Challenge 4: Lurking PT 2

Hello everybody! For this weeks challenge we continued to lurk on social media that was related to our topic. For this week I continued to lurk on twitter and reddit and remained on the same hashtag and subreddit, checking periodically so see what the sites were up to. This weeks challenge was an extension of last week where we are lurking on various social media sites looking for information on our controversial topics. For the past few weeks I have been able to find valuable insight on my topic of mental health on both twitter and reddit.

As I continued to lurk on twitter and reddit I have realized that both kind of have similar helpful communities on them. On both twitter and reddit various users seem to enjoy posting stories of situations of where mental health has affected their lives and how they overcame these situations. Other similarities include users that post their personal stories seeking help from other users. Something that I found wonderful was that on reddit more times than not when a user was posting some sort of cry for help, users would comment on their post words of encouragement or ways that they can overcome their issues. Users would even go as far as finding links mental health pages to further help the user in need.

After lurking for two weeks things that have changed since the beginning till now is how I choose what posts to look into. After being on twitter looking at mental health I’ve noticed that their a lot of posts that keep leading you to different sites so I’ve avoided clicking links that lead to lists or other unknown sites. On reddit I’ve learned how to avoid to “troll” posts that unfortunately occur on sites were users try to remain anonymous. However, through all the lurking I have found mostly both sites are very helpful in helping people find ways to cope with mental help. The two following screenshotsare examples of how twitter and reddit attempt to help fellow uses.IMG_3341 IMG_3343

The picture on the left is a reddit user trying to relate another users story to their own so they can try and help on the right is a screenshot of a twitter user posting an article about a therapy that could possibly help with schizophrenia.

Challenge 4: Component 2: Lurking Week 2 (For or Against?)

This week we have continued to lurk on our social media sights. For those of you who didn’t read my last post, lurking consists of silently following a certain sight and watching what they are doing without commenting on anything or making your presence known. As I stated before I felt kind of weird doing this when I first started because I felt like a creeper, but once I got used to it I was able to understand the positive effects of it. Last week I was shocked to see the wide variety of positive and negative views on my topic of the refugee crisis, but as I’ve lurked more and more I have opened my eyes to both sides of this topic. I saw people becoming more involved with my topic by lurking more and this week I have examples of both from the sites I have been lurking on, which are YouTube and Instagram. On YouTube I came across this video on the five things media wont report about the refugee crisis. This video made me think, so here’s the link in case any of you would like to check it out. (http://youtu.be/UklocH91j0w) On Instagram, I came across a page of a woman who decided to actually put herself through the refugee crisis and write a blog about it. I really liked this because she could have easily just tried to go and fins some stuff out about the crisis and report it. Instead, she experienced it and is now writing from first hand experiences. She also takes questions on her blog post and posts lots of pictures from her experience so I am definitely going to continue following her blogs to learn more. Here is her blog in case any of you would like to as well. (https://medium.com/@I.am.a.refugee) I still believe that we should be taking these refugees in; although there is conflict I believe we need to help one another. I found a picture that really spoke to me and made me realize that we need to make a difference. I am attaching the photo so you all can see it, and I want you to remember the first thought you have when you read it.

IMG_0571

 

challenge 4.2

So I guess when I was reading it sort of muddled together and I did a bit of both. I’m lurking on facebook and twitter. Anaylizng, comparing and contrasting what I find on a certain topic; mine is the affordability/cost of college tuition. This I found on twitter. Which is on the rising cost of room and board. I can relate to that that’s why I decided not to move to campus. Its much more expensive with an added meal plan you probably wont use and its non negotiable.   https://twitter.com/urcollegeworld/status/586241936492724225

So before when I first started on this topic I didn’t see very many posts that gave facts on social media that weren’t for companies that wanted your business.  But now I’m starting to see even more political posts and how people are going to handle the task if they get elected.  http://www.washingtonpost.com/rweb/ideas/why-hillary-clinton-is-more-progressive-than-bernie-sanders-in-one-sentence/2015/10/06/bc5a1931bf71dfdbb32f9ea4c268256b_story.html?tid=kindle-ap

While on face book I came across another article that goes along with most things I’ve found.That the rising cost of tuition is continuing. How its adding up little by little.

www.facebook.com/nytimes/posts/10150561736459999

This is just a photo I thought was funny

I’m starting to conclude that college is not affordable for most people  who cant obtain help either financial aid or loans. To my dissatisfaction the facts are true  college is super expensive Hopefully those  that say theyre for change are really. But the the fact that costs have risen is alarming how ever some are over exaggerated to get the point across its not as high as they make it out to be..

