Is it inappropriate to use a hashtag in a college essay? And other thought-provoking questions…

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1. Is it inappropriate to use a hashtag in a college essay if it totally works?  As the author, don’t I get to make that decision?

2. When does appealing to an audience’s pathos become dangerous?  
–I ask because I recently saw a mother with a small child standing on the side of a busy highway begging for money.  It was 30 degrees and raining.  The child had no coat and was holding the cardboard sign.  Isn’t this a little too far?

3. How early is too early to text your boss?  He/She wouldn’t have given you their cell phone number if they didn’t anticipate an emergency at some point…right?

4. Which animal is the happiest animal we see on a daily basis?  I’m sure there are a lot of free, exotic animals that are happy, but I’m talking an animal we pass multiple times a day–no matter where we live.  And yes, there is a correct answer.  
…It’s a squirrel.  I’ll let you figure out why.

5. Where were you when you realized that your high school drama really wasn’t like the most important thing that like, has ever happened in your life?  

 

Encomium to Miley

Miley-Cyrus-and-Taylor-Swift--MTV-VMA-Awards-2013-2225065

As a young girl in the early 2000’s, I idolized her.  My friends and I would dress up like her for Halloween and dream about living the way she did.  She used to sing about living two separate lives—one as a pop star that would face all kinds of adversities because of her fame.  Turns out, this wasn’t too far from a reality for Miss Miley Cyrus.  Recent controversy surrounding this young woman has gotten way out of control.  There is no doubt that a number of her acts are questionable, to say the least, but are her actions really her fault?  Or was Miley raised in a spotlight that was destined to eat her alive at some point?  And are these actions really degrading, or are they making a statement the public shouldn’t ignore?

Miley’s father, Billy Ray Cyrus, is an American country singer from Kentucky.  Billy Ray has released 12 albums and 44 singles since 1992, the year Miley was born.  It’s no secret that fame and a talent for performance run in the Cyrus family.  Miley was destined not to live a normal life from the very beginning.  Miley says that her father, Billy Ray, took her along to many of his shows and outings as a young child; this is where she decided that she wanted a piece of the spotlight too.  As a young girl, Miley didn’t have a choice in whether or not she wanted to accompany her father in said outings; she went where she was told to go—as all young children are stuck doing.  The life seemed glorious, and after all, doesn’t every child want to be whatever his/her parent is at some point?  After all, our parents are the first adults we learn to love, cherish, and revere.

As a result of her early upbringing, Miley began her career in the spotlight in 2003, at just 11 years old.  At 11 years old was Miley making her own, independent decisions?  Probably not.  Just three years later, in 2006, Miley began acting on her show Hannah Montana. This show immediately became a huge hit among young and pre-teen girls.  Everyone wanted a piece of Miley and her beautiful life.  Her father, Billy Ray, played her father on the show as well.  No doubt Miley was supported in her endeavors to become famous.  Her family was with her every step of the way—pushing her every single day.

In 2013, Miley’s image seemed to take on a very different appearance.  Her fans’ parents were shocked, and young girls could no longer dress as Miley for Halloween without being completely and totally inappropriate.  Miley no longer acted on her hit show Hannah Montana, and the lyrics she sang now were racy and suggestive.  These changes awarded Miley all sorts of negative attention, criticism, and defaming.  Other young artists and actors, like Amanda Bynes, have fallen off their “wagon”—and in a worse way, might I add.  Miley has yet to be arrested for a DUI or breaking and entering, but because she sings about love and sex, people condemn her.  Plenty of male artists, for example Lil’ Wayne, sing about very suggestive material, and never once has the media defamed him in such a way.  The media constantly publishes condemning articles about “Miley’s latest tattoo” or her “twerking” shenanigans.  Interestingly enough, as Miley fans, we have yet to hear Miley’s father comment on many of his daughter’s actions.  We don’t know if he also condemns his daughter’s public, sexy lifestyle, or if he supports her and admires the strong, independent woman she has become.  Bad parenting?  Think about it…

However, in Miley’s defense, it’s important to note that one of her “latest tattoos” is of the equal rights sign.  She openly supports the fair treatment of all couples that love one another, regardless of gender.  And her dance is a form of expression.  What if you were condemned every time you wanted to express yourself?  Poor Miley is a victim of the spotlight her father cast her into at such a young age.  If she had had a normal childhood, no one would think twice about the tattoo or a dance move that almost every 21 year old is doing these days.

