Sunday, October 31, 2010

Incoming message


Whether one receive's voicemails, text messages, bbm's, Twitter tweets, Facebook posts or emails, we are always on our phones. Some people might think this is terrible and it is bringing our society down by making us less social, but I believe it is actually making our society more connected.


In less than a minute you can know where someone is. With cell phones, you have a constant form of communication with your loved ones. You will never go a day without talking to someone because of cell phones. Amy Gahran believes cell phones are changing our lives. She feels that they are changing the lives of the media as well. With one click of a button you can take a picture or a video of an event. With a smartphone, you can immediately upload the picture or video and in seconds everyone is informed.


Cell phones are shaping our society by providing us with information readily. You will always be kept up on news with your phone and you can always message your friends and family. Cell phones are advancing our world.

It is time to Speak Up


October is National Bully Prevention Month and during this month, CNN pointed out just how bad it can be for a person who is bullied. Bullying does not just take place in person anymore, it has, like so many other things, moved to the internet. Internet bullying is called cyber bullying. The various social media outlets such as Facebook and College ACB, have made it even easier for kids to bully each other. The risk of this new cyber bullying, however, is that the bullying can go global with just a click of the button.  

The humiliation that is brought on by cyber bullying can be life changing. A few weeks ago, a student from a New Jersey College committed suicide after he was the victim of being cyber bullied. His roommate took video tape of him having a sexual encounter with another male student and then posted it on the internet. The student was so humiliated by the event, he jumped off a bridge. The student was later arrested and regretted the joke he played, but the harm was already done. A life was lost. The interesting part of the situation with the student in New Jersey, is there was another student in the room with the individual who was doing the bullying. If she had just spoken up and stopped the attack, she could have changed the outcome.

I believe that today’s society encourages cyber bullying. Everyone in our society is competitive and superficial. They are only looking out for themselves. Everyone is willing to pick on someone else who does not fit the definition of “normal”, but a lot of times this is to hide their own insecurities with the issue of whether they are “normal”.  Bullying, many times, happens because a person does not like him or herself, so the person makes fun of others to help that person feel better about his or her own weaknesses. It takes a strong person to stand up to bullies, because they know if they say too much, the bully will turn on them next, but standing up to a bully will eventually cause the bully to break. If the girl in the dorm room had told the bully it was wrong to videotape his roommate, she may have broken the bully cycle and she could have saved a life.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Avoid the Freshman 15

 You are preparing for college by packing up your clothes; buying new decorations for your room and worrying you are going to gain the dreaded “freshman fifteen”.  The “freshman fifteen” is known as weight students gain their first year in college.  I know it is definitely easy to eat all the time while attending college, especially at a school such as SMU which is a large city with a multitude of places to eat.  Especially, on campus at SMU there are three cafeterias, many off campus restaurants within walking distance of the campus, and, of course, all the snacks each students keeps on hand for late night snacking.  One of a student’s biggest goals, as a freshman, is learning not to eat all the time.


Just because a lot of people in the freshman dorm order Jimmy John’s or run down to Mac’s Place to grab a snack, at any time of the day or night, does not mean you have to join them.  In an article I read online, it stated new college students gain weight because eating is part of their new found freedom.  New college students can eat whenever they want without anyone to tell them to stop.  Also, they crave sugary snacks to keep them awake to pull the late night studying sessions which come with freshman year.  The combination of sugary food and late night eating is not a healthy habit to start for these students.


However, there is some good news to the “freshman fifteen” myth.  The article states students do not actually gain fifteen pounds.  On the average, the students usually only gain eight pounds.  Students gain weight because they do not know portion control.  Also, students do not have the same structured lives they did at home.  They are living on their own terms and their own times.  So for many, snacking happens more often.  However, one of the main reasons people gain weight is from drinking sugary sodas and energy drinks.  They use the caffeine in the drinks to pull all nights, but each drink contains at least 100 calories and many contain a lot more.
Freshman students in college must watch their eating and drinking.  The students do not want to go home over break having gained weight.  Each student needs to take care of his or her body and enjoy the college experience.

    Studying from a Kindle?


    Textbooks are an essential in every student’s lives.  They contain the information needed to learn the subject.  However, textbooks are very expensive.  To cut down on costs, Clearwater High School in Clearwater, Florida is piloting a text program.  They are replacing all hardcopy textbooks with textbooks in electronic format on Kindles.  As said on TBO.com, the school bought over 2,200 Kindles, enough for each Clearwater High school student to have one.  The school administration believes using Kindles will advance technology use in the school with students.  In addition to having easy access to their books on the Kindle, they can look up material quickly on any subject they are studying at the time.  It is like having a library at each student’s fingertips.  The school board discovered it is cheaper to load each Kindle with a book than to buy the actual hardcopy of the textbook.


    I believe using Kindles is a great idea.  It is the way of the further in learning.  In addition to saving each student’s backs from carrying backpacks filled with heavy textbooks, it allows students to look up additional resource information other than just what is found in the textbook.  Additionally, each student has the option to take out a $20 insurance policy in case something happens to their Kindle, instead of having to make their parents pay $177.60 if it is lost, stolen or broken.  The students are finding the biggest issue they are having with the Kindles is the Kindle becomes demagnetized if it touches a cell phone.  So if the Kindle is placed in a backpack near a cell phone, the Kindle no longer works.  The school is working with the makers of the Kindles to fix this problem.  The school’s major concern with the Kindles is making sure the students do use them to access inappropriate websites.  There currently is a block on the sites to prevent students for accessing information which is not appropriate for them or a classroom setting.  It is anticipated the program will spread to more schools next year.  My only regret is the Kindles were not available at my high school so I did not have to tote around an extremely heavy backpack all day.