Sunday, September 9, 2012

Response to Course Material (9/9/12)

I think I’ll start off by saying that the terms test was one of most challenging tests I’ve taken in a very long time…that test score rivals the ones I got when I attempted to take PreCalc! (And I tried to take that class twice (twice!) before abandoning ship & switching into FS^3!)
However, since I started preparing for AP Lit I’ve come to realize that being able to understand something is more complex than just memorizing definitions. I need to be able to apply the terms to whatever I’m reading/learning/discussing. I’m currently halfway through the Chapter 2 and 3 reading and being able to see the terms put into use in the examples passages is helping me understand how to use & recognize them.
            Working on the Foster Presentation has helped me look more carefully at repeated symbols or themes in pop culture. By looking at the Prezi presentations I’ve also considered different types of rhetorical situations and arguments when applied to modern day literature.
For example, my fashion magazines obviously have a different purpose and audience than, say, my dad’s political magazines.
The purpose of The Nation, a political editorial, is to inform or persuade. I’m much more familiar with Seventeen and I’d say it definitely has mixed purposes – one hand it entertains, but it also informs.  The audience also offers different viewpoints: different age groups, social/political differences, expectations, etc. Writing Seventeen with the vocabulary and opinions of an analysis of the Republican Party would not go over very well.
            I’d also like to bring up something Ms. Holmes mentioned in class a few days ago. I occasionally suffer from, as she put it, “Pompous Thirty-Five Year Old Man Syndrome”. I tend to try to use big words and embellish whenever possible. (Let’s just say that thesaurus.com is one of my “Most Visited” bookmarks & leave it at that.) I’m trying to work on it, but if I ever get top-heavy or lose focus, a constructive reminder is always appreciated.

4 comments:

  1. "Pompous Thirty-Five Year Old Man Syndrome"...actually, I think you've been doing pretty well with avoiding it. Your posts sound intelligent but candid, and not annoying or pompous whatsoever.

    You are right, too, understanding is something that we aren't really trained to do from a young age, instead, we're told to memorize as a way of "learning".

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  3. (So I apparently deleted my last post...so take two!)
    The terms test was one of the most hardest tests i've taken in awhile too! When I was taking it, I was thinking "Oh, psh yeah I got this!" and then when I submitted it...
    I agree that what we're learning can't just be memorized, but understood. I think it's a bit hard to even just memorize things (...I have the memory of a goldfish).
    I also agree with what Preeti said about the “Pompous Thirty-Five Year Old Man Syndrome”, you don't sound pompous. But I actually feel like I have the "syndrome". I try to make my essays sound "smarticle" all the time.

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  4. I agree with everyone else on the "Pompous Thirty-Five Year Old Man Syndrome" thing--you definitely do not come across as stuck up or full of yourself, but as someone with a strong vocabulary. I definitely know how you feel, though, since I have a hard time deciding when I've crossed the line from interesting to absurd diction. Also, I'm glad to know that I'm not the only one suddenly seeing symbols in pop culture since doing the Foster presentation. It freaks me out a little bit that I can no longer see a meal on TV without thinking of communion.

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