Little Writers: Big Ideas

November 8, 2008

College Scholarships

Filed under: Uncategorized — conove25 @ 9:09 pm

Brave New World of Digital Intimacy

Filed under: Uncategorized — conove25 @ 8:55 pm

The one thing that I have completely agreed with from my own experience is when Mark Zuckerberg talks about getting to know a person through things like facebook or twitter.  I have met a few people through online chats, people from around the country and even out of the country.  Though most people would warn you not to talk to people online, because you don’t know who you’re talking to, I have met some interesting people.  Usually for what most people warn you about, you can tell when a person is a fake and isn’t who they say they are.  And because I have been aware of who is real and who is fake I have made some good friends with people I met online.

Zuckerberg is right, that by reading the repeating nature of people’s statuses in Twitter or Facebook you get a sense of who they are.  You begin to understand what they see as important, and just their daily habits.  Even in a place as personal as Facebook people still feel a sense of anonymity and open themselves up more to others.  That sense of anonymity gives people a chance to let go of their inhibitions and open up to others, for which I have come closer to some friends hundreds of miles away than those next door.

Beginning Teachers

Filed under: Uncategorized — conove25 @ 8:14 pm

The Last Lecture

Filed under: Uncategorized — conove25 @ 8:10 pm

Education Today and Tomorrow

Filed under: Uncategorized — conove25 @ 8:08 pm

November 6, 2008

Plagiarism at its Finest!

Filed under: Uncategorized — amandao2888 @ 7:42 pm

The Vocabulary of Comics

Filed under: Uncategorized — conove25 @ 6:50 pm

 

I personally am a huge fan of comics, and have been reading them for a while now.  The ideas that Scott McLoud writes about in his article I find intriguing and very much on point for the importance of comics.  Often many people, like McLoud says, write comics off as a child’s entertainment and that there is little to no merit given to them.  What so many people forget is that there are actual professionals who not only take pride in what they are doing, but also put great thought into what they are writing or drawing.  Obviously they are written for entertainment purposes, but so are any classic paintings or pieces of fiction, and cartoons can have as strong a message as either.

I think in today’s world so many people look down on comics as either a book full of superheroes, or the child’s section of the newspaper between the news and the crossword.  Most people don’t take a moment to look at what goes into creating a comic and resign them to the stereotype.  As McLoud writes, a face alone can be made of just two dots and a line but the artist chooses how to represent the faces as icons for the majority of people.  An artist decides how to make the character visually pleasing or displeasing depending on how they want the viewer to see them, and what techniques are best to do so.  Comic artists must also be writer’s themselves, for while they rely on writers for dialogue, the artist is the actual narrator.

The artist depicts the story, they illustrate the scene, the characters, and it is on their shoulders that the action must occur and flow.  In any normal story, the writer tells the reader what happens, but not so in a comic the artist must show this.  That isn’t to say the writer has it any easier, and their role in comics is easy.  So often there can be hundreds of characters in a comic at once, and it is to the writer to capture each individual voice.  Likewise, there are times when the writer must explain through speech the action the artist illustrates, having characters say what they’re doing.  Most often, having a character say they are walking across the street for a specific reason would seem redundant but it can’t seem to be to the reader.

So much goes into the development and creation of a comic, and a large amount of time can be used up on one panel alone.  As McLoud says, “comic artists have a universe of icons to choose from” and the selection alone takes time and attention for what is just the right icon (McLoud 58).  I have always loved reading comics, and have used them for inspiration on my own pieces of fiction.  I read them for their entertainment because there are times you want to fly off with a superhero and save crime or laugh at an extra large cat.  But every comic has some sort of following and many are as timeless as Shakespeare’s plays and da Vinci’s Mona Lisa.

The Secret World of Lonelygirl15

Filed under: Uncategorized — amandao2888 @ 5:39 pm

“She is a high school girl with swooping eyebrows, boy problems, and a webcam willing to listen. The room behind her could be anywhere in America- there’s a pink floral-print bedspread, a half-dozen stuffed animals, and a framed picture of a rose on the wall.”

 

            This description sums up the scene for the youtube production of Lonelygirl15. While many seemed baffled and disgusted that Lonelygirl15 was indeed a fictional plot and not a real life soap opera drama, I was intrigued by its ability to fool the internet world. Creator Mesh Flinders depicted his character Bree (played by an actress), as an innocent teenage girl who confided to the youtube world her arguments with her parents and boy troubles. Many viewers became intrigued by Bree, and wrote to her about their own problems, hoping Bree would guide them through their mishaps and troubles. When the web world found out that Lonelygirl15 was indeed a fictional plot, some were outraged while others did not seem to mind if she was real or fake. After reading The Secret World of Lonelygirl15, I indeed admired Flinders for taking a huge risk and creating these mini-webisodes, and bringing a whole new light to reality on the web. He in fact fooled the world by creating such a brilliant concept, and did so for months. It amazes me how naïve people can be in the sense that they believe that everything they see must be real.

Why Let Our Students Blog?

Filed under: Uncategorized — amandao2888 @ 2:33 am

November 5, 2008

Qualified Teachers

Filed under: Uncategorized — amandao2888 @ 5:43 pm

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