New! Course Construction Workshops are Here!

This semester, T&L Innovations is excited to announce the new Course Construction workshop series.  This evolving series is designed to equip you with the practical skills you need to develop your online or blended course. Registration is open to all faculty, those who have recently completed the Online Teaching Preparation Program (OTPP) or/and the Blended […]

A Little More Lurking

This week I continued to lurk about LGBT on Twitter and Facebook. I went back on the sites and searched the hashtag LGBT again. I realized that I can find more up to date content on Twitter since people tweet more often than people make posts on Facebook. I also noticed that some of the content overlap because some people/organizations have both media sites and share the same content on both of them. I enjoy looking through Twitter more because more content comes up on the page. Last week I made a comment about accounts being verified. What I meant by that was, the verified accounts of public figures/organizations. On the Twitter feed, it is really easy to see who made the post. I like looking at the verified public figure/organization accounts to see who is involved in some type of cause to the LGBT community. I came across a few people/organizations I recognized. Aja King with Matt McGorry, actors in the ABC shot How to Get Away with Murder, the NBA, Vice President Biden and the basketball team the Golden State Warriors.Screen Shot 2015-10-20 at 10.59.39 AM

Our professor Michelle asked about the SpiritDay hashtag last week in my images I shared. It was a second hashtag Kim Kardashian shared on her tweet along with the LGBT hashtag. I honestly didn’t notice it until i went back to check it out. I decided to click on it to see what it was about and the tweets above came up. It turns out, spirit day is a day where people wear purple in a stand to end bullying and support the LGBT youth. “Observed annually since 2010, individuals, schools, organizations, corporations, and public figures wear purple, which symbolizes ‘spirit’ on the rainbow flag” (GLAAD, 2015). These public figures above are just a few of those in support of the cause and it’s really cool to see how supportive they are even if its something as simple as wearing the color purple.

Cook Islands Coral Reef Poster

We’re looking forward to showcasing our undergraduate student research on campus on Wednesday October 21st from 5-7pm in the Sierra Hall roof garden. Click the link for a poster preview: 2015 Cook Islands Student Research Collaborations

Making Sense of Higher Ed: #DLRN15 Reflections

Last week, I attended the Digital Learning Resource Network conference #DLRN15 at Stanford University with my colleague, Jill Leafstedt. It was a very worthy experience and I’m processing a lot of ideas right now. With a couple of days of distance, I am now sensing what my most important takeaways are — at least for the moment.

The Hidden Curriculum

“the student who better understands the student role & tacit expectations does better. does NOT mean they’re brighter” @MarciaDevlin #dLRN15

— Bonnie Stewart (@bonstewart) October 17, 2015

We still use the term “non-traditional student” to refer to individuals enrolled in higher education who do not fit the classic “student” model:  full-time student, residential status, 18-24 years old. Looking out over the higher education enrollment demographics, these students are now the minority. Not earth shattering news. However, each of us must examine what this means within our own institution. A professor at Stanford, for example, and an instructor at a community college will have different relationships with the needs of non-traditional students, because the proportion of them in their classes will be different.

Sociocultural incongruence. Replaces deficit thinking. Important @MarciaDevlin

— Lee Skallerup (@readywriting) October 16, 2015

At DLRN, Marcia Devlin shared an exceptional presentation that uncovered the ways higher education incorporates invisible barriers that interfere with the success of non-traditional students. These barriers are constructed through the gaps between students’ and faculty cultural currency (the skills they arrive with, which are informed by their socio-economic status). In other words, a first-generation college student from a working class background may feel prepared for a class and be ready to apply herself, but not have the same access to criteria for completing work successfully.  For example, when she receives an assignment in a general education course to write an essay in APA format that is written in a scholarly voice, will she understand how to apply these criteria in the same way other students may?

