Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Ahh! Blogging?

When I first heard of the blogging assignment for WRIT1122, the first thoughts and images that came to mind were "Oh, those weblog things people write on the internet about random junk" and "I've never even really READ a blog in depth, much less WRITTEN one before." This is what one of the scariest things about writing is for me, is writing something in a style I am unsure about and have never written before. I always wonder, what if this isn't anything like what is expected of me?

Well, like just about everything else in life, "practice is everything." To help out, Dr. Schonberg also provided me with some good examples and links to blogs which have really aided my understanding of blogging over the last week. One main thing I have learned a lot about blogging is that it takes on a much less formal style of writing. There isn't much to it as far as a specific style or organization goes. From what I have seen from numerous blogs on the web, the style's the blogs are written in vary greatly, depending on the topic the blog is about, the style of the blog (whether it is a technical blog, a more personal blog, etc.), and also, they seem to vary from person to person.

After this research I have actually started to take an interest in reading blogs, and hopefully writing plenty of my own as well as even starting up my own blog relating to activities outside writing.

-Nick

Monday, January 14, 2008

In class writing revision

Dr. Schonberg,

I am a freshman here at DU who has successfully completed his first quarter. I am writing this to inform you of where I am at as a writer right now, where I was before I came to the University of Denver, and where I have come since then, as well as things I have realized about college writing.

In my first year seminar which related to evolution and fossils, we wrote semi often. In class quizzes were usually written out answers to questions instead of multiple choice. Our midterm and final exams were also papers. Ultimately, in just this one quarter long class I produced approximately ten to fifteen pages of writing. The writing assignments as stated above were all in place of tests or quizzes, so they were ultimately assessments of course material. The assignments related to the methodology of the course in addition to the material. Most of these assignments usually asked me what I thought of a hypothesis and to prove or disproved based on my opinion which was based on the information learned from the material of the course. The writing in this course was not even close to what I had expected of college writing. My expectations of college writing was that it would be typical high school English class style thematic essays except juiced up on steroids by having huge length and vocabulary expectations. Or, in other words, writing assignments I already found boring and dreary that I often struggled and found great difficulty with, but a much harder version of it. So far, college writing has been nothing like this at all. In reality, college writing has been much more simple and down to the point. It is something I am enthusiastic about and can sit down and crank out page after page with little effort. It is so much easier and fun to write when there is more of a purpose to what I am writing that is actually interesting. This has been what the majority of my college writing has been like. I also like how it is so much more precise and efficient because there is so much information to write about, unlike high school writing which is a useless babble fest to attempt to fill five pages with something that has little to no importance or meaning to the writers.

As a university student I have learned a lot about writing, mostly that it isn’t these boring dreary repetitive thematic essays that are nearly identical from one to the other. There is so much variety in college writing and what is expected of it. For example, a business case study paper shares nothing at all in common with these high school style essays, nor does it really share much in common with an analysis of a deliberative discussion or a final exam paper in my fossils and evolutionary theory first year seminar. In college writing it is all tailored for the area and subject matter to write about the material in the most efficient manner possible. What I have realized however, is that I have much to learn about writing, and that so far what I have encountered is only a fraction of what I have yet to see and experience of college writing.

-Nick D’Antonio

WRIT1122 (MW 4:00PM)

1-14-2008