waiting for Superman, it saddened me that today’s school systems are so poor in performance and lack the means to provide due to lack of funding.  Poor school performance and low funding, generally speaking, makes for a poor education for the young people attending the school.  I believe that charter schools are great idea to help the children of lower income areas to get the best education they possibly can.  It was very sad to see that the schools had to choose who attended by a lottery system to make it fair to every child who had applied.  It was very hard to watch the children featured get passed over in their hope for a brighter future by getting a ticket in except one.  I cried for the families whose children did not get selected and rejoiced for the one who was.  Having two stepchildren who are getting a good education makes me feel fortunate.  The public school system in Clay County is not superior by any means but both schools that my children attend are “A” schools by academic standard.  Every child deserves a chance for a great education so that they may rise about the poverty or the less fortunate circumstance from which they come.  If your child tells you about their dream of what they want to be when they grow up, help them achieve it.  It sickens me that teachers cannot be paid on performance.  If your child has been lucky enough to have a teacher that goes the extra mile to make sure they are learning everything they are supposed and more, then I feel they should get that extra incentive.  Many other fields of work base their pay on experience and performance, why not teachers?  Why not those who are molding and teaching our children?    

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Miss Representation: Exploited


                Jennifer L. Pozner made the statement, “You have to look like Miss USA, have sex like Samantha from Sex in the City and think like June Cleaver.  The ideals that women are supposed to look a certain way, act a certain way in the bedroom, and think another way in all other aspects of life is ridiculous.  Women are intelligent human beings capable of independent thoughts.  The media portrays women and girls in a negative, hyper-sexualized way and it causes unrealistic views of what real women are.  Such media has been known to cause eating disorders, depression, and self-esteem issues pertaining to their bodies.  Government regulations suggest that women’s reproductive can be controlled and therefore the women no longer have choices in regards to their own bodies.  It is immoral to dictate what a woman’s rights are to her own body and that the world presents an unrealistic view of the perfect woman. 

                In reality, women are highly intelligent human beings and should not be put out of any situation just because they are female.  It seems as though the smarter a woman is the more she is shunned by society.  Powerful women are not always liked.  In regards to this documentary, it seems as though women are expected to be seen and not heard, blending into the background and looking pretty.  I was born to stand out and I pride myself on my intelligence.  Maintaining a 3.84 GPA doesn’t happen overnight, neither does being invited and inducted in Phi Theta Kappa International Honor Society.  Alice Walker said, “The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don’t have any.”  The first step is to maintain power and make it known that women can do the job as well as a man.  I am not discounting the fact the men do well but simply that women can as well.  There are many incredibly intelligent women who are the Chief Executive Officers of major corporations such as Hewlett Packard and IBM. (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/07/fortune-500-female-ceos_n_1495734.html)

                Notably girls in today’s society are growing up way too fast.  It seems as though girls are given an unrealistic view from a very early age that they are supposed to look a certain way based on what they see on some of their favorite television shows or in movies.  I know that many people have daughters and they fear that they will end up a statistic of society.  78% of girls hate their bodies by the age of 15 and 65% of them have eating disorders. (http://community.feministing.com/2011/02/14/miss-representation-a-film-review/    Many women and girls suffer from varying forms of depression as a result of Body Dysmorphic Disorder.  BDD is a type of somatoform disorder, a mental illness in which a person has symptoms of a medical illness, but the symptoms cannot be fully explained by an actual physician. (http://www.webmd.com/mental-health/mental-health-body-dysmorphic-disorder)  People with BDD are preoccupied with an imagined physical defect or minor defect that others cannot see.  One of the most common areas of concern is body weight.  The media portrays the perfect woman as tall, thin, and blessed in the breast area, so basically like Barbie.  However, in most cases unless a woman is in the gym constantly or was blessed with a high metabolism that is not the case.  Women and girls come in all different shapes and size, each one unique as God intended. 

