Kelsey's DCA Blog
Thursday, May 3, 2012
My Final Freshman Post
There are three things I want to include in my final blog post as a freshman: My best memory, the most important thing that I have learned this year, and some advice to future freshmen. My best memory as a freshman in high school was getting to watch movies my friends after school in art club. I especially loved it because I got to do it with my friends and hang out with them. I think the most important thing that I have learned this year is to avoid procrastinating your homework--it will hurt you and your grades in the long run. And finally, three pieces of advice to future freshmen: 1.) Respect others so that they will respect you, 2.) Have an open mind, and 3.) Remember that you're never truly alone.
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
My Experience from The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman
In my English class, we recently finished reading The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman. I believe that my experience from reading this novel has impacted and changed me in several different ways. First, it has relinquished my, perhaps subconscious, stereotype that all white people around the time of the Civil War were racist. Gaines did a good job of bringing a subjective point of view to the novel and provided characters that contrast the racial stereotypes. For example, Job, a character in the novel, was a poor white man who helped Jane and Ned, two black children, and sheltered them. Another way that the novel has affected me is that it has opened my eyes to the idea that freedom isn't just about being free from the restraints held by other men, but also being free from restrictions of rights and free from judgments.
Monday, February 27, 2012
Yeah.. I'm White. So what?
In my English class, we are reading The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman by Ernest J. Gaines. We were told to write about an example of a stereotype portrayed in the novel and show how that stereotype can be proven as false. I have chosen to write about the stereotype that claims that all white southerners are racist and despise black people. Although it is true that there were a lot of white southerners who hated black people in that time period, this is not true for every white person. For example, there is a white man named Job who helps the main characters, Jane and Ned, and brings them to his home. He even feeds them and lets them stay there for the night despite the fact that he is a white southerner, that Jane and Ned are black children, and that he and his wife are barely able to support themselves. There is yet another case of this hospitality toward the two children when a plantation owner named Mr. Bone lets them stay there and even gives them a job despite their young age and lack of education and experience.
Sunday, January 22, 2012
Eragon: Paolini's Best
Monday, December 5, 2011
Mission Impossible: Socialism
In my English class, we have read the novel Animal Farm by George Orwell. One important theme depicted in this novel is the concept that maintaining socialism in any community is an impossible task. The idea behind socialism is that everyone gets a fair and equal amount of materials, money, and work. Socialism is also defined as no one having a higher social rank than anyone else, and this is where everything becomes complicated. For a community to function properly, there has to be organization. For there to be organization, someone has to establish this organization. Whoever this is will inevitably have a higher social rank than the others, and thus have more power. We see many examples of this whole phenomenon in the novel Animal Farm as the animals of the story try to establish socialism but end up failing as the pigs, with their greater intellect and cunning minds, take over and form a communist community.
Monday, November 21, 2011
I Am Thankful for My Family and Friends
This Thursday is Thanksgiving, and it has inspired me to think about what I am thankful for this year. I am actually thankful for many things, such as our successful move from Alabama to Tennessee. However, I think I am most thankful for my friends and family whom have supported me throughout my life and made me a better person. They have always been their for me during the most difficult of times; I'm truly grateful that I have them.
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
My Analysis of Career Day 2011
Today, my school hosted something called Career Day, where we liistened to several different topics relating to a specific career lectured by people who specialize in that particular career. The four career lectures i chose to attend were: business, law, engineering, and nursing. Of the four, my favorite was probably business. I liked it because business and finance has been a career I have been interested in; I have always favored the practical and direct style of thinking that is usually required in math and have always preferred to keep everything, from my time to my possessions, neatly organized. Something interesting that I learned, which I had never put much thought into, was the concept of how the different levels of authority were "layered"--such as, how there are managers of small groups in most businesses and how those groups were put in larger groups governed by managers of higher power, and so on.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
