Manny and Henry’s Update 2/28

This whole time in digital storytelling we have been changing our ideas but, i think today we finally have the tools to finish our project. So we found a way to import YouTube video onto the the desktop (after a whole lot of trial and error). I think that from now on, we’ll be able to actually work on the project instead of trying to learn how to do everything. We plan on continuing our original project and will compile videos from YouTube into a commercial for Michael Jordan sneakers in the next few weeks.

Today, Manny also worked on a written piece that will accompany his digital project. He’s decided to write a short piece about Michael Jordan’s rise to fame and will trace his trajectory from underdog to superstar athlete. He is still working on a rough draft, but it looks very promising. We just have to figure out how to tie this paper into the digital project.

Update: Amanda and Isabella

It’s Isabella here and today Amanda and I have been trying to organize our project so that we know what our next step is. I have now decided that I would like my project to be a slideshow where we will be showing videos and pictures of rowing. Our main pictures and videos will be from the U.S Women’s Rowing Team, Poughkeepsie High School Rowing, and the Vassar College Regatta.  We also came up with interview questions that I will be asking my coaches and other rowers. We also found a hilarious video of a rowing boat flipping, which many rowers will say is their least favorite part of rowing because of the icy cold water.

I am looking forward to finishing my interviews with my coaches and teammates so their voices, in addition to my own, will be heard throughout this project. We will be back in two weeks, hopefully with some sample interviews.

Food for thought: “Not everybody wins, and certainly not everybody wins all the time. But once you get into your boat and push off, tie into your shoes and bootstretchers, then “lean on the oars,” you have indeed won far more than those who have never tried.” – Anonymous

Quandaries

The first thing i did was listen to Radiolab and how they were talking about escape as in how to escape from problems and stuff like that. Then we discussed about quandaries and how peoples reactions are different no matter of their sex or age. So now I’m going to ask people different quandaries and make them into a podcast.

Update.

Hi there, fellow human beings.

Joe and I are still working on our latest project, W.W.S.D. We have taken most of your opinions for the main question. Some of you we gave time to think, while others we asked spontaneously. I explained as to why that was in the last update. I also wrote down some new question for the refection that will be also in the video. Today we did get far.

Later,

Hanna

quotes

These are some quotes Shemona likes that she wants to include in her video:

if you dont like me,someone else will,if your not missing me someone else is.if your dont love me someone else will.  (-drake)

 

you cant lose what you never had,you cant keep whats not yours, and you cant hold onto something that does not want to stay. (-drake)

 

you said i love you and i said it too. the only difference is i dont lie to you (-drake)

 

dont be flattered that he misses you, he should miss you however, he’s still the same person who broke your heart remember,the only reason he can miss you is because he’s choosing everyday not to be with you. (-drake)

 

i got a small circle circle ,i’m not with different crews. we walk on the same path but we got on different shoes.(-drake)

 

i just kinda do what i feel. i never knew what lane i would fill. i didnt even really contemplate that far down the road. i just started having fun.once i put that into perspective it was like everything just got easier for me,because i no longer wanted to fit in anybody’s box. i just wanted to be shemona (-nicki minaji)

 

a woman has the last word in any argument, anything a man says starts a new argument (-nicki minaji)

Cool History Resources

The Zinn Education Project website has compiled an awesome list of resources for teaching history:

http://zinnedproject.org/teaching-materials/list-of-resources

Resources include nonfiction books, fiction books, articles, audio, movies, websites, teaching guides, and more!

I really appreciate the way these sources are oriented towards a “people’s history” and emphasize teaching history through a lens of social justice. This site is a great place to look for “hooks” that would grab students’ interest at the beginning of a history lesson, or even for books or films that could be central to a teaching unit. Also, you can explore the resources by theme or time period, which is super helpful!

 

Shemona

Hi this is the 4th time i have been here and so far my project is going really well.

this song that i will be singing …well lets just hope it goes good. i hope that when you guys

here my poem and the song that my perspective of you guys being the kids in the program

who knows me changes so you can think of me being more than a MEAN and OBNOXIOUS

person, because i really do have  heart.

– shemona <3 <3

 

FIGMENT–“Write yourself in”

http://figment.com/

This website is a portal for all kinds of readers and writers. It has everything from essay contests to book previews. Anyone over the age of 13 can sign up to be a member–and its free! Once you’ve created an account, you can submit your work to contests, order the latest recommended books, read other members’ work, and more! Fiona likes the website because she can find all different kinds of books that she likes. She just types in a genre and receives entire lists of recommended books. There are also tons of opportunities for her to share her work and read other members’ essays, stories, film screenplays, and poems! Check it out!