                Women are most commonly stereotyped as good for one thing: reproduction.  Without women in the world, the population would be very small or cease to exist.  What right does the government have to regulate women’s reproductive rights?  Birth control was not available for sale until May 11, 1960 and was sold by Searle.  The fact that women have been having children for centuries with no means of birth control is stifling.  Many states made the sale of birth control illegal because the Catholic Church opposed it, their only option was abstinence.  (www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/pill/timeline/timeline2.html)  Many insurance companies will cover male enhancement drugs such as Viagra and Cialis but will not cover birth control.  That fact doesn’t set well with me that men can get aid to help enhance their lives and women cannot control their choice to give birth other than abstaining from the act of sex. 

                Generally speaking watching the documentary, Miss Representation was not an enjoyable experience since having seen it once before.  It bothers me that women and girls are over-sexualized and exploited in the media and it portrays an unrealistic view to the young women and girls in today’s society of what real women look like.  For women to have 86% of the purchasing power, why do advertising outlets seems to play more toward the stimulus of men?  Today’s society and even in years past should be less judgmental of outward appearances and look inward to what really matters.  Women should be seen for their brains and not just their bodies. 

Works Cited

American Experience
Timeline: The Pill 1951-1990

Body Dysmorphic Disorder

Fortune 500 List Boasts More Female CEOs Than Ever Before
Posted: 05/07/2012 12:34 pm by Bianca Bosker

Miss Representation – A Film Review
COCO, February 14, 2011, original posting on PersephoneMagazine.com

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Miss Representation Journal Entry


Having watched this documentary once, I was not thrilled to have to watch it again.  I watched Miss Representation for an extra credit assignment in ENC 1101 and was appalled at what I saw.  Women and girls are so sexually exploited in the media that is sickens me to my very core.  I have a stepdaughter who is 11 and she is already body conscious.  She really shouldn't be but she watches a lot of television and reads magazines that portray the ideal image of what a woman is supposed to look like.  She is very worried about what other people think of her and it comes out in how she chooses to dress to the way she wears her hair.  I do not think it is fair to women or girls in today's society to be viewed as objects rather than human beings.  Women are often objectified and made out to be less than they are especially if they are ones with above average intelligence.  I do not think that women are by any means inferior to men. In common society, women are responsible for keeping retailers in business as they make up an approximate 86% of the purchasing power.  I laughed when I heard the statement, "You have to look like Miss America, have sex like Samantha on Sex and the City, and think like June Cleaver."  To me that premise says you have to be a beautiful, sex-kitten, domestic goddess that will not be confrontational.   Many women and girls suffer from Body Dsymorphic Disorder as a direct result of the way they are portrayed in the media.  BDD is an obsessive disorder that many develop when they see what the media conveys as the perfect body type from their hair to their weight and as far as the way they dress.  Many women suffer from severe depression and have self-esteem issues as a direct result of BDD.  A size 2 is not the normal size for women in today’s society.  Being healthy should be more important than the size on the clothing labels in your closet.  Be who you are and do it on purpose.

Monday, March 18, 2013

Going Dumpster Divin’



            Viewing the movie Dive was an eye-opening experience.  The idea that people would actually dive into a dumpster full of smelly garbage in hopes of finding food treasures boggles my mind.  Many people do not fully understand the amount of food wasted until they are hungry and searching for their next meal.  Grocery stores and restaurants waste enough food daily that could feed hundreds.  The amount of food the United States of America wastes in one year could keep small countries fed for several years.  Having been raised on the mentality of cleaning your plate, it bothers me how much food is wasted.  As a child, I was told to clean my plate or there would be no option for dessert and at Grandma’s house you always wanted dessert.  Children in today’s society are too picky when it comes to their food choices and 40% of food waste comes from households.

