Thursday, November 17, 2016

THE LAST BLOG

Crazy to think the semester is already coming to an end. Seems like we just started and I just wrote my first blog. Nonetheless, Its been a fun journey, writing these blogs.

Blogging was probably my most enjoyable genre that we explored this semester. Blogging is about just writing whatever is on my mind that (somewhat?) relates to the prompt. I don't have to worry about being academically correct and worrying that my rant is ever so slightly going off topic from the prompt. Most writing assignments consist of me staring at my computer screen for 10 minutes, typing out a sentence, look at sentence, and then delete sentence and repeat. But not my blogs. (They are actually so easy to write that I could write them an hour or two before they were due :D) They are nice quick and easy responses where I feel I get to show myself both with what I decide to talk about and visually how I formatted my blog. Its interesting to go back and look over my blog and see how close I got to creating that identity that I originally tried to portray.

And yea. Blogs were my favorite genre. I don't know what else to say other than I'm just doing this blog cause I feel like I'm going to need all the extra points I can get after I see the grade I get on my ethnography.

Turns out one more RWS class wasn't as bad as i thought it was going to be...


Thursday, October 27, 2016

Blog 10: Research Ideas



Its kinda bitter sweet that its already time to start the research paper Professor Flewelling has been talking about all semester. Sweet because that means the semester is past the halfway mark and the end is finally in view but bitter because well...I have to write a research paper. Just from reading and talking about the paper this sounds like it will be my most involved research paper. I think this I have only had to write one other research paper since my freshman year and even that one wasn't as in depth as this one seems to be.

I am not very sure what discourse community I want to observe and research about. I have a couple in mine but I will talk about the one I want to do, but I'm not sure if I will be able to get it to work. I'm thinking of exploring how landscape photographers of Instagram communicate with their followers. I want to know why they are posting. Is it to get feed back on their work? To get more followers? Or do they just like to share their pictures with others? Now that I'm thinking about it maybe I should change my focus to landscape photographers in general and they different genres they use to showcase their artwork. I have been involved in the photography world for a few years now and would love to see what kind of answers I could come up with in this research. For me photography has just been a hobby. I use a picture sharing website and have an Instagram but have never really been that serious about getting my pictures out there to show others. I think I would like to be more active in the photography realm and this research would give me a good glimpse of how I could go about doing so. The big question I hope to answer is why do other photographers feel the need to share their work in the first place.

Hopefully after my conference tomorrow, Professor Flewelling will help me guide my research in the good direction with photography to make this interesting for me.

One of my favorite pics I have taken :-)


Monday, October 17, 2016

Blog 9: Service Community



Marabelli brings up some very interesting points in his article, "Learning to Serve." In it, Peter Drucker asserts that "interactive service workers lack the necessary education to be 'knowledge workers'" (Marabelli 145). This is a very generalized statement that I do not agree with. Service work is not a job that everyone can handle. I have worked a few food industry jobs and I never want to go back to. I tried it and can say I have seen what that industry is like and know its not for me. My job now as well as those summer jobs all strongly focus on customer service. If you've never had to deal with customers in a direct face-to-face interaction before consider yourself lucky. The people that I have met in the service industry, for the most part, are all people that i would say could be "knowledge workers," but had something holding them back. For a lot of service workers I think the thing holding them back would be furthering their education so they can be "knowledge workers." This isn't necessarily a drawback for them, but being a service worker is more of just a job to have while to work to become something more. I have many friends who are servers and waiters who I know will someday be "knowledge workers." Does having that particular job make them any less of who they are or who they will become? No, I don't believe so. Maybe to others who didn't have to work as hard as my friends do in order to have a better job might think so. Sure there are some service workers who just aren't meant to become "knowledge workers" but to say that all service workers cant become such, is a bit of a stretch. 

Monday, October 3, 2016

Blog 7: My Identity Kit



I used to hate talking to new people. Because of that, my first two years of high school were pretty rough. I was suddenly at new school full of people I didn't know and I sure in hell wasn't trying to go out of my way to meet new people. I was very reserved and kinda just kept to the small group of friend I did have and myself. 

But one day I decided I wanted more. I pushed myself to go out of my comfort zone and found a new group of people to be around through some mutual friends. Everything was great and I finally started to open up and then I had to leave that group of friends when we all went off to different colleges.

And then it seemed I was back where I started. That timid kid that always kept to himself. But fortunately living in the dorms my freshman year forced me once again to step out of that comfort zone and talk to people. It was hard at first but eventually I finally felt comfortable again talking with people and being in new social situations. 

I even had built up my confidence so much that I got a job on campus. When I applied I had no idea customer service was going to be so highly stressed. Dealing with strangers in a professional manner at work was a whole new level of social interactions that I was not ready for. Luckily, when I suck it up and toss myself into those situations I actually aren't that awkward as I think I am.

Its crazy writing this and seeing how far I have come as a person. I feel super comfortable in social situations but still have times where I feel a little uncomfortable and try to work on it. I have had new people that I have met tell me that they think I am a really social and talkative person which is crazy to me because I know how hard it used to be for me just a few years ago. Just never know whats gonna come out when you fake it well enough

Sunday, October 2, 2016

Blog #6 - Discourse Communities and Cost of Affiliation




If you would have asked me which college I wanted to go to back when I was a senior in High School I definetly wouldn't have said SDSU. Having been born and raised just 25 minutes from campus, I wanted to venture out and get away from my parents like every other high school senior. When college announcements came out and the only school I got into was SDSU, I was ehh not to excited....

