Tuesday, November 30, 2010

In Class: free write

Thanksgiving break was a good break overall, highlighted by the demise of Boise State on Friday. Friday was an unusual day overall for college football. The day began with Auburn playing Alabama in the Iron Bowl. With an Auburn loss, it would put TCU in better position to be playing for the national championship game. Alabama opened the game scoring 24 unanswered points, but eventually lost to Auburn 28-27, which was disappointing. Alabama had four possessions inside of Auburn's 10-yard line and had two field goals and two fumbles in those four possessions. Had they converted one of those fumbles into a field goal they would have escaped with a win and put TCU in a better position for the national championship. After this sad ending, Oregon played Arizona. Again, an Oregon loss would put TCU in better position for the national championship, but Arizona had a small chance to beat Oregon. At halftime, Arizona was leading but could not finish and eventually lost to the Ducks. After these two depressing games that did not go TCU's way at all, Boise State played WAC rival Nevada. Although Boise was not ranked ahead of TCU in the BCS poll at the start of this game, a win would propel them ahead of TCU and crushed all national championship hopes. Boise State was up 24-7 in the fourth quarter but could not hold on to the lead and ended up losing to Nevada in overtime, a result of two late field goals that were missed on Boise's end. All in all, food to football, I had a fabulous break.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Unit 3 Proposal

For our Unit 3 project Tracy, Allie, and I have decided to discuss the issue of TCU going to the National Championship. All of our articles/evidence will be in support of TCU going to the championship game.


We are going to use 4 different mediums to appeal to different audiences on this subject. I am working on an ESPN article that will appeal to, obviously, all of the sports fans around the world. Lots of people are constantly getting updates on their phones/emails through the ESPN website, which means they're always checking it. It will be a good way to get this argument out to that population.


Tracy is working on a letter to the BCS selection committee. This letter will be talking to the 'higher end' people in the BCS selection process. Hopefully persuading them to consider TCU as a viable candidate. This audience is narrow, but it's still very important to make sure that these important people know how much everyone believes TCU is deserving of a spot in the championship game.


Allie will be working on both a Fan page on Facebook, and a billboard. The Fan page("Support TCUs Drive to the National Championship") is going to be a good way to get the word out to the younger population. Almost everyone ages 25 and under have a Facebook, and if we invite as many friends as possible to this page, it will get noticed. Also, obviously all of our TCU friends will be in support of this, and it will hopefully get them rallied to expanding this argument out. Anyone and everyone is welcome to join this group! The billboard is also something important she is working on. We haven't decided on our favorite picture yet, but we're just going to have a huge(legit) picture from a TCU game, and one or two words on it that will make a statement. Obviously, it has to be short enough so people driving by will be able to get the main idea of the visual. This is a powerful way to appeal to the Fort Worth/Dallas community in support of one of our home teams going to the National Championship.


Overall, things are going great so far, and we're all really excited to keep expanding on this project.

In Class: visual argument reading

The reading for this class period dealt with how visual images make different arguments. The reading covered everything from wording to coloring to emotional appeals created through visuals. Since I am dealing with more of the textual parts of the third assignment, I focused on the visual elements that text deals with. The visual appearance of text plays an important role and sends many messages for what the style of a visual may be. Certain fonts (serif vs. sans serif vs. decorative) all play a role in the message that an author may want to portray. For this project, one of the tasks that I will be doing is creating an article that is similar to one found in ESPN. This article will be formatted using either a serif or sans serif font (likely Times New Roman). For this article, the visuals that I may choose to incorporate will need to be relevant to the context, and I will attempt to elicit emotional response from the hypothetical reader. This I will accomplish through the use of pictures that show TCU doing well, or through pictures that may show reactions of fans (hopefully creating an effect that other events have been able to show through the use of bystanders).

Thursday, November 11, 2010

In Class: What I Learned in the reading

For the reading today, one of the topics I learned is how the structure of words is much more important that I thought in forming arguments. With individual wording, it is important to avoid jargon and technical terms when writing to large audiences, because it has the potential to deter some of that audience who are unaware of the meaning of those terms. Sentence structure also plays a key role in conveying the meaning of an argument, especially when it comes to length of sentences. Often times powerful arguments start with topic sentences that can be brief and are followed with phrases such as "in fact" or "in addition" to add more inflection into the argument. In addition to wording, style is an important aspect of any argument. In order for a strong argument to be written, it must be done in a style that will be appealing to the audience as a whole. In some cases it is inappropriate to employ one style while at other times it may be a necessity to use that same style.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Unit 3 Job Titles and Descriptions

Job Title and Description: My title in the group is Lead Analyst. In addition to being the Recorder, as Lead Analyst I will do extensive research on my group's topic, brainstorm possible ideas for each of the three texts to utilize for the project, plan meetings ahead of time (as well as elaborate on action items for the next meeting), formulate edit any written text, and assist Tracy and Allie in anything they need help with or do not understand. In the group, I want to be active and helpful in every way possible. I will accomplish any task that is delegated to me, and I will put forth my best work. My primary responsibility is to ensure that all research on our topic is done ahead of time as well as to serve as a resource for Tracy and Allie if they are confused or unsure of where we are going as a group on this project.

Other team members: Tracy Littlefield and Allie Barnes

In Class: Group Work

Last year in my Business Information Systems class, I was placed in a group with members who did not have the same work ethic as I did, which ended up in me doing most of the work for the overall project. Due to the high volume of the work, I was overwhelmed and ended up getting a mid-B on the project despite giving all the effort I possibly had.

An ideal group project for me starts off with being in a group with a similar work ethic that I possess. I want to be with members who do not settle for mediocrity and only want to submit their best work possible. I think it is also important to be with members who pay strict attention to detail and are engaged in the task at hand. Additionally, it is important to me for everyone in the group to participate and be held accountable for their work. It is not fair when the group as a whole receives the same grade when there are others who clearly worked harder than the other members. It always bothers me when members of the group are unprepared for class and meetings (or show up late), so preparation and punctuality are critical for a successful project.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

In Class: Analysis Challenges

During this process the biggest challenge for me was avoiding giving my own insight and opinions into the primary source analysis itself. The BCS national championship is an issue that I am passionate about and directly affects all of us at TCU, and leaving my own thoughts about the championship/system out of my analysis led me to see the arguments in a much different way. In addition, this process made me view arguments and rhetoric in a completely different way. This challenged me to view the articles from an unbiased perspective and to see how effective and strong each individual argument was. Although none of the articles that I found were in favor of the current system, the articles I read and analyzed each presented differing viewpoints and they subsequently gave me new insight and more reasons as to why I feel the way I do about the flawed BCS system. There would be times while writing where I would catch myself expressing my opinion, but by the time I got through with the third analysis, I was becoming more efficient and not catching myself in that position.