There is no doubt that Miley is influential.  She stands for equal rights and the right to express oneself with confidence.  Each of us could learn a little something from Miley Cyrus.  Stand up for what you believe in and do it without shame.

Despite whatever negative attention Miley has attracted in the past year, and the attention that she’ll attract in 2014 without a doubt, I believe in what she stands for and admire her expressive personality.   #MileyFoLife

The Argument of Influence in Homer’s Iliad

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In his article published in Rhetoric Review, G. Mitchell Reyes discusses the variety of techniques used to persuade characters in Homer’s Iliad.  Reyes, a doctoral candidate at Pennsylvania State University, claims that his essay will “ultimately assist contemporary rhetoricians in clarifying the qualities of persuasion…” (22-23).  Reyes states that his goal is, “to draw the specific persuasive acts of the Iliad,” to create a broader understanding of what he calls “Homeric persuasion” for modern rhetoricians and readers (23).  Reyes discusses four examples for such Homeric persuasion: honor, material, power, and justice.  Reyes presents a valuable argument; however, the way in which he presents his information leaves much to be desired from his readers.

Reyes’s first example of Homeric persuasion is the use of honor.  He states that there are two ways Homer’s characters can achieve this honorific ideal: “to be a doer of good deeds or to be a speaker of words” (23).  Reyes immediately draws on textual evidence with an example of Achilles and Odysseus, stating that these two characters have no doubt mastered both deed and word in terms of honorific behavior.  In contrast to Achilles and Odysseus, Reyes goes on to explain that most of the Homeric characters only harbor one of the two honorific ideals.  As an example of the way in which a good speaker is revered, Reyes references one of Nestor’s early speeches.  However, the reader never gets a good sense of the way Reyes believes Homer uses deeds alone to persuade characters with honor.  As the essay continues, Reyes’s argument about honor begins to stray.  He muddies the waters by suggesting that honor in the Iliad also comes from the character’s becoming enraged.  He begins discussing the rationality, or rather, irrationality, of this rage on the heroic code.  Just two pages into the essay, a modern reader gets bogged down in a variety of claims that do not seemed to tie into one another.  Reyes continues discussing the ways in which the community in the epic is fragile, and suggests that “persuasion… tests the bonds of [this] community” (25).  After this digression, however, Reyes does manage to come back to his original point of honor used as a means of persuasion, with many strong examples from a number of books in the epic.  Reyes concludes that all of the characters in the epic want to be honored by the gods, fellow soldiers, and their families.  He implies that the desire for honor persuades these characters to fight as they do.  Although Reyes’s treatment of the first topic starts off strong, his argument for honor becomes relatively ineffective when clouded by irrelevant talk of bonds within the community.

As Reyes continues, he discusses the idea of material gain as a means of persuasion in the Iliad.   Reyes states, “in fact, the first speech given has Chryses appealing to Agamemnon’s desire for material gain” (26).  He goes on to quote the speech itself.  As one of Reyes’s stronger points in the essay, the reader clearly understands that material gain is a major factor in persuading the characters to act in specific ways.  Reyes mentions the specific use of females as material, as well as a means of gaining bountiful ransoms.  Whether it be Chryses’ daughter who was bargained for with a kingly ransom, or Helen of Troy, the idea of gaining something, or someone rather, that one could show off was a major tactic employed throughout the epic.  Reyes successfully reconnects to his first means of persuasion, by insinuating that there was something honorable about having material to parade in front of others.