            Dumpster diving is defined as the practice of searching through dustbins for discarded but still usable or valuable objects such as food or clothes (Dictionary.com).  There are actually websites that give how-to’s on dumpster diving.  I guess it makes sense to have instructions on how to perform the task of actually diving in if you have never done it before.  The fact that they list bringing gloves is funny to me but that is because I am a mysophobic.  I do not like germs therefore gloves wouldn’t be enough to get me into a dumpster (shareable.net).  A quote from a site referenced dumpster diving as follows: “The very name “dumpster diving” makes the nature of the activity pretty clear. It doesn’t hide behind a sanitized euphemism, like, say, “gently used snack gathering.”  “Free food? Honey, ain’t nuthin’ free,” (Adventures of a first-time dumpster diver, Kwak-Hefferan).  There are many people that dumpster dive for the sole purpose of keeping their families fed because they cannot afford to shop the conventional way due to lack of money or government assistance.    Be that as it may, many people will dumpster dive to help out local shelters that feed the hungry on a daily basis by recovering food that would not be donated under normal circumstances. 

Most of the food that grocers throw out is perishable, including fruits, vegetables, seafood, meat, baked goods, and ready-made meals.  Perishable foods are most often thrown away versus being donated because it releases the grocery store from being held liable if someone gets sick.  Food waste will probably always be an unfortunate by-product of the food service and food retail industries. Food recovery is a great way for all types of food businesses to help those in need, and can oftentimes result in tax savings when donated to a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization (Food Waste from Restaurants, Caterers, and Grocery Stores, Jan 03 2013).  With the amount of food wasted by grocery stores, many of our homeless shelters could feed hundreds of people for longer than usual with regular donations.  Most perishables can be frozen and it disintegrates the expiration dates printed on packaging because it time locks the food at its current state.  The statistic from the movie Dive of the amount of wasted food was sad at a staggering 96 billion pounds yearly.  The amount of food that the United States wastes in one year could feed many smaller countries for many years.  The United States is said to be the richest country in the world and yet we waste the most food while many other countries have people dying from starvation.  If we packed up our wasted food for one year, the entire country of Haiti could eat for five years (Dive!). 

Furthermore, children in today’s society should be thankful for the food choices they have in front of them as there are many who go without.  I can recall hearing as a child that I should clean my plate because children in China were starving.  Children are pickier nowadays than they were twenty or more years ago.  Children of the eighties and much earlier were happy to get a healthy meal or less.  I know more children who thumb their noses at vegetables and refuse to eat them.  When I was younger, it was clean your plate or you will just have to be hungry and there would be no snacks.  I can also recall my mom covering my plate and placing it in the refrigerator in case I got hungry later because I refused to eat it the first time around.  Even worse was going to my grandma’s house and having to eat peas in order to get dessert and believe me you wanted dessert at her house.  Children in smaller, poverty stricken countries do not have the luxury of food choices.  They are lucky to get some bread, rice, or crackers and most likely some dirty water depending on where they live.  Every day, almost 16,000 children die from hunger-related issues (bread.org).  Based on that number, one child dies every five seconds.  With the food that American children waste, that would not have to happen. 

All things considered, we as Americans can help stamp out hunger.  Dumpster diving can provide food for those who cannot regularly afford it as well as providing donations to shelters or food banks.  Choosing your meals wisely can help alleviate waste in your home by making sure you only prepare enough for the one meal unless you plan on consuming the leftovers and not throwing them away.  I know that we cannot force people or organizations to help but every little bit helps, one person at a time.  Be an example for your children by trying new things and attempting to finish your food so they learn responsibility for their food choices.  If it helps, remind your children that for everything that they throw away there are hungry children in other countries and even as close as your own city.  Helping each be more responsible about our wasteful tendencies in our own homes can reflect outward onto our community.

 
Works Cited

“Adventures of a first-time dumpster diver,” By Elisabeth Kwak-Hefferan 12 Jan 2012 at 7:01 p.m.

 http://grist.org/food/2012-01-12-adventures-of-a-first-time-dumpster-diver/


Dive! A Film by Jeremy Seifert, Copyright © 2013 http://www.divethefilm.com/facts-about-food-waste.aspx

"dumpster diving." Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 10th Edition. HarperCollins Publishers. 12 Mar. 2013. <Dictionary.com http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/dumpster diving>.

“Food Waste from Restaurants, Caterers, and Grocery Stores” Jan 03 2013 Flashfood and Food Recovery News  

http://flashfoodasu.wordpress.com/2013/01/03/food-waste-from-restaurants-caterers-and-grocery-stores/


“Global Hunger”, http://www.bread.org/hunger/global/


“How To Dumpster Dive, Eat Free & Fight Waste” by Willie Osterweil, November 7, 2012 at 7:43 a.m. 

