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Showing posts from October, 2017

Online Movements

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This week in class we discussed online movements. We also picked groups for our collaborative project two. I am part of food group. The Black Lives Matter movement is a huge movement in the media right now. It is discussed throughout many social media platforms, has been discussed on different tv networks, and even has been written about in songs. Celebrities have been promoting this through social media and even in outfits for award shows. I believe this online movement has a large platform but should be taken more seriously. All Lives Matter is something that came up a lot last year and at first I was very for it until realizing that it was making fun of Black Lives Matter. I think based on Twitter, it made this movement very big. The hashtag went big for a really long time which made many people see it and caught attention of celebrities. Also the many protests with the hashtag got people noticing it on the television.  Photo by The All-Nite Images  Via Wikimedia Commons

Online Gaming

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This week in class we discussed online gaming. The company we discussed was Riot, League of Legends. Researchers looked through the game to see the effects of toxic and trash talk in the game. They used different codes to see if people would stop talking badly on the game by having people report others and have different check points in the games with different colors. I don't know much about online gaming but when I was younger I always played Webkinz and Club Penguin and they had censors for people that would speak badly. If teens on the site continued to have toxic behavior on the site they would block the character from the site. I believe that every website should have this based on the fact that their will always be teenagers and people that speak this way. Or I believe they should make games where they know people are talking this way for a more mature age. Make the game get information about your age before allowing you to join. Photo by Gamingforfun365 Via Wikimed

Civil Inattention

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A sociologist by the name of Erving Hoffman defined the process civil inattention. It is the process where strangers who are close in proximity show that they are aware of one another without showing recognition. People just have their own personal boundaries. It is through brief eye contact when approaching a stranger. It is acknowledging each others presence but nothing more than eye contact. I do this everyday. I walk by people in class, on the street, or even someone that lives in the same building as me. I also do this on social media. I scroll through Facebook, Instagram, and Snapchat and see posts every day. I don't always interact with their posts . Many people comment or like each post which is small interaction but not every single post you see. Also when sending posts between friends. Such as taking a screenshot or share the post via messenger isn’t interaction with the person it’s interaction with someone else.  Image by HabibullahQureshi Via Wikimedia Common

Group Project

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My group presented the Tuckman's 5 Stages with the show Friends. I had never watched the show Friends before but I watched a few episodes so I could be on the same page as all my group members.  Overall, our group got along well and split up the work evenly. Some members had difficulty doing it at the same time. The only bad part was the presentation. This was my first presentation of College and I get very nervous in front of a lot of people. Public speaking isn't my strong suit so it was hard till it was finally over.   Image by: Tom Mrazek via Wikimedia Commons