Reyes broadens his argument by effectively explaining the connection between pity and material persuasion.  The example of Lycaon’s relaying to Achilles how many oxen he is worth when begging for his life is used as an attempt to portray the similarity between pity and an appeal for material gain.

Reyes then introduces the source of persuasion as a powerful force—one in which each character in the Iliad ultimately seeks.  Here, Reyes draws on examples from another scholar, Michael Naas, to support Homer’s appeal to power.  As the essay moves forward, Reyes states, “the source of power, then, is not just the strength of an individual but the recognition and honor others give with obedience and material gifts” (28).  This single sentence ties Reyes’s previous points of persuasion to his new claim, but here, Reyes becomes quite repetitive, and this redundancy becomes problematic for the reader.

In the same section entitled “Power,” Reyes introduces the topics of obedience, reconciliation, and unity.  These claims lack definite information to support them, and they do not necessarily add any substance to the power argument.  He makes a bold claim in stating that power drives each character in the epic because each wants to be powerful; however, comparatively, this section of Reyes’s essay is quite short and disjointed.  Reyes’s thesis could have been much more interesting and effective had he expanded on the topic of power. This addition could ultimately have been much more influential to his readers.  When thinking about a classic epic, power is at the forefront of many readers’ minds.  After all, the majority of characters are gods.  How could the idea of power as a means of persuasion have been so lightly glossed over by the author?

Nonetheless, Reyes’s final persuasion tactic draws on the idea of justice.  He begins, “…justice is not the moral divide between right and wrong in the Iliad” (29).  He argues instead that justice essentially means to follow the tradition that has been accepted by the community.  Violation of this social and communal tradition is “the greatest social harm one can do” in the epic, according to Reyes (29).  Reyes effectively makes use of textual evidence as a means of supporting his claims on the topic.  Gods like Zeus are credited as the portrayers of this “justice” by enforcing the necessary punishment to those that violate ideals.  Trust is assumed to go hand in hand with the Homeric idea of justice.  For example, Reyes claims that Paris violates trust when taking Helen, thus, causing a breach in social justice.  In turn, this breach of justice persuades armies to fight one another.  Here, Reyes makes his most influential argument for persuasion.  He is most direct in the way that he moves the reader through his thoughts on Homer’s use of justice.  Readers find this section especially effective in understanding the idea of “Homeric persuasion.”

In his lengthy conclusion, Reyes restates his premise claiming, “Throughout my analysis I attempted to identify and distinguish certain sources of persuasion that transcend situational constraints… [and] how certain strategies of persuasion operate throughout the epic” (31).  Reyes claims that none of the aforementioned examples work in isolation and draws on textual examples to support this claim.  He quotes Henry Johnstone, Jr. as the man that proposed the thought-provoking question that fueled Reyes’s essay, ‘“Was persuasion in fact an ‘art’ in the Iliad” (32)?  Reyes disappointingly answers that this is “still pending” (32).

Reyes did in fact attempt to distinguish between these sources of persuasion, however, ineffectively.  As a reader, I was very disappointed in the pending status of the argument’s ending.  What was the point of the essay if the ultimate question is left unanswered?

In this article published in Rhetoric Review, G. Mitchell Reyes discusses the variety of techniques used as methods of persuasion, or used to persuade, characters in the Iliad.  Reyes attempts to discuss four examples of such Homeric persuasion: honor, material, power, and justice.  Reyes ultimately leaves much to be desired in his essay.  Although the use of textual evidence and outside sources increases the initial credibility of his argument, Reyes presents this argument in a befuddling manner.  The way in which he attempts to add to his basic four ideals is perplexing, unclear, and appears off-topic.  His argument would be substantially more effective if presented more clearly and concisely.  Although Reyes’s ideas are thought-provoking, his delivery could be much more efficient.

Work Cited

Reyes, G. Mitchell. “Sources of Persuasion in the Iliad.” Rhetoric Review 21.1 (2002): 22-39. JSTOR. Web. 15 Feb. 2014.