Monday, March 11, 2013

Journal #5: Dive!

Journal 5 due. Topic: Share your thoughts on the film Dive! to help you narrow down your essay topic.  Would you be willing to dumpster dive?  Have you or someone you know dealt with food shortages or food insecurities?

I honestly do not know if I would ever be desperate enough to dumpster dive as I am a huge mysophobic or otherwise known as a germaphobic.  I am constantly washing my hands or using sanitizer.  If my family ever got to the point where we needed food that bad I would happily send my husband or my nineteen stepson into the dumpster.  My stepdaughter and I would not want anything to do with even touching the dumpster.  After watching the documentary, it did not surprise me that so much food it wasted every day.  The United States is the fattest country in the world and we waste the most food.  The staggering statistic of wasting ninety-six billion pounds of food per year blew my mind, even more so that our waste could feed the entire country of Haiti for five years.  I did not think that grocery stores wasted that much food when it could be donated and frozen to stamp out the expiration date.  The fact that eleven million people go hungry each day saddens me and makes me rethink about portioning meal  prepared to eliminate leftovers that will go into the refrigerator only to be forgotten about then discarded. Preparing and eating smaller, more nutritious portions will help alleviate wasting food and help with a healthy disposition.  Another sad statistic is that forty percent of food waste is from personal homes.  Prepare a meal and take it to a friend or neighbor, share the wealth if you have extra do not throw it out if it can help someone else. The best statement I took from the documentary was "Food is life and should never be wasted."   I do not personally know anyone who has had to even think about dumpster diving.  I have known several who relied on government assistance such as food stamps to provide the food they needed for their families.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

The American Dream

The American Dream

                                    The American Dream can mean an array of things depending on with who one is speaking. The American Dream was defined as the ideals of freedom, equality, and opportunity traditionally held to be available to every American or as a life of personal happiness and material comfort as traditionally sought by individuals in the U.S. (Dictionary.com).  The term most identify in reference to the American Dream is immigration. When the United States was first discovered, many came over as immigrants.  Many immigrants came to the United States and were forced into slavery or indentured servitude to survive.  People from other countries would send younger relatives or elderly family members to the United States to achieve a better quality of life or to save their lives.  However, many immigrants have gained access to the United States illegally. 

Immigrants came from all walks of life and many different countries. Many immigrants came to America to gain a better quality of life but were met with hardships of not being able to find work to support their families.  Men, women and children worked on plantations or in factories as slaves just to ensure food and shelter would be given in return for their work.  Pilgrims were first immigrants in the 1600s and came in search of religious freedoms.  The country’s first immigration station was Ellis Island. On January 1, 1892, the first immigrant processed was Annie Moore, a teenager from County Cork, Ireland.  She had made the nearly two-week journey across the Atlantic Ocean in steerage with her two brothers.  She later raised a family on New York City’s Lower East Side.  In the 17th through the 19th centuries, hundreds of thousands of African American slaves came to America against their will.  (“United States Immigration Before 1965.”)

            A guest speaker, named Mauricio Garcia, which I recently heard was an immigrant from El Salvador in 1983. His family sent him to live in this country at the age of 17 with his 16 year old brother and cousin.  In the early eighties, El Salvador was ravaged by a bitter civil war.  Mauricio stated that the life expectancy for boys aged 16-24 was very low. The war is why his parents chose to send him and his companions away.  Being sent to America saved their lives.  In the journal titled “The Air War in El Salvador” it states, the war became so deadly that President Jimmy Carter cutoff US economic and military aid. As a result of being thrust into America, Mauricio struggled to fit in and learn to speak English.  He claimed, “Teachers who teach English are Saints.”  Also stated was, “Learning another language messes with your confidence.”   Mauricio came to America as a scared, hard-nosed, did not want to learn anything and became a man with dreams and ambitions.  His first job was working in an animal hospital as a volunteer and was excited when he was promoted to “shoveling crap.”  Mauricio exhibits the ultimate American Dreamer in my eyes.
           