Devlin termed these barriers “hidden curriculum,” which was a new term for me. Honestly, I found myself reflecting deeply on my own experience as a student in higher education. My first memory was from a Romanesque to Gothic art history course in graduate school. As a grad student, I felt like I should be achieving at a higher level than the undergraduates in the class with me. I was keeping up with my reading but found myself sitting through my professor’s lectures with complete confusion about what he was talking about. I recall him referencing a person named “Soojay,” which I kept writing down in my notes (by this point, I learned that without taking prolific notes during lecture, I would not retain a thing — another gap).  I would go home and pour over my book to locate any reference to this “Soojay” figure.  Then — literally after about a week of time — it hit me. He was referring to “Suger” (an important character in the historical development of Gothic architecture in France) but was using the French pronunciation. Ugh. I felt utterly stupid. This gap derailed me quite a bit and the fact that this memory from nearly twenty years ago came back to me instantly (along with lots of other memories too) as I listened to Devlin, says a lot about the imprint it left on me.

Critiquing the assumption that students are students first, that doesn’t fit students who are parents and employees. @marciadevlin #dlrn15

— Kate Bowles (@KateMfD) October 17, 2015

When we teach online, Devlin pointed out, these barriers may be even more difficult for learners to resolve, as students are less able to lean over to a fellow student and ask, “Hey, are you getting what she means by that?”  And as we know from our own experiences, most students are not willing to ask for clarification in a classroom setting either.

Social and Affective Aspects of Learning

The other theme that I’m reflecting on is the number of research projects shared at DLRN15 that were examining the social and affective aspects of student learning. This was also refreshing to me, as I’ve been exploring a similar thread in my Learning Out Loud research (about how participating in asynchronous voice conversations impacts students on a cognitive, affective, and social level).  What I was not happy about, however, was the strict reliance upon textual data to examine affective and social dimensions of learning. I understand text is more “accessible” than voice when it comes to data analysis; however, how can we rely upon textual cues to determine when students are feeling confused, stressed, disconnected, anxious, frustrated? I look forward to seeing data in the form of voice and video be integrated into the future studies of the social and affective aspects of learning.

Including Community Colleges

It feels very good to have the CA Comm College Online Education Initiative included here at #DLRN15. @PatJamesHanz @joryhadsell @DrBSI

— M Pacansky-Brock (@brocansky) October 16, 2015

Last, but not least, I felt a sense of community at this conference that I don’t normally feel at events that incorporate an international audience from higher education. This time, representatives from the California Community College Online Education Initiative (OEI) were in attendance. The CCC system serves just over 2 million students and is the largest system of higher education in the country. Nearly 27% of these students enroll in at least one distance education course, up from 12.5% in 2005-2006. Yet, it’s rare to bump into my CCC colleagues at conferences that aren’t specifically set up for that system.

Pat James, Executive Director of the OEI, participated in several presentations to showcase the work of the OEI team, which is focused on creating a way for CCC students to locate and complete the bottle-necked courses online that they need, in a streamlined fashion.  The OEI team has developed new online student support resources and shared them with a CC-license for others to easily re-use, and is integrating professional development (via @ONE) and instructional design support for faculty (which is lacking from the faculty support services offered at individual colleges the system).

Hey @diglibarts check out http://t.co/BoyuzYvnV3 amazing resources that our transfer Ss will be familiar with soon. #dlrn15

— Andrea Rehn #TvsZ (@Profrehn) October 16, 2015

Here, here, @PatJamesHanz speaking to the near absence of Instructional Design support in CA’s Comm Colleges. Faculty #DoItAll. #DLRN15

— M Pacansky-Brock (@brocansky) October 16, 2015

“Higher education” events really need to be more focused on bringing together representatives from 2-year and 4-year colleges. Local/regional/statewide systems, especially, need to be crafting ways to connect, share, and learn from one another. While 52% of students who graduate from the CSU system started at a CA Community College, I am dismayed at the lack of collaboration between the CCC and CSU systems and as I return to my day-to-day work, I am reflecting deeply on this gap and what effects it has on our state and on our students — because they are all our students.  Not ours and theirs — just ours.

