Monday, April 19, 2010
Last Blog
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Essay 4
Monday, March 29, 2010
blogggg
For the papers that I have written in English 101 I have only had to use a few sources in my writing. Usually, when looking for a source I start with the library website that WSU has to offer. I find it very helpful because you can narrow your topics down so you can get exactly what you are looking for. Once I have found a source using the library website, depending on the topic of my paper I will try and find the article that is the most recent. This is a good way to go about finding sources because it will allow you to gather the most up to date information, instead of attempting to cite an article that was wrote ten years earlier. I also have found Google to be a very helpful website as well. Google has allowed me to browse through thousands of different sources to find the correct information that I’m looking for. Even though not all of the information that I find is credible I have found a lot of reliable information that has really helped in my writing. If I am not sure of whether or not a website is credible I will do a background check on the creator of the website or the author to make sure that the information I am obtaining is worth using in my work. At this point in my research I have found that I have been successful in finding credible sources, but there still is a few things that I could improve to enhance the quality of my searches. First off, I believe that even though I have been occasionally using the library as a way to find sources, I should use it as the number one place to search for sources for my essays. I could also try and stay away from the easy way out like Wikipedia and even Google as a way to effectively find sources.
Monday, March 8, 2010
Kellogs article response
Norman Borlaug Response
Monday, March 1, 2010
Chapters 6 and 7 They Say I Say
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Chapter 16 and 17
Monday, February 8, 2010
Chapter 4 and 5: They say i say
In chapter five the focus is to determine how a reader knows when the author is moving from what "they say" to what "you say." This can be a difficult task for most writers because some writers tend to confuse the reader into who is saying what in the paper. I feel like a good way to go around this is to apply quotes to the writing because it gives the reader the idea that the issue being discussed is coming from another source. Also, it could be a good idea to rephrase your ideas so the reader understands who is talking more clearly.
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Monday, February 1, 2010
Blog 2 chapter nine
Monday, January 25, 2010
Omnivore's Dilema Blog
In the book, "The Omnivore's Dilemma," Michael Pollen discuses the issue of corn and how important it is towards today's society. Chapter two starts out with Pollen targeting the one specific farm in Iowa and how it was for the Naylor family to live the farming lifestyle. At one point during our countries history, the Naylor farm was able to produce enough corn and soybeans that was able to feed up to 129 Americans (Pollen, 34). That statistic right there goes to show how important one man's job was to the survival of man kind. But as the years went on in the farming industry, corn became so cheap that it was put into nearly everything that a person was to consume. With the rapid growth of population throughout the world, corn was at that the top of the list for human survival, and without a more efficient way of producing it, an estimation of two out of every five people on this earth would have lost their lives (Pollen, 43).
Luckily, a man by the name of Fritz Haber came up with one of the greatest inventions of the twentieth century that basically saved mankind. "The discovery of synthetic nitrogen changed everything- not just for the corn plant and the farm, not just for the food system, but also for the way life on earth is conducted" (Pollen, 42). Now that nitrogen is being applied to the food that we eat, corn and other products can be made at a much faster rate than ever before, making it possible to feed the mass amounts of people that live on this planet. From Pollen I also learned that the discovery of synthetic nitrogen has not been totally positive towards planet earth. In fact, the factories that create this fertilizer pollutes the atmosphere, and also gets flooded into rivers and oceans causing a deadly effect that has been shrinking its biodiversity (Pollen, 47). In the end corn has placed mainly a positive effect on our planet but has also brought a continuous fall to man from the beginning of agriculture.