Incidentally, human trafficking and illegal immigration happen every day. Most of Americans cannot fathom the number of cases.  An estimated 14,000 to 18,000 immigrants are illegally brought in the United States every year.  Trafficking is the recruitment and transportation of persons within or across boundaries by force, fraud, or deception for the purpose of exploiting them economically.  Victims are sometimes forced to perform lewd acts in return for promises and often those promises are not kept.  Some forced into inexpensive labor in return for letting them stay in the United States. (Trafficking in Persons Report, 2007. U.S. Department of State.) Many illegal immigrants will do anything that is asked of them to avoid being returned to their home country.  Deportation back to their home countries could lead to imprisonment or death.  One of the things the illegal immigrants are looking for is a better way of life and they all want to live the American Dream. 

            In essence, immigrants whether legal or illegal are all looking for a new start in their lives or that of their families.  There is a reason they choose to leave their home countries and move to the United States. We are the home of the free and the brave.  Mauricio Garcia said it so well, “The two best things about living in the United States are Bacon and Milky Way.”  Stop caring what other people think of you and start living your own American Dream.  If someone tells you that you cannot do something, prove them wrong.  There are lessons to be learned everywhere you turn and you have the choice to learn from them or not.  Another phrase from Mauricio Garcia, “We become really good listeners when we are out of options.”  Try listening for a change and you may be surprised what you will learn and it may just help you live your dream. 
  Works Cited

"American dream." Dictionary.com Unabridged. Random House, Inc. 26 Feb. 2013. <Dictionary.com
“Find your Purpose, Live Your Passion” Mauricio Garcia, http://www.facebook.com/events/310659692284633/
“Human Trafficking – Exploitation of Illegal Aliens, http://www.fairus.org/issue/human-trafficking-exploitation-of-illegal-aliens#end Trafficking in

Persons Report, 2007. U.S. Department of State.

“The Air War in El Salvador”, by Dr. James S. Corum (Major, US Army Reserve), Aerospace Power Journal, Summer 1998.
“United States Immigration Before 1965.” 2013. The History Channel website. Feb 26 2013, 11:08 http://www.history.com/topics/united-states-
immigration-to-1965.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Journal # 4: American Dream Essay Ideas

2/26/13: Journal 4 due.  Topic: Share your thoughts on Mauricio Garcia's talk to help you narrow down your American Dream essay topic.  What are your thoughts on immigration, both legal and illegal?

 So many people in the United States of America came here as immigrants.  Illegal immigrants tend to come to our country looking for a better life for themselves and their families as do legal immigrants seeking citizenship.  From the beginning, when our country was founded it started immigration to the "New World."  Irish immigrants came to the United States and many worked as slaves or servants just to survive as did many others from various parts of the world.  Slavery wasn't reserved strictly to any particular race but anyone who needed work and a place to stay.

  Immigration was nothing new to America. Except for Native Americans, all United States citizens can claim some immigrant experience, whether during prosperity or despair, brought by force or by choice. However, immigration to the United States reached its peak from 1880-1920. The so-called "old immigration" brought thousands of Irish and German people to the New World.  (http://www.ushistory.org/us/38c.asp)
Not all Americans welcomed immigrants then nor do they now.  Immigrants of the early days were forced to work as slaves and many were bought and sold like property.  Immigrants served as cheap labor and their owners knew they would work hard to avoid punishment and be able to keep working and living with a roof over their heads.  Some were treated harshly for their misgivings and were whipped or had food withheld. 

In the case of Mauricio Garcia’s story, his family sent him, his brother and cousin to the United States to keep them alive.  It was mentioned that boys around age 16 to 17 did not live long in El Salvador, many were killed.  Mauricio and his family members struggled to survive when they arrived in Florida on their way to New Jersey.  Not knowing how to speak English was a huge challenge for all three boys especially Mauricio.  Mauricio stated, “Teachers who teach English are saints.”  He also said, “Learning another language messes with your confidence.”  The one phrase mentioned that stood out was, “Just because you are comfortable doesn’t mean you are happy.”  It made me laugh when Mauricio said, “The two best things about the United States are: Bacon and Milky Way.”  It spoke volumes when he talked about his first job and how happy he was to get a promotion to “shoveling crap.”  Most Americans would not be happy doing a job that requires them to shovel animal waste but he was.  So when you think your life is rough, think about those people who fought to get here to gain a better quality of life and weren’t lucky enough to be born here.

