Featured videos: language, literacy, writing

Reading Together

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Author: Jazmin Gomez

Pull the Lever, Kronk!

Pull the Lever, Kronk!

 

Oh, Kronk, such a great character. Ha. I think we have all taken Kronk’s great repetition of syntax in our essays throughout the years. Especially high school essays. Oy. Speaking of high school…. remember when teachers would tell us that the college professors were going to be such a-holes and not bestow mercy upon us? Riiiggghhhhtttttt. *Kronk voice*.

I was in AP English classes for the last two years of high school, and we were taught MLA. No other form. No APA, or other fancy abbreviation styles. We were told again and again that we had to sound like the dudes who wrote the U.S Constitution, or else we’d fail in life. Of course, the university expectations are the same, however, there is so much more freedom to writing–a term I didn’t think I’d use when writing “formal” essays.

In most of my classes, the ones that aren’t English classes, the use of MLA is most common. In my Latin American Studies class last year, I wrote the most basic paper ever, and I got an A. My point is that those types of classes are much easier to hinder the formality of your writing. The professors don’t expect the hard words to be expressed on the paper, which I believe is less rigorous than that of high school. I mean, of course, I had classes where I was like “Well, I have to write about race and gender…how the fuck do I write that?” Oh yeah. And one more thing that kinda blew me away from the differentialities of high school and college writing was research papers.

Research papers. Dear. Lord. The most difficult thing about research papers is looking up the shit. Do I want to spend my precious time researching about the Guatemalan peninsula and the Tikal architect? Yeah, I was interested in that only because of my heritage. Ha. But…I wasn’t interested in putting up with the research. Those papers are the most popular form of essays from the “common” classes.

I was blessed to have been in Kelly Candelaria’s class because while she had to go through MLA, she made me realize that the point I want to make across to the reader is something I control. I control what I say, and I have the freedom to incorporate the evidence that attains the knowledge of my point. I know it’s the principle of basic research papers, but that class was a big epiphany.

And lately, I’ve been pissed at journalists because sometimes I don’t understand what they’re saying. It makes me feel like I can’t read, and that they have to dumb down the information for me, but in all honestly, the media needs to wipe that “smartass rhetoric”.I’m like, “No, that big word doesn’t belong there, stop flaunting! get through with the message!” Sigh. Not like I can change it….yet…

 

Anyways, that’s a big transition I think, is the research papers. And I think that it’s ok to not be so formal–well not messy either–but at least have a voice. Because then we’ll be sounding like Kronks for the rest of our lives.

 

We are all Kronks. I totally don’t/will never deny it

Writing is Art

Writing is Art

I love to free write. I’ve done it since I was in middle school, though now I don’t write as much as I use to. People ask how I can write outside of school essays–for them, it’s hard to write a title on the damn paper. I would just shrug my shoulders. I never found it necessary to really state my reason for loving something.

My theory of writing is passion. Yes. Passion. Cheesy af, but that’s ok. Because it works for me. There have been many things in my short life that I did not want to write about. Did I want to write an essay about Andrew Jackson on my AP exam that Tuesday morning? Hell. No. But I wrote it with a passion, because at that moment, I knew that if I wanted to pass this exam, I needed to write a good essay. (I didn’t pass). But oh well. No, that passion sparked because the writing came from me, and the information came from me. That what really helps me.

If you’re going to write a paper about why x=12, then write it with passion. You have to breathe it–meditate on why x=12, and the words will flow endlessly, because if you do just that, you’ll reach the limit of the amount of pages your paper is supposed it be, and you still haven’t said everything you had to. That is the best part. You think in the very beginning that you have nothing to say about a pathetic paper, but when you find one tiny thing to talk about, there will be an overflowing power that won’t make you stop writing.

Key terms that I can come up with when I write are: music. Ah, yes I have to listen to music as I write because if I don’t my brain will…die. Ok, another term is connection. And this is something that I completely agree with the reading of this week. I almost jumped up and down because I was so excited. In section 1.0, it says, “Writers are always doing the rhetorical work of addressing the needs and interests of a particular audience, even if unconsciously.” Amazing. We want to connect with an audience who will understand us and who will be like, “Yes! They get me! They understand me! I’m not the only one!” As a reader, it’s great to find a writer that gets you.

