Thursday, November 20, 2008

Presentations

This week in class we started doing presentations today, on Wednesday. I thought I'd write a little about what I thought. First off, I was really impressed with the professional style of the presentations. It was obvious that everyone was trying to speak clearly (with a little exception made for Taylor since she only had 4 minutes to present), and everyone's projects were very informative and interesting. And I am going to say right now, that after Kayvon's presentation, I definitely plan on flossing tonight. I'm not going to turn down an extra few years. I also now have an idea of how short 5-7 minutes is. I was planning on reading my entire essay, which is about 4 pages long. I think that might take a bit more time than I actually have, so these presentations also helped me plan my own. All in all--I look forward to more on Friday!

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Class this Week

I thought the exercise we did on Wednesday was pretty informative. I think our group had a pretty good idea comparing and contrasting essays and speeches, since both are kind of similar, yet at the same time very different. Essays are a one short deal, make your points, make your conclusion, and hope you convinced your reader. Speeches, on the other hand, can emphasize points more than once without people thinking you are being redundant, since you can change your voice inflection  and the way you are saying the point. It is a much more personal interaction, whereas in an essay the writer and the reader are entirely separate. But then again both are long pieces of written writing (although one is performed) that are meant to be persuasive and informative. 

Monday, November 10, 2008

My Chosen Genre - The Essay

I know that we just did essays, but this time I am writing a completely different kinds of essay. My last one was very informative and scientific, but this one will be more creative and, of course, call for change. 

The kind of essay I am describing is sometimes called a Descriptive Essay, which means there is a lot of descriptions of the setting, and of people. Also, there is a lot of use of metaphors and similes and often is a personal story.

A lot of different kinds of people write these essays - we read a few of them for class a few weeks ago. Also, like I brought up in class, one example is Jamaica Kincaid's "A Small Place." Mostly the reason for writing them is to call for social change (lik Kincaid's), or to bring attention to something not many people know about or realize. They are often published in literary magazines, and are sometimes able to reach a wider audience that way. 

I have a lot of freedom in this genre. There are so many kinds of essays--I can really write whatever I want however I want to. I am choosing to write it to bring attention to an issue that I find important that most people never think about. I am bringing in a lot of personal stories to make it interesting and more real for the reader. 

Sources: Along with our in class resources and course packet, I read an essay called "How to say nothing in 500 words."

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Assignment #3

For my last assignment, like I've been talking about, I want to do something more creative. So I think I would like to write a short story/creative essay about what happened to ASD people after they leave high school. I think I'd like to write about three examples that I know about: 1) Dan - mildly MR, ~age 25, works as a janitor and lives with his mother; 2) Jamie - severely disabled, ASD, age 17, unable to work, lives with his mother; 3) an example from a group home/insitution (I don't know anyone personally); 4) Ariel and Christine - twins, both severly disabled, ASD, given up by parents, live with foster parents, ~age 6. Basically I want to write about something people don't normally think about--the fact that some of these people can't take care of themselves and are a huge burden to their parents and to society, really. I don't have a solution, but I really feel like people don't realize how big a problem this is.