Monday, February 18, 2013

Digital Media: The Bright Side



Digital Media: The Bright Side

            I found that the documentary touched on many facets of the digital nation.  The fact that our young people spend fifty plus hours in front of some kind of digital media per week is mind-blowing.  The anticipation of our children always reaching for their phone or computer instead of going outside to do a physical activity was unheard of when I was younger.  Many of our youth and adults alike are, “Hooked on Tronics.” (Dr. Gary Small, UCLA)  I argue that digital media can be helpful in our school settings if proper etiquette is taught and utilized.  Many classrooms in Korea have started teaching their students in second grade the proper uses for internet in and out of school.  Major corporations have utilized digital media to aid them in every day operations.


            My step-daughter spends more time texting or chatting on Facebook than she does playing outside.  In my childhood, we had video games but we were made to go outside and play to run off nervous energy, as my mother put it.  Many children suffer from obesity because they sit playing video games and snacking instead of engaging in physical activities like organized sports or even just playing on the playground.  The only time my sister and I spent hours playing video games was when we were trying to beat a level or the whole game.  It gave us bonding time.  Most children lose that bonding time because they would rather do their own thing that involves their electronic devices.  When Dr. Gary Small of UCLA stated that we are “Hooked on Tronics,” it made me laugh because it is so true.  So many individuals, both children and adults, use digital media to keep in touch with distant relatives or friends.  Some would argue that the use of digital media such as texting allows children to be more direct when holding conversations without the fear of reaction from the other person engaged in the conversation.  Of course digital media has seemingly taken over our world, but it isn’t necessarily a bad thing. 

            In the event that children are properly taught how to use the internet, it can be a valuable learning tool.   In Korea, students are learning the proper use of internet around the same time they are taught to read.  Korean second graders are using computers to gain valuable knowledge by allowing them to learn proper etiquette online.  Many schools in the United States use computers in their schools because it allows them access to valuable research tools via the internet.  The usage of the internet and computers within schools has been said to keep the students engaged more than if they attended standard lecture style classes.  Children are encouraged in some cases to partake in webcasts with students from other countries as part of a cooperative learning activity.  If the internet was not available in our schools such activities would not be possible.  In the documentary it showed that some schools distribute a laptop to each student within the school to encourage keeping up with their homework resulting in better grades. 

            Despite most companies limiting the content of internet usage in the office, they use virtual reality to conduct meetings. In January 2010, IBM’s Global Innovation Outlook team utilized a role playing software called Second Life to conduct meetings between national and international locations.  They chose to use this program to cut costs by not having to fly to meetings.  Each person who is supposed to attend customizes an avatar and then joins in on the conference event within the world.  The website offers voice recognition so that members can communicate verbally within the meeting.  It is equally interesting for each member when they create their avatars to see where their mind is going when they choose their features.  Most of the people portrayed in the scene for IBM have never met in person and are in different countries.  I believe that this software and others of its nature are going to become more widely used as a means to save companies money. 

            Generally speaking digital media isn’t a bad as many make it out to be.  If we did not have access to the internet, we would not be able to access valuable research information.  Children having access to digital media can be significant because it can be used for learning new information.  If children are taught the proper etiquette and usage for the internet in and out of school then the likelihood of abuse online is lessened.  It is my opinion that schools using technology such as computers to help their students become more engaged in learning is very effective for their educational development.  Many corporations utilize digital media on a daily basis.  Corporations are more likely to hold virtual meetings than in person because it cuts travel costs significantly. 



