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It seems like it was only yesterday when I first walked into the “Special Topics in Writing” class. This class was not my first choice, I did not need it to obtain my certificate in Professional and Public writing, and I registered somewhat late. During the first few class sessions, I felt like I was just receiving an overview of what I had learned in a class during the previous semester.
- Class discussions involved narrative and personal writings through the use of Aristotle’s appeals, like logos, ethos, and pathos. A weekly BlogSpot was completed expressing the views of exiles extracted from the weekly readings. Then, these views were connected with personal experiences relating to the material read. The class was focused on writing narratives.
- Personally, I felt somewhat out of my comfort zone because the majority of my other writing classes involved writing styles like memorandums, technical reports, and research proposals, which are conducive for the business environment. For this reason, I struggled in discovering the importance of this class, which interfered with the process of learning.
- Shortly after the first few days of class, I quickly realized that . . .
- 5. “Life as a Learning Experience”
- Every opportunity in life could be embraced. Class management is a key ingredient for learning maximization. (This is not to be confused with “time” management.) Often times students would voice their opinions like “jump-in reading” at grade school. “Boy, I loved jump-in reading.” Once more, I realized that jump-in speaking is not an effective way to construct a class discussion environment. It was like “survival of the fittest,” where only those who projected their voice, who interrupted others, and who insisted in speaking survived class discussions. I experienced this format leads to incomplete thoughts.
- Not too long ago, a student sitting behind me in class attempted to speak by raising her hand thrice and pronouncing the first couple of words, but she was not able to have a turn to speak. I turned around and she looked at me with eyes wide open expressing a sense of frustration. I only replied, “I know. You won’t get anywhere by raising your hand though.” Once, the professor commented on a particular blog of mine, I barely spoke a few words when another classmate suddenly spoke, followed by a chain of other peers, leaving me, the author, without much time to speak.
- As an outsider looking in and reflecting on situations such as the ones above, I wonder, “If I ever have the privilege of managing a class in the future, what will I do to create a learning environment where each student can participate in a live thread of comments and responses to have an effective class discussions?” or “How would I lead students to develop clear and focused thoughts?” As a student, this particular class has allowed me to not focus on what I can do to better the situation, if I were given the opportunity in the future, instead of being a participant of the actual situation.
- During the course of this class, I have been able to compare and contrast the results from my class to a class where students take turns to speak and I have learned that in the latter example, the majority, if not all of the students who wish to speak, were able to do so efficiently. In short, I have learned to embrace any opportunity in life, especially the ones I find less appealing, as a future learning experience, because life is all about learning experiences.
- 4. “Less use of PowerPoint”
- One of the main tools professors use as a vehicle for lecturing is PowerPoint. This class was instructed using various pedagogical strategies outside of the college norm I have experienced in the majority of my classes. The strategy mostly used was the format where students would arrange their chairs in a circle, reducing the focus on the professor and emphasizing the focal point on the students.
- I was not too fond of this arrangement style because it forced me to be in tune with the class discussions at all times; however, as a teacher and professor, I would deliberately arrange the class using this circular format because, after experiencing it, I have learned that it is more promising and engaging for students to absorb and retain knowledge. Rhetoric is used in this situation too. The audience is the students and the arrangement to create pathos is the circular formation. Less use of PowerPoint presentations (or the like) and alternative methods of presenting can lead to more effective teaching and learning methods.
- 3. “Repetition is Key”
- In the majority of the classes I have had, the topics are only taught once, twice at most (twice would be the exception to the rule). This might be due to a
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few variables, like class time available and the quantity of material to cover. This class did not require a textbook. The lack of using a textbook provided ample room to learn “outside of the box” and for repetition. If I was asked about the concepts I learned in this class, words like “ethos, logos, pathos, credibility, logic, emotional appeal, style, organization, arrangement, and audience would be some of the key terms that would come to mind. The main reason I recall these terms so vividly is because they were repeated in the majority of the class meeting, if not all of them.
- 2. The special in “Special Topics in Writing”
- Indeed this class was special; hence, “Special Topics in Writing.” I had the benefit of being welcomed into the minds of experienced bloggers, like Joe Lapin. Lapin took a good portion of his time to Skype and to provide students with an insight into his world. His view on writing allowed me to see the rawness and realness of blogging. Now, I see blogging as my core, the core of life, and the core of my existence.
- Joe Lapin inspired me to write about my struggles, my goals, my dreams, and the journey to accomplishing all of them. This is quite challenging for me as a writer and as a blogger because I like privacy. Actually, I enjoy privacy and its mystery. American society has been rapidly advancing in the media that there is less and less room left for privacy. In previous generations, it used to be that if one’s life was overtly exposed, society would frown. Now, it is the opposite.
- In my view, it is about finding the right balance where I can use the media to keep up with the advances in America and a social being integrated in society, while keeping my personal life somewhat private. “To be or not to be? That is the question.” ~ Shakespeare. For now, after graduation, I will probably create a Facebook account expressing my professional interests and goals. I will surely connect BlogSpot to the Facebook account and enhance the special in my writing topics.
- 1. “Strokes of Paint”
- When I think of the times the instructor lectured, I think of strokes of a paint brush. Such thought comes to mind because, though it might sound cliché, I have learned that writing is a form of art intended for a certain audience. Art focused on nudity is appealing to people who appreciate the body as an art figure, yet not pleasing to those who think the body should not be publicly revealed and exposed. Like paintings, some forms of writing about topics that interest some people.
- As an author, understanding that my writing will not appeal to everyone allows me to focus on engaging the audience intended. Every message can be accompanied with its own design. Text font, images, colors, and bullets are a few examples of enhancements that portray a deeper message. When I pause and reflect, I imagine myself immersing in deep blue waters floating to the surface with two-inch bubbles swimming upwardly. Each bubble represents the scene of the moment in mind until it explodes. Once it explodes, I am able to reflect and learn the lessons from that moment in time. My bubble now is swimming through the waters, known as “weeks,” until it explodes in only a few more days, upon graduation. This form of descriptive expression is an example of the art of writing. Even the words I repeated, like “bubble,” are a stroke of art.
- In the long run, the goal is to use the lessons learned in practice and not just in theory. This class has gone a step above the theoretical aspects of lecture and has reached its practical facets. These experiences are what I will carry on through the different phases of my life. In the future, whenever I think about exile, I will think of this class and remember the last semester at this university, whose name I no longer want to utter. Leaving this university, which I have attended for over two years will be the first step to the exile I have longed for many times before.