Man was I wrong. Attending San Diego State has easily been the best thing that has happened to me. My parents let me dorm my freshman year, which is something I wanted to experience and needed to have. Since being here I have met some pretty awesome people, experienced things I never would have thought of, and have learned A TON about myself. SDSU has provided me with so many opportunities to ready myself for a career after graduation while also making me a way better person. 

And the whole being "too close to home" thing is was a true blessing in disguise. If I was sick of eating at the Habit or making my own food I could just get on the 15 and be home in no time to have some of my mom's cooking. At first I rarely went home and got my personal space that I originally wanted but since then I have accepted my two communities I so closely live in: SDSU and my academics, and my family back home in Poway.

After reading, "Why Poor Students Struggle" I am beyond blessed to have parents who have unconditionally supported me both financially and emotionally through my college experience. Without their support I would no where near the person I have become. I have friends who struggle financially and going to school and its hard to seem have to struggle through so much when I got it so easy. For me, I didn't have to "exchange your old world for a new world," as Madden put it, but more had to find a balance between my two worlds. 

Monday, September 26, 2016

Blog #5: Discourse Community

I needed a picture so here's something I took this summer :D


All those JSTOR and Op-Eds, I forgot we did blogs. Thank goodness too cause blogging is so much easier than trying to meme a JSTOR article.

Professor Flewelling called Swales' piece a "stiff" read, so I wasn't looking forward to try and get through it. I probably had to read every sentence over a few times and still not really understand it but thats okay cause we talked about discourse communities in class on Monday.

From my understanding based on class on Monday, a discourse community is more than just in the intended audience. It is more of a specific group of people who have developed their own way of communicating in order to achieve a common goal. I liked Professor's analogy she always uses about doctors. Doctors taking and then sharing their SOAP notes could be considered a discourse community. A discourse community could be a social group such as my group of friends, or it could be a professional group such as how I would communicate with my coworkers and managers at work.

Swale came up with six characteristics to help identify a group as a discourse community:

  1. "A discourse community has a broadly agreed set of common public goals"
  2. "A discourse community has mechanisms of intercommunication among its members." 
  3. "A discourse community uses its participatory mechanisms primarily to provide information and feedback." 
  4.  "A discourse community utilizes and hence possesses one or more genres in the communicative furtherance of its aims."
  5. "In addition to owning genres, a discourse community has acquired some specific lexis." 
  6. "A discourse community has a threshold level of members with a suitable degree of relevant content and discoursal expertise." 
The group I am going to analyze is my coworkers and managers. On any given day at work I will communicate on the phone, over text, written daily logs, verbally in person, and verbally with a radio. We meet the first criteria, being we are all trying to the job done (i.e. make sure everything is ready/clean) As for the second criteria, I'm not entirely sure what "mechanisms of intercommunication" means but I taking it as multiple forms of communication which we also have at my work. I communicate with coworkers at work "primarily to provide information and feedback." The fourth characteristic Swale give is a mouthful wow. I think this one is similar to #3, saying a discourse community has to have different styles/forms of communicating. Swale calls "lexis" as "community-specific abbreviations and acronyms." At my job we abbreviate all the time to communicate in a quicker way. We also have a very formal technical way of communication with our radios. As for the last characteristic, we are always loosing and getting new people so we always have a balance of experts and novices who are familiar with how communicating at work is done. Based on these characteristic, I do believe my coworkers and I are apart of our own discourse community.  

Sunday, September 11, 2016

Blog 4: Opinion Writings

I've never read an op-ed or JSTOR article but really hoping they are easy to read cause this is the last thing I wanna be doing on this beautiful Sunday afternoon. Here goes nothing....

Me every time I write these blogs

The first op-ed I read was Emma Rollers, "Why This Election Feels Never­Ending." The next op-ed I read was Paul Waldman's "Trump's history of corruption is mind-boggling. So why is Clinton the supposedly corrupt one?" Despite my little interest in politics, for my third op-ed I kept the election topic going and read "Donald Trump's bet: We are all chumps." All three writings was easy to follow yet they still manage to have a formal and profession feel to it. Op-eds do exactly as one would expect: voice the author's opinion on a particular subject. I found reading these to way easier than Devitt's writing. It almost seemed like the op-ed pieces we blogs in a way. I feel the author of op-ed connects more to its audience because it is filled with so many emotional appeals. The only downside to writing op-eds is that they are geared toward an audience that shares the same opinion as the author. Okay there might be a few people who read op-ed they don't agree with but I think the majority of people will read the title and decide if they agree and want to keep reading or look for another piece. 

Having just watched the first episode of Stranger Things yesterday, when I saw a JSTOR article about that I had to read it: Liz Tracey's "'Stranger Things' and the Psychic Nosebleed." The other two I read were Kimberly Fain's "Viral Black Death: Why we must watch citizen videos of police violence" and Livia Gershon's "Where American Public Schools Came From." While still preaching a main opinion like the op-eds, the JSTOR article varied quite differently in structure and format. These articles left out most of the pathos that dominated the other opinion writings and instead were packed full of facts from history, references to other writings, and a logically formatted argument. It could have just been the content matter but I enjoyed reading the JSTOR article more than the op-eds. I usually don't care for reading academic pieces but the JSTOR article have a good balance of having a informal feel but still coming off as scholarly and knowledgeable authors.