Time for Writing

Tom Romano’s and Donald Murray’s chapters on writing both made me think back to my earliest academic writing experiences, in elementary school. When I was in second grade, my small, rural public school began a system that they called, creatively enough, “Writer’s Notebooks.” Basically, everyone had to buy a notebook, and they had to write in it. That was pretty much the whole thing. I don’t think there were many requirements to the project–as I recall, we simply had to write, and from time to time the teacher would collect the notebooks to see how we were doing. If we had written something we wanted to keep private, we could fold the page over (I remember thinking “yeah, right,” and watching what I wrote on folded pages too, but still, the option was there). In short, the only goal was to get us writing. When we got the notebook back, there’d be maybe a few spelling corrections, but mostly just reactions to the small events of our second grade lives, and questions to push us furtheron our topics.

I guess they liked the results, because the program continued through the rest of my time at the school. The school began provided the notebooks, which would we decorate at the beginning of the year. We were supposed to write for 20 minutes in class, anything at at all, progressing to 30 minutes as we got older. We were supposed to do the same at home every night. I found I loved doing this. I started off in second grade writing about my day to day life, my ideas for the future, etc, but from third grade on discovered that I loved writing stories and poems. I don’t think I would have the interest I have in writing as an adult if not for this early, forced daily work. It would not have occurred to me, as an eight or nine year old, to make time to write, so my teachers did it for me.

This seems to me to be exactly what Romano and Murray recommend in their essays. From Romano, to write constantly and to write everything, in order to become comfortable working in diverse genres. And Murray, right in his opening, forcues on simply making the time to write, unplanned and comfortably. This seems so obvious–how are we to know what interests us if we cannot explore, and how are we to become comfortable with different tones if we are always trapped in a single, academic form? Further, how are we to think of writing as a means of communication, of expression, if we only ever encounter it as a rote task, a way to respond to basic questions?

And yet, when I think beyond my elementary school years, to middle and high school, and then to the middle and high school classrooms I observe now, and even to some of my own college classes, it is so rare that older students are simply given time to write. Why is this? Students do not naturally lose creativity or curiosity and they get older unless they are taught to. But after elementary school, the only times that I remember being given the space to simply write were a couple elective courses late in high school. During my observations now, a few years later, I have never seen students given time to write, or assigned daily journaling. This confounds me, because it seems like an equally important, if not more important, time to be writing. If, as children, we are exploring, then as adolescents we are discovering. We are getting a hold on our own voices, on who we want to be and what we want to do as we reach adulthood. Therefore, this is an essential time to be developing a strong writing voice–but where is the space to do that? Perhaps I’m mistaken, and it is just my limited experiences that make me think students no longer have the kind of required free-writes I had as a child. But if not–why? Why does this open reading and writing space disappear when it’s needed most? Is it a lack of time due to test preparation, or basic skill reinforcement? Could twenty minutes be found to work on something that helps even nervous students get comfortable with the basic process of writing, of not worrying about errors? I know this would’ve helped me in middle and high school.

 

 

Writing to Create Meaning

At the beginning of this course we talked about who considered themselves readers and writers. I said I was a reader, but not a writer. And yet I write everyday! It seems a little silly in some ways. But part of what we talked about that first class was intention when you read and write, that being purposeful and thoughtful were what ‘made it count.’ I don’t completely agree with that statement when it comes to reading, but I think it’s huge in writing. I wrote papers for school and notes to myself, but nothing that mattered much to me. I was focused much more on the ideas I was writing about than using writing as a process to find meaning.

Now, halfway through the semester, I would call myself a writer (albeit, not a particularly good one). The reason for this change is that I’ve really been forced to use many different styles of writing quite regularly. I have to write blog posts every class for two of my courses. I never know what I could possibly have to say until I sit down and slowly find myself responding. I have to write a one to two page analysis paper every week for my religion class and every two weeks I get a new creative assignment to slave over in my english class. Then I have the typical larger papers due around midterms and finals! What I’m constantly finding is that writing is incredibly difficult for me. And what I’ve found most true–particularly in the english class–is that writing is how I find meaning. I can’t possibly find what I’m grasping at until I hit upon a word that seems to capture something that I didn’t even know I was trying to say. And that just leads to more words that take me somewhere–often somewhere completely different from where I thought I thought I might go.

My point is that the chapters in our textbook this week really resonated with me because they stressed how the process of writing–which can really only be taught by someone who participates in the writing process regularly–is really what creates meaning. That means meaning in the content of what’s being said, but also in the concepts and presentations used to express it. I think that’s what makes writing such a good tool in the classroom. It just naturally evokes meaning of all kinds that we can always use to examine and learn.