Homeowork [1.6]

The school day was going on like any other school day. It was the end of fourth period, we had just wrapped up a long math lesson. My teacher Ms. Chan loudly announced, ”boys and girls line up for lunch”. The excitement me and other students felt could not be described with words, lunch period was like a getaway vacation from school.In the middle of my classmates lining up for lunch, I couldn’t control myself. Instead of following directions, I sneaked behind one of my best friends, holding a deck of Pokemon cards tightly like it was money, nearly messing up the whole line. We went downstairs, arrived at my vacation, the lunchroom, grabbed our plate of food, and ventured into our intense Pokemon card battle, turning the lunchroom into a whole Pokemon league tournament, kids cheering up me and my friend, for a moment I thought I was actually on the Pokemon TV show. It was at that moment, I realized school in America was way different than in China and that I experienced something I never experienced in China. At a young age, I experienced many Chinese cultures and many life experiences. Although I was born in America, my formative years were spent in China, under passionate care of my grandparents. It was there I first learned how to speak my mother tongue, Fuzhounese, and learned many Chinese traditions and values. While I enjoyed spending my childhood in China with my grandparents, life will move on eventually. I returned back to America when I was 5.My return to America signified the beginning of my educational journey that would not only change the language I was speaking but my thoughts on education itself. The first day of kindergarten was intimidating. I found myself in a class with unfamiliar faces, some kids were darker than me and somewhere lighter than me, I was confused and couldn’t understand a word of English. Despite the confusion, I noticed a similarity between me and my teacher, she looked like a teacher I had back in China. At that moment I felt like I was back at home as if I never left China.However, everything changed. My parents, who immigrated from China to America wanted me to get a better education and because they didn’t have the opportunity to go to school themselves, they wanted to give their son a chance. They made a decision to transfer me to another elementary school. She believed that learning English and other subjects from an American teacher is more impactful. This random transition was crucial to my educational journey.The experience of transferring to another elementary school had both pros and cons. I started speaking English more in the new school even though it wasn’t the best. My struggles with the English language indicated that effective communication with my teacher and classmates was theĀ  main ingredientĀ  of education. English helped me make friends outside of my own race.The shift from a school with predominantly Asian teachers to another school with predominantly American teachers exposed me to diverse teaching styles and different teaching approaches. This also expanded my view of education by showing me there is a diversity in learning.Transferring schools also made me realize how important making friends and just socially connecting in school is. I never got to say goodbye to that friend because everything was so sudden, but I am grateful he helped me experience something I never experienced before.Looking back at it now, transferring school had a big positive impact on how I see education. Language is important for learning, teachers teach differently, making friends is a big part of school. Transferring schools is like a journey you grow, adapt, and discover.

 

Research Question proposal

Something traumatic can happen anywhere and at any time to anyone, and the toll that it can later take on the person Depending on where the event took place, the trauma can then turn to PTSD, where the person is afraid of something or someone and finds it hard to move on. My research question is: How does someoneā€™s PTSD influence their later life? Can that also affect their relationship with their parents? Personal life? How does that event shape who they are now? Iā€™ve always asked myself that question, as I personally see my parentsā€™ lives. What if that event didn’t end up happening? What would my parents be like today? Would they have been happier or even had an accommodating life? Thatā€™s what makes me want to ask more, research, and learn more about

Hw,2.2

When I was a kid, I was interested in becoming an investigator. I would watch shows such as Carmen SanDiego and Sally Bollywood. The idea of wanting to solve crime sounded fun and interesting, and my mother would buy me those unsolved crime puzzles. I am still interested in becoming an investigator, but not really. My reasoning is knowing how inhumane some crime scenes can look, the toll that it can take on a human being, and maybe also putting myself in danger. Asking questions about being an investigator helped me learn more about the role they play in the field. As I grew older, my curiosity changed about how much I wanted to learn. It got unsettling, so I started losing interest in it and stopped asking questions and wanting to know more. The role the educational system played in my curiosity was providing crime books or also inviting policemen and investigators to the school for some career showcases. Instead, now Iā€™m more interested in the topic of architecture and buildingā€”how one can actually make a drawing of a building or something aesthetically pleasing to the eye just by learning how to even make a building stable to stand on or a shelter for someone who likes the way that I made it.

HOMEWORK D.1

The article for me was interesting and boring at the same time. The whole article was about procrastination and it helped me understand more about it Ā because I really didn’t know what was procrastination before it was spoken about in class and before reading this article. I procrastinate a lot, it is difficult for me to focus and get stuff done, I think about it too much and I say I’m gonna leave it for the next day and sometimes I do get it done but sometimes I don’t. I know this is bad and I got to work on it because it’s going to set me up for failure in the future. In the begging of the article the author was talking about a man named George Akerlof that needed to mail a package to his colleague across the country, however George Akerlof procrastinated about it and said that It was going to take a lot of time of his day to do so, so instead he said he was going to mailed it next week but he never did. Eight months has passed and he still haven’t mailed the package to his colleague. Akerlof find out that a friend was sending some stuff over to the U.S and that’s when he took the opportunity to send the package to his colleague. This part of he article stood out to me because I find that I would be the type to do things like this or similar. In some occasions we’re very busy completing tasks and stuff that needs to get done that we procrastinate about doing other important stuff. In the other hand most of the article was boring to me. They were talking about different ways of procrastination people goes through and the negative outcomes that comes from it.