WORKS CITED

IBM dives into Second Life

Meeting, collaborating, and brainstorming in a virtual world

Shruti Gandhi, Technology Innovation Manager, IBM
January 19, 2010


Is Generation Y too Hooked on ‘Tronics?
By Daniel Sieburg, posted February 11, 2009 at 1:58pm
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-501464_162-4626122.html

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Journal # 3: Digital Nation



2/12/13: Journal 3 due.  Topic: Share your thoughts on the film Digital Nation to help you narrow down your essay topic.  Are you part of the digital nation?  If so, what has your experience been?  If not, why not?


I found the documentary to be one of truth.  I agree that our society and that of the world is heavily dependant on digital media.  I own a smart phone, as do many others, and it keeps me constantly connected to the internet.  I found it intriguing that Korea teaches the proper use of digital media to first graders.  Teaching the proper etiquette to students around the world would greatly benefit everyone that uses the internet.  So many people abuse the internet and many are malicious with their intent.  I always looking things up on Google, my husband would say, “I am a chronic Googler.”  My phone is always within reach if I am awake.  I can Facebook on the go as well as using other various applications.  The most helpful is my navigation application.  I have lived in Jacksonville almost my entire life and there are still places I am not 100% positive on getting to without directions.  I have heard that excessive cell phone use can cause cancer but are they really studies to support such allegations?  The digital age is one that many people partake in including children.  My step-daughter has a cell phone and an IPod Touch and she is usually texting or surfing the net more often than she would read a book unless it were for school.  If you don’t have a computer or smart phone nowadays you are considered behind the times.  I do believe that is it easy to become addicted to digital media especially video or computer games.  I was once addicted to playing The Sims and would spend hours on end playing with little to no interaction with other people.  I actually had to see a chiropractor for neck and should pain from spending too much time in front of my computer clicking the mouse hour after hour.  On the weekend I could spend all my awake time in front of the computer, even consuming meals while watching my Sims go through their daily lives.  Internet intake should be limited to where it does not interfere with regular daily actives or sleep.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Journal Entry # 2 Reality Television

2/5/13: Journal 2 due.  Topic: Reread the essays regarding reality television on pages 93-110 in your text.  Write a journal response on your opinion of reality television. 

I personally do not like to watch many of the reality television programs that seemingly keep increasing.  I can't sit and watch a program about the "Real Wives" of any city or deciding who you are going to marry by competing against 24-30 others all living in the same house.  Reality television is typically not about real life situations but yet so many are sucked into the shows week after week.  Many people watch so many different reality shows they have a hard time telling what is real and what is not real in the "real" world around them.  Bryant Paul said it best, "The novelty is wearing off."  Every time I turn on the television it seems like there is a new reality show available.  Today's society use reality television to escape their real lives.  We live in a world of voyeurs.  We will sit and watch others making a fool of themselves at the chance to win something or in hopes they might become famous.  The New Statesman blamed not only reality viewers but also participants for the culture of voyeurism. Nearly a year after that article, a Newsweek headline read: "Another reality show, another IQ point disappears."  Mindless television equals mindless people?  The basic needs of reality viewers proved that truth is sometimes scarier than fiction.  Some people like reality television because it makes them feel more important or superior to those they are watching.  Johnny Knoxville's series of shows and movies showcase that someone is willing to watch others purposely humiliate themselves and the empire of "Jackass" is still thriving.  I, like so many others, have sat and laughed at the antics of Johnny and Steve-O and the other cast members as they purposely injured themselves.  Waite and Booker would classify this as "humilitainment," which is the tendency for viewers to be attracted to spectacular mortification.  I don't think that all people watch reality television as a means of escape but as solely for non-judgmental entertainment. 

