Showing posts with label school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school. Show all posts
0 comments 09 May 2011

student

For my Humanities class, the assignment called for interviews of complete strangers in order to investigate how different people view happiness. So, I crafted a sign that read “Can I interview you about happiness for a school project,” taped it to a piece of cardboard, sat myself down at the Crazy Mocha in the main branch of the Carnegie Library and waited for potential subjects to submit to my questions.

We arrived nearly the minute the library opened, it was the Sunday of the Race for the Cure- just about a block away from the library- and it was Mother’s Day. The entire place was practically empty. This was just as well, since I had an APA style guide to get my hands on so that I knew how exactly to craft the transcripts. By the time I came back, about an hour had passed since I first put my sign out. I figured it was time to recruit some people. The first two fellows I asked to take part in the study declined. Just when I thought all was lost, a rather elderly woman was between me and my table at Crazy Mocha, so I decided to ask one more person before giving up completely. She said yes. Soon, I had a line at my table. I decided to pace my questions among the waiting throngs.

After about a half hour of interviews, I discovered that the APA Publication Manual does not contain directions on how to format a transcript. We ended up at the Pitt Law Library for a look at the Bluebook Guide for Uniform Citation, which, while primarily used for the formatting of legal documents, is the fallback for the APA style. Finally, I had what I needed and we left Oakland.

The weather was super nice, so I decided to begin work on the porch. I’ll probably be out there for the next couple of days, since my assignment calls for transcription as well as a 20 page analysis of what I found. Yay.

0 comments 20 April 2011

Over the past three days, I have been engaged in a debate with a couple other students about what constitutes a fact. It took place in the discussion board, over a question about how the civil rights movements would have been if lead by Malcom X instead of Martin Luther King. My point was that since Malcom X included violence in his strategies, his style of leadership had less of a chance to appeal to the masses.

One of my fellow students posted a response in which he referenced a page on a website that contained what amounts to an attack on King’s character. The central theme of the page was that King was abusive toward women and had other streaks of violence in his personality. The problem is that the author of the piece provided no proof to back up his claims. In fact, he is the owner of the website. Not only was the piece written in such a way that it presented his claims as fact, but it also made the claim that anyone who didn’t agree with him was only interested in preserving the public perception of King and that questioning his moral integrity is off limits. What’s more, he repeatedly states that his efforts to have his claims published in national media, like USA Today, or the Wall Street Journal were refused. He gives the reason for the refusal as ‘media’ not wanting to spoil the public perception of King.

Everyone is entitled to their opinion. And everyone is entitled to be convinced that that opinion is the truth. However, nobody is entitled to use portions of that opinion as an argument in an academic environment. The opinion may be taken as a whole, and observed as an opinion, which can sustain a claim that someone out there has that particular opinion.

This process is called research. Anyone who is doing research on a topic needs an accurate source of information. Otherwise their argument is pointless and meaningless.

So, when the other student began to offer his criticism on my post to the discussion board, based on this website, I responded by asking him if he had an academic source which he could cite to support his argument. His reply was in the negative, but then offered that I am obviously “…among those that do not wish to tarnish the man's reputation”, even though I said nothing of the sort. But you see, I was questioning the validity of the source and according to the website owner, that puts me in a category of people who “…do not want to see the truth”.

Naturally, I responded with a clarification and a suggestion that my fellow classmate might want to consider familiarizing himself with the process of conducting research. In my response, I provided a couple of links to some research guidelines that Kaplan provides their students (in order to avoid situations like these!). The student’s response was somewhat puzzling, and to some extent, not really surprising. He explained that in the two years that he has been attending Kaplan, he has never had a problem with another student questioning his sources. Additionally, he had the professor’s permission to use the source in the discussion, and he does not have to answer to me at all about his references.

After then explaining that I was only speaking out in defense of academic integrity, he didn’t respond. But another student did. Her poorly constructed reply basically said that she was having a problem with not everything in the world being academically based. Which sounds like her solution would be to base everything on academia. She didn’t mean that, of course. She meant that not everything in the world is academically based. But whatever. She then went on to say that just because someone didn’t want to go through the bother of being peer reviewed and/or subjected to fact checking of any kind, doesn’t mean that it is invalid. She also said that she doesn’t see why I’m running away from considering that King may have had a personality flaw.

Just for the record, I never disagreed with the points of the argument. I disagreed with the source of the argument, which is nowhere near based in fact.

For my own peace of mind, I have requested office hours with my professor to find out what her take on it is. Hopefully, she takes my side in the argument. I’ll keep this post updated with the situation.

The entire exchange is available on my website: http://www.richwertzonline.com/school/factorfiction.htm

Here is the link to the website and the ‘source’ in question: http://www.cstnews.com/bm/racial-issues-facing-christians-today-common-sense-for-today/mlk-martin-luther-king-jr-media-ignoring-the-facts/what-kind-of-man-was-martin-luther-king-jr-shtml

Notice that the website frames this under ‘news’. I have some news, too- and I hope a backward idiot at a university uses this statement as an academic reference: aliens have taken over Europe, the Earth is hallow, the Brooklyn Bridge is for sale, cows speak English and Hitler is alive and well and resides in a house in Buenos Aires.

0 comments 13 April 2011

Shortly after starting on my educational journey, I vowed to not let my personal feelings regarding the literary failings of my fellow students. One of the reasons for this decision was that I didn’t want to hurt anyone’s feelings, since my school blog is known to my peers. My frustration over the lack of writing ability that persists in my school is assiduous, nonetheless. Even at the higher level classes that I’m taking now, these people can not construct a sentence in any form conducive to basic understanding. Reading the newspaper, or a book, watching the news, placing an order for pizza- anything having to do with communication with other people should give some sort of clue to these people about how the English language is constructed. There should be some indication that they can’t write based on the readings we have for class. It should be blatantly obvious that something is seriously wrong with their communication skills.

There are those who make a concerted effort to construct an argument, only to fall short in coordination, punctuation or s-v agreement. I’m not talking about them. At least they are trying and even if they fail to make their point, at least they are writing coherently.

Not that there isn’t help for those who revert to severely informal street talk/MTV cadence. The school has a very helpful incredibly extensive writing support center for people who want to become better writers. If the state of the written word does not improve in the next couple weeks, I may be forced to act inappropriately.

0 comments 23 March 2011

Website, Work, School. Three ends of an impossibly long candle, all burning at the exact same time.

I’ve been working for most of the past week on my Chinese History website to ready it for display as part of the vanity portion of my professional portfolio. Ridding it of redundant links, fixing broken ones, etc. The splash page has been redesigned, which almost always seems to happen, despite having the simplest of goals, none of which having anything to do with the splash page. Since starting school, there has been so little time, if any at all, for it and I felt so neglectful when the Year of the Rabbit started without so much as a mention.

The last term of school hasn’t yet been archived and I’m so far behind in getting that information gathered, let alone the new term. The books for my classes arrived Monday evening with a bang, when the UPS guy decided to knock on the glass storm door, which caused all sorts of racket.

Since my work is contract based, and I’m kept on retainer, actual work is sporadic at best. That said, how do these people always know when I’m swamped with either school work or professional development activities? They only ask me to do something when it is the least convenient for me to do them. Also, there is a sixth sense about them because most of their requests come on the very first day of classes, while only silence is heard in the week long break between classes.

Now that my busy, busy calendar has been laid to bare, I suppose I should get started with it, rather than going on about it, no?