DLRN15 provided opportunities to address tensions and conflict within higher education. I can only speak for myself, but I believe this is not only important but essential to “make sense of higher education.” Thank you to the wonderful coordinators of DLRN15 (who I will not list, as I will miss someone important) and thank you to Laura Pasquini for encouraging me to attend.

We’re Halfway There!

Welcome to the middle of the semester! Remember, at this point, you should know at least one of your portfolio essays and should be working on substantial revisions while you draft through our third essay prompt. By Week 12, you should know your second portfolio paper and then continue to revise. You’ll notice I’ve added our portfolio requirements to Learning Module 4, so you can take a look at those. Don’t forget that our scoring criteria is accessible through our syllabus page as well as under Learning Module 4.

Remember, revision, revision, revision!

Blog #8. Lurk Part 2

Hey everyone. So I started to notice a few new trends in social media revolving around the refugee crisis. Two hashtags began to arise and come out really strong. One was #One4 which basically stands for two things. One is the phrase “Out of every 4 refugees, One is a child.” This Hashtag is simple, yet it completely conveys a strong sense of reality. To put it in numbers, America wants to bring in 100,000 refugees next year. That would be 25,000 children who have to leave their homes and come into a country on the other side of the world. I mean, I hated moving two towns away when I was a child, I cannot imagine having to move to a different country. The other is for people to say “#One4 Peace or #One4 Love” to describe this refugee crisis. It conveys a thought that sometimes all it takes is one person to do something kind and it can create a chain reaction. The band Imagine Dragons are huge supporters of this thought. If anyone downloads their song “I Was Me” on itunes, there is a donation that goes out to help the refugees. It is another good and simple example of participation culture, and how useful social media is. People are able to connect with bands they like, to help a great cause.

The second hashtag is actually pretty basic. #NoRefugees. Mainly the people who post these hashtags seem to be radical Islam opposers. They post plenty of outrageous thoughts that call people “terrorists” or “Muslim Lovers.” It’s pretty ridiculous. However, I can agree that not all the refugees are going to be good people. Many people also say that America needs to focus on its homeless population, and we should not be worrying about refugees of another country. I can see where they are coming from, however it is our civic duty to help refugees seeking asylum from the Syrian Civil War. There are organizations that will help the homeless population if they seek help, but the homeless population does need to be addressed as well.

Follow

Angela #1A #DefundPP‏@angelacarwile

.@LibertyUSA1776 I see their “Convert or die” and raise them…”Meet my hollow point”. DON’T threaten ME! #NoRefugees #IslamIsTheProblemNews about refugee crisis on Twitter

Another, really crazy issue that has begun to arise, is the problem of child brides. I found this article on Facebook, and it really struck me. Syrian girls can be married at young ages, such as 13 or 14 years old. This is well below the age of consent for multiple countries and is basically pedophilia. There are some 13 year old teenage girls that are married to 40 year old guys. It is really creepy and definitely a problematic issue for countries harboring the refugees. They are legally married in their country, but breaking a law in different ones, so how do countries respond? Dutch lawmakers are honoring marriage licenses, but I highly doubt America would. If America did, it would basically be endorsing pedophiles. This article is about a 14 year old who is 9 months pregnant and missing. I really hope they find her, because she is probably in dire need of medical care.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/refugee-crisis-nine-month-pregnant-14-year-old-goes-missing-amid-anger-the-netherlands-is-allowing-a6701136.html

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There are two sides to any issue, and as the refugee crisis continues people are beginning to feel stronger towards their ideals. There is a strong sense of separation about this subject, and the refugees are the ones losing the most.
#One4 Peace

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Google Drive: A Life Saver

One resource that has been instrumental in my success thus far at the university has been Google Drive. In high school, I struggled with completing…