References and Notes:
Reiss, S., & Wiltz, J. (2004). Why people watch reality TV. Media Psychology, 6, 363-378

Annette T. Rottenburg & Donna Haisty Winchell (2012). Elements of Argument A Text and Reader, Tenth Edition, 3, 93-101.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Gallery Opening, Essay 1



Jennifer Mann
ENC 1102   31st Annual College-wide Photography Competition
Essay # 1 – Gallery Critique (edited to make essay fit within this box, indents show new paragraphs, conclusion starts with Overall)

 “Photography records the gamut of feelings written on the human face, the beauty of the earth and skies that man has inherited, and the wealth and confusion man has created.  It is a major force in explaining man to man.”
Edward Steichen

 Scene: Gallery opening at Kent Campus, expectation: feeling of hope in this year’s photography selections, and view: joy and some shock.  This year’s gallery opening was a drastic change from last year, some good and some bad.  There was a stirring of emotion from some of the viewers of the various works of art and their chosen portrayals.  There were some that showed nature’s true beauty, some that evoked raw feelings due to recent tragic events, and some that played to a more novelty sense of life.  
              John Shippee excelled in the area of portraying nature’s true beauty.  His work “Cemetary Beach” was awe-inspiring.  The use of natural lighting from a storm on the horizon captured the details of the fallen trees with simplistic elegance.  The way that the dead trees lay on the beach is as if they were placed there by a machine, neatly lined up in some areas but then draped over one another is truly majestic.  The color of the sky is a stormy blue with grey and white puffy clouds as if they were painted for the perfect background to the beach.  John Shippee also had “The Coming Storm” on display.  The blue, grey, orange, yellow and white in the sky look as though there were brushed on and meet the ground so effortlessly.  Nature’s fury can be seen if you look very closely within the darkness of the clouds.  I can imagine being on the beach watching the lightning dance off the water and watching this awesome storm rolling in.  The air is probably thick with electricity and the wind is whistling warning all to clear the way of its vicious wrath. 
              “Paralyzed” by Susan Tassin struck a raw nerve within me and I am sure many others upon being viewed.  The recent tragic shooting in Newtown, Connecticut that claimed the lives of twenty children, six adult staff members and the shooter’s own mother makes me wonder why anyone would choose to depict such a violent image.  The sheer terror that is on the woman’s face as a gun is held there is not one I would hope to see on anyone now or in the future.  Seeing this image sparked immediate anger and rage that was almost blinding.  I cannot imagine why anyone would want to depict such an image especially so close to a horrific tragedy.   Using guns in a violent manner is not a form of art in my world, although violent images are widely viewed in many media outlets and are one of the most widely viewed on the internet. 
              “Dark Life Web” by Piere Weber made me think of a trilogy of books I have read recently, “Fifty Shades of Grey” by E L James.  At first glance you see a dream catcher with chains hanging down, upon further inspection the true nature of this photograph comes out.  At the center is a small masquerade mask and the chains actually have little handcuffs attached at their ends, this seems as a bow to the darker side of life or kinkier if you so choose.  Within the books by E L James, the characters are thrust into the BDSM community, but privately and the female role does wear a mask and is restrained with handcuffs.    “Other Bag”, also by Piere Weber, shows a bag of goodies for the naughtier side of life.  Ropes, handcuffs, lingerie all scream for a little fun for the right situation.  It is almost as if this “bag” was tumbled onto the floor in error and a coy smile is to follow the one who discovered it.  I will admit I saw the depicted photos as they truly are and the ploy at which they were trying to get at.  In many cases, your run of the mill every day person could be hiding a “bag” of tricks in the trunk of their car. 
             Daniela Ortiz displayed “Lost in Wonderland”.  Her work showed me the whimsy of a young girl with silky blonde hair and striped tights, who appeared to be lost and looking for her friend in vastness of the forest.  Alice is a character I grew to love as a child and I have seen her depicted as sweet and naive in Disney’s Alice in Wonderland looking for the White Rabbit and then the darker, fighter side in Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland.  This particular photograph depicts Alice as sweet and naïve as does Disney’s version.  I do admire the use of the black and white image for this photograph versus color, because most of us having read the book or seen the movie, know what Alice looks like and her typical wardrobe. 

Overall this year’s gallery opening was spectacular with as many talented artists as there were last year.  The  flow of the works was well presented and organized.  I do feel that some of the photographs should have been taken a different perspective when being chosen by their artists.  I always enjoy viewing artistic creativity and gaining insight into the minds of the artists featured.  I look forward to the next event and what it may hold for personal enrichment.