Attempting to write a (short!) paper in Spanish on the topic of Global Education…

Educación Global

                ¿Desea convertirse en un mejor estudiante?  ¿Quieres un futuro jefe creer usted es la mejor persona para el trabajo nuevo?  ¡Si es así, puede considerar una educación global!

                La educación global es aprender sobre diferentes culturas, costumbres, etc. En muchas maneras diferentes.  Educación global requiere estudiar en otros países de su propia.  Por ejemplo, muchas estudiantes aprenden para programas de estudio en el extranjero. 

                Yo creo que una educación global es importante porque prepara a los estudiantes para ser calificado de puestos adicionales.  Estudiantes son la mejor para una empresa si pueden hablar varios idiomas y interactúan con muchas personas. 

                Para obtener una educación global, un estudiante necesita estudiar muchos aspectos de otra cultura, mientras que vive en esa cultura, idioma de la cultura, etc.

                Cuando se reflexiona acerca de cómo ser un mejor estudiante, considera un programa de estudio en el extranjero.  ¡Futuro jefe se lo agradecerá!  

Former high school teacher “teaches” me to teach myself

I have tried to erase this entire educational incident from my memory; however, when tasked with thinking about why I am such an independent learner, and why I want to be a teacher, one specific teacher, and two specific subjects, all came rushing back.

I’ve always like history classes the least.  I’m not completely sure what it is about them.  Maybe it was the fact that my history classes were almost always taught by coaches that made it apparent that they would rather be somewhere besides the classroom.  My senior year of high school, I enrolled in an AP Government and Economics class.  Being a student in a small-town high school, there was one teacher who “taught” the subject.  I honestly can’t remember his name… It was Coach Something-Or-Other.  At this point, I’m sure it’s apparent how hard I really tried to forget this whole educational mess.  Coach Something-Or-Other was, and I’m sure still is, quite a bit more interested in the plays of his football and baseball teams than the fast-approaching AP Government and Economics exams.  I think we read the same chapter at least four times.  There is a chance that we may have made it half-way through the material we were required to know for the AP exams, and by “made it through” I mean, he read it aloud.  Reading aloud was really the only thing he was good at…  One day, he pulled out The Bible and began preaching to our class, something he could get away with in the town I grew up in, but still highly inappropriate for a public school teacher in my opinion, but I digress.

I had never before had a teacher that strictly read from the book.  I mean, it was an AP class; wasn’t it obvious we could all read for ourselves?  During most of his read-alouds, I sat in the back of the classroom staring at him, wondering how he’d gotten a teaching certificate.  As an AP student, he didn’t make me feel prepared for any sort of exam I was ever faced with on the topics of Government or Economics.  But consequently, this feeling of being so underprepared for every task at hand inspired me to teach myself.  I would get special permission from the coach to take books home with me so that I could study.  He just looked at me funny when I would ask.  He didn’t seem to understand why any student would want to learn more on his/her own.  Nonetheless, with the help of two very outdated books, I muddled my way through a year of subject-matter.

Looking at this situation two years later, I realize that Coach taught me quite a few valuable lessons, whether he meant to or not.  Not only did he teach me how to teach myself and to seek information on my own, but he also inspired me to want to teach others.  From day one in his classroom, I decided that I was going to save public education.  That’s what we’re all after, right?

Maybe Coach something-Or-Other didn’t teach me a single thing about Government or Economics, and needless to say, I didn’t do nearly as well on the AP exam as I would have liked.  But, in his defense, the coach taught me how to seek information out for myself.  He taught me what to do when a teacher doesn’t hold your hand and spoon-feed you the answers.  I’d go so far as to say that I also have a much better understanding of the plays that win mediocre high school football and baseball games, as well.

Learning to be an independent thinker and learner has definitely shaped the way I am as a student and the way I hope to become as a teacher, although, I want to teach students to be independent thinkers and learners in a much different way than the coach did.