Website
Website:http://johnbrownslife.webs.com/
The product in which I created an advertisement for is
charity water. It isn’t necessarily a product but a foundation that brings 3rd
world developing countries clean water. The message portrayed in my advisement
is that everything counts. The slightest amount of money can even make a
difference. For example the picture located in the center says, " $20
dollars can give on person clean water". Which isn’t much. When creating
this advertisement I didn’t have a specific intended audience I fell as though
this add could catch anyone’s attention and would make people stop and look. So
I would say my audience would be all different types of people in any age
range. I think creating a print add is effective because people can walk by and
see it and they really don’t even have to stop. Also my advertisement has bright
color that stand out, its visually appealing. If I were to complete this
Benchmark again I would do a hand drawn print add because I feel as though I created
a great advertisement but it could have been more creative.
We now use an array to store a list of circles so that we can track more than one. Each item in the array is an object containing x, y, dx, dy, and r for one circle
The script listens for the space bar to add circles to the system (click inside the red box first so it will hear you)
Zaria Fortson-Linton
The Black White Girl
One summer day, I decided to
hang out with some of my friends ad we were talking about many different topis.
The topic at the moment was about what we were afraid of. When it came to my
turn to admit it, the conversation went from being good, to me being bashed.
“I am so petrified of squirrels! Just there
presences is enough to making me sprint away from them in fear!”
My friend then responded saying:
“Why you always speakin’ wit that proper voice
& those big words? Its like you tryna make everyone look stupid.”
“I am not! I just can’t help it. It is
something I’m so use to doing.”
“Whateva! Tryna act white!”
This is the typical conversation
I have with my peers. Most sixteen year olds my age like to use as much slang
as they can. They tend to cut off certain letters and make abbreviations in
texts. Since I don’t like to use them, I come off as a “Miss Know-It-All”,
stuck up, or even white. Being known as a know it all or stuck up doesn’t
bother me as much. The one that bothers me the most is being told that I sound
white. For one, I can’t seem to comprehend how race has a language. I also
didn’t know that using higher-level words that I am taught in school gives off
the impression that I’m trying to be someone who I am not.
The worst part about this is
that it isn’t just my friends who think this. Even my family views me this way.
When I mean family, I mean cousins and aunts and uncles. You see, my mother,
step-father, sister, brother, cousin and grandmother all live together, and we
all use what people consider “White people talk.” Not only that, because we get
really good grades and it’s been that way since kindergarten, that also gives
them a reason to classify us as know it alls. I’m not saying that we are stuck
up, but I feel as though this generalization is unfair. I feel like judging
someone before you even get to know them, or judging them because you were
taught differently then they are is wrong and unfair.
In the passage “If Black
English Isn’t a Language, Then Tell Me, What Is?” by James Baldwin, he says,
“…that language is also a political instrument, means and proof power. It is
the most vivid and crucial key to identity: It reveals the private identity,
and connects one with, or divorces one from, the larger, public or communal
identity.“
This quote is something of
which I disagree with. Basing the way someone talks is one of the worst ways of
trying to get to know and better understand someone. Judging someone before you
get to know this is terrible.
At first, my group wanted to look into the ability of the president to veto bills. However, we couldn't find vetoed bills that really affect us. Instead, since our group was all female, we figured that the amendment that most directly affected us was the 19th. Once we picked a topic, our lives got a bit easier! We did have a lot of trouble choosing a method of storytelling. Although I do really like the freedom we had to pick our method, so long as it fit in the video, we ended up brainstorming for far too long and didn't have as much time to produce.
Although I appreciated that the project was formatted after the C-SPAN documentary challenge, I think that a slightly altered assignment could have been better for SLA. Maybe we could have chosen whether to create documentary videos or some other form of presentation – videos tend to be just as much about editing as about actual information. We could have had more restrictions on how much history we had to put in. My group did a lot of work on finding the history of the 19th amendment, but didn't include much of it in our project because it didn't fit with C-SPAN's requirements.
As we prepared to create our video, we found plenty of drama in the fight for women's suffrage: a constitutional amendment was brought to congress for 40 years in a row before it was passed, women wrote a "Declaration of Sentiments" that is a pointed reference to the Declaration of Independence, and more. The one point that I found most interesting was the story of the ratification of the amendment. In the end, it all came down to the vote of a single senator within Tennessee. He was in his 20s, and ended up voting for women's suffrage partly because his mother wrote him a note and told him to do so.
In the end, I liked our final project. However, I don't think it thoroughly reflected all that we learned. Instead of telling the story of the amendment, we had to think of ways to explain why the right to vote matters to us. I think that we ended up successful because our video definitely explored the reasons that the 19th amendment matters, and even tied in those reasons to the history of the amendment and an international perspective.