Now shifting the position, you being the writer, you conjure up ideas for people who are open to those ideas, and for people who have thought of those ideas as well. That is our audience. My free write stuff, if I were to ever publish, I would love a young adult audience–those who are young at heart as well because, I know for a fact that I will be reading that genre for the rest of my life. I will be living my life as a teen in high school dating an alien when I’m seventy-four years old because the book has allowed me to.

I’m so grateful that I found a method that works for writing essays rather than one that makes me want to pull my eyelashes out.

Even if it’s the most stupidest subject on the planet, make it a passion . A passion that allows you to bear the hours you spend on it. Make it a passion because it came from that beautiful brain of yours. I swear it will make it less painful.

And that is my theory of writing.

Peace.

Living That Dandy Literate Life

Living That Dandy Literate Life

 

Jazmin Gomez

 

My name is Jazmin, and I’m a sophomore majoring in English Literature. I wanted an excuse to read and write a lot, so I majored in the most write-y major of them all. I was questioned by a few people as to how the hell I was planning on getting into a career of English Lit if I don’t want to be a teacher. Oh yes, and that’s one thing that irks me: being asked immediately if I am majoring in English to become a teacher. I believe teachers are the most amazing, wonderful beings in this universe, however, I don’t see myself teaching. It’s not something that I think I was made for. Anyways, I’m majoring in English because I see myself as an editor or a publisher in the book industry.

I’d say I’m a good editor, though the funny thing is that I can’t edit my crap, which constitutes a mess. No, I love reading everyone’s stuff, and I say, “Well you could use a different word here, or eliminate this entire sentence because it’s a disgrace to the human race”. But if you’re thinking that this blog isn’t grammar-correct, or that I use too many run-on sentences, please know that I cannot edit my own stuff. Just like how a hairstylist can’t fully cut all of her hair on her own. Boom.

What I’m hoping to take from this class is experience. While my focus isn’t to become a teacher, I do love the idea of tutoring and mentoring someone, because I know that the mentors in my life have aided me in the best way. I hope that my internternship teaches me many great thing, and I hope that I can also say influential things to the students that I’ll be with.

My life is always literate. My parents joke that I was born with a book. I have always been a bookworm, and I will always be a bookworm. In high school, I loved reading Shakespreare, though I hate classical litertaure. I don’t like it. But, my usual day of reading consists of a lot of reading. For my own leaisure, I like to read Young Adult books- they’re the best genre out there! But I read homework assingments and it’s not bad if I take something from it. I’m a writer. I’ve been writing my own short stories since I was little, and when I was 15, I wrote a 300+ page book…That I plan to rewrite comeplelty and hopefully publish one day. I write that story every now and then. Now my daily writing consists of text messages and blogs for school. Fun stuff.

Szwed’s text in, “The Ethnograpgy of Literacy” was actually a very interesting article and I found myself agreeing with many points that he said:

  1. “We do not fully know what literacy is”- Yes! As someone who reads and analyzes everything, I can most definetly agree that we won’t comprehend literacy. Times change. Literacy was something different 200 years ago as it is now.
  2. Schools have expecatations of certain reading levels for the different grades. However, the schools underestimate the students that are not at the “correct level” where they’re supposed to be at. I am starting to believe that we should probaby get rid of this assigned reading list. It holds no value if it doesn’t include hope for the kids. What a nerd, I know.
  3. Perhaps not something that I can totally agree with, but something that uttelry suprised me was when Szwed mentioned that the richest countries in the world suffer from low skills in literacy. That was unexpected, because I would think that the kids would be smart as hell, and eventually rule the earth. However, I began to speculate that it would make sense if these kids don’t grasp the idea of education quite toughly as we do. These kids are given everything- they have money, they were born into a good family. However, perhaps it’s believed that the monetary situation will be taken care of for the rest of their lives, and so it won’t be neccesary for them to study quite rigourously.

 

From what I understood is that my way of reading and writing has been influenced to be in a certain style and in a certain manner. I grew up to be formal in my essays, and my AP teachers in high school were always so very threatning about how our essays in college must be in ultimate perfection. As an English major, I was frightened with the thought that I had to be perfect in my writing. I’m so not. I value the way I write because it is my way of communicating with the reader on an easier, yet fun way.

The surprise of my college career was finding out that English professors not always want what we were taught. God, I was so stressed when my first English professor told me that there really wasn’t a style she wanted other than MLA. But when I found my voice without the mix of other voices trying to tell me how to write, I realized that I finally found my freedom, and because of this, I thoroughly hope everyone in school -elementary, middle and high school- will find theirs too.