My group specifically ran into a lot of trouble with the scheduling and technicalities of collaboration. We had to get the video from computer to computer, and weren't able to find time to all work together at the same time. Even when we did all work together, we ended up unable to work efficiently. I did enjoy working with the group, though, because we all brought different ideas to the table. If I had to do this project over, I think I'd want to start getting video earlier. That way, we would have been able to add more pictures and other edited pieces, and I think our project would have been richer. However, I did like our overall project, and am proud of my work.
"No, you’re wrong it's New Jersey and New
York, now you say it"
"Ard, I got chu new jewsey and new
ywok"
"Sigh… pero por que tu segi desiendolo
haci?"
“what chu been por que? Haci es como yo hablo?”
“sigh”
People nowadays are just so quick to fix
someone else up when really there's nothing that's broken. People want others
to speak what they consider and accept as "normal" when really it's
just one of millions of ways to talk. For an example, when I'm talking with my
brother he says that I sound like I'm from Brooklyn or if I'm Italian when
honestly I don't It's just the way I talk. It's kind of stupid that people want
everyone to talk like how they talk. Everyone is different in everyway. But,
then there are some people that take it to a whole other level even though it's
not that deep. Just because one say certain words how the majority of people
say them doesn’t mean the whole world need to say it the same way. When I'm
having a full conversation with different people they all say that I talk weird
because I speak both Spanish and English at the same time and I be pronounce
things differently than others. For an example some words that people say that
I always say wrong when I know that im saying that they are right are, “Inevitable”,
“Congratulations”, “talk”, “New York”, and “New Jersey.”
When I'm speaking to my close friends I also switch back and forth
using both Spanish and English to talk to them. When I'm talking to my friends
when we go to the corner store and we all are making fun of each other or
something we always switch from Spanish to English. So when I talk people say
that I talk really weirdly because I apparently talk “Ghetto”, like an Italian,
and Spanglish. Im always having somebody correct me and I get annoyed because I
know that im right and it’s just the way that I want to pronounce them.
“Ayo, por que tu siempre esta hablando
haci. You saying that the way that I tolk is wrong when u can’t even pronounce
have of the words you is saying.”
“Si pero like you say New York and New Jersey like a whole italian
boul or if u from Brooklyn when u is not and u talking like one of the drugies
around here.”
“I know im not cambron pero that’s the way I talk and I don’t get
it, why is it wrong like how is it wrong”
“Porque tu nunca oyo los gentes aqui talking like that,
you talk like a whole nut daawg”
“o.”
The conversations would be full of argument about how we both talk
and the pronunciation of words ect. Also, I think that I am the only person
that talks the way I do because I haven’t seen anyone else talk the same way.
Like, the combination of English, Spanish and the Italian accent and Brooklyn
accent. When im having a long conversation with someone they realize it imitaly
and the point it out. Then that’s were it starts the argument of how Im just
talking normal and they say that it is not normal and they begin to correct me
and talk slow for me and they just cant because I don’t know how else to say
them. So, I have im guessing a few accents mixed into one.
Now another example is when im talking on the
phone to a company and I start talking how I always do my mom would get mad
because I sound like im talking “ghetto” or “dumb” when really it’s just the
way I talk. Why is it that when we talk there is a “smart” way to talk and a “dumb
way” to talk. Shouldn’t talking just be Basic English everywhere we go and not
be judge by how we pronounce words or the accents that we have. So I think that
I could relate to “Tonge Tied” a lot
because in the story there was a quote that said “She didn’t understand black language. I stood their nervous and
sweating I did not know how to react or what to do. I couldn’t run away, I
couldn’t breath, I could not even swallow.” This quote explains how I feel
when people give me a weird look, or ask me about what I just said.
Another quote that I could relate to from the
same story is when it say’s “there are different Spanish’s. “Every Spanish speaker waits and wants to
hear what kind of Spanish you use. If u mess up a lot of words or the pronunciation
of a word you are look down at and they will think that you weren’t raised
right or you grew up in a bad neighborhood”. I have this feeling all the
time when talking to my mom friends or when talking to my friends because I
don’t want to make a mistake I want to speak as perfect as they do but it’s
hard when I talk the way I do. If I were to pick a thesis for this story it
would have to be “Everyone’s a critic, always ready to judge one’s language and
style.” Why I decided to pick this thesis was because I think that it’s true
how no matter what race, age or sex one can be are there’s always someone ready
to judge the way you talk and will look at you differently once you open your
mouth and that reputation will always follow you because of the first time you
talked to someone they will always have some kind of word to describe you.