Saturday, April 15, 2017

Portfolio Index

The purpose of this portfolio index is to organize finalized stories that I've spent time revising from each week. As a former copy editor from the OU Daily as well as a few other places, I enjoy editing and revising copy to make it as perfect as it can possibly be.


Sisters Unite

Once there were three young girls: Ella, Kate, and Lee. They were from a rich family. Their dad was a lawyer, and their mom was the district attorney. Not only were they rich, but their parents didn't spend a lot of time with them due to their jobs. So at age sixteen, they were all very used to doing whatever they wanted and whenever they wanted. Unfortunately, they weren't intelligent. They went to school but spent most of the hours on their phones, never paying much attention to the teachers. The only special thing about the sisters was that each had her own special talent.     read more...

Hunt or Be Hunted
The king and his servants go out one morning, venturing into the woods. Guns in hand, the king was ready to catch a good bird. He always loved the sport of hunting. He had a room filled with taxidermy. He was so proud of everything he had hunted and shot down. In reality, most of his servants that went on his hunting trips were really the ones who shot and killed everything. But of course, being the king, credit was due to him.     read more...

The unforeseeable foggy future

On a rainy day in Brownmote Village, there were three vicious witches stirring up trouble. The first sister, Meg, was the brightest, but she never knew when to stop talking; the middle sister, Patty, always messed up the easiest spells, even turning her own dress into a pumpkin one time; the youngest sister, Serena, was by far the prettiest of them all, which isn’t saying much, and she was also the nicest of them all.     read more...

A Series of a Child of Ill Luck
There was a daughter borne to two beautiful actors. They had a scary birth, but overall they thought they had bore a healthy child. But when she was born, the doctor told them that she was a child of ill luck. At first they were scared, but then they remembered that it was just an old myth from Chinese culture. And it made sense because their doctor was Chinese. But they decided to ignore the doctor and continue on with life.     read more...

Fortunate Findings
Once there was a poor, poor village just outside the kingdom’s reach, and every morning Baker Paolo would put out a basket of burnt bread for the children to grab on their way to school. The children would take what they needed to fill the rest of their stomachs, never taking more than was filling, for they knew other children might come along who also needed it. The baker always looked forward to seeing the children's smiling faces in the morning, knowing he was at least putting some joy in the children's lives.     read more...

Monday, April 10, 2017

Famous Last Words: Make an Effort

I'm doing this blog post at the beginning of the week since the class announcements will be the same for Mon-Wed.

Source: OU Class Announcements

This meme really speaks to me as I have less than a month until graduation.
I have received many awards. I have been involved with a lot of things. I have accomplished a lot of things. But in the midst of all the hustle and bustle of trying to find a job, I forgot that I need to come back down to earth and be humble. I have lost that. The awards and achievements don't mean anything unless I use them to better myself and the people around me. I think a lot of people gain power and they get lost in what the power does to them. I like to be in control and be in a position of power. But I don't want to be in a position of power to take advantage of people. I believe that with power comes responsibility. And you must use that power for good. A lot of what is going on in today's society is people using their power not for the good of society. And it is not necessarily my place to say where people should direct their power toward, but I know this society and the world would be a much better place if people used their power for good. So, I want a job that I can use my power for good. I want a job in which I am seen as a role model. I want to be someone that everyone can invest time and energy into and trust.

So I have taken a second to sit down, breath and reevaluate my life and my hunt for a job.
I know that in everything I do, I must make a real effort to succeed. No one is going to hand me a job. And certainly no one is going to do it for me. I have to do it for myself, and I have to make the effort. 

Final Class Reflections: Improvements

For the final class reflections, I have copy and pasted the text from the original blog, and have made comments in red below each section. My own separate suggestions are in blue. 


Change Review Weeks to Planning Weeks. This is a really big change to the class, but one that I am really excited about. Right now, there is an Orientation Week in Week 1, and then Review Weeks in Week 8 and Week 15. What I am thinking, though, is that instead of reviewing, PLANNING would be more useful, especially in terms of getting people to plan their own time schedule for the class. The result would be Orientation Week in Week 1, then a Planning Week in Week 2 (focused on time management but also other kinds of plans you might make for the semester), so the regular reading and storytelling assignments would go from Week 3-8. Then there would be a Planning and Review Week in Week 9, with the remaining reading and storytelling weeks for the rest of the semester. The main goal here is to try to find a way for people to create and commit to their own schedules for the class instead of relying on the Canvas due dates (which are obviously not going to be convenient for everybody). If you have any other ideas about how to help people with managing their class schedule and time management in general, let me know!

I like this idea. I love planning, and I think this would have been great this semester. It would have helped me have a general scope of what I had left in this class. 

Expand the Story Planning Option. This was a fantastic idea that someone suggested in the midterm survey, and I actually implemented it partway through the semester (something that I rarely do, but it was such a good idea!). Next semester, I will have that story planning option available from the very start, plus I am going to expand on that idea to be useful for people doing Storybooks: in addition to using this option for planning a regular weekly story post, people who are doing Storybooks could use the planning option to plan the upcoming story for their Storybook. Did you try the story planning option this semester? Was it useful? What resources can I provide that would help people with the planning process? Any thoughts you have about that would be very helpful!

I never used the story planning option except once maybe, because I'm the type of person to sit down and get everything done, at least for this class, to just start writing. Yes, I am a planner, but for this class, a planning option wasn't really needed. But I'm sure other students would greatly benefit from it. 

Create more audio recordings. I don't have a professional-quality recording voice, but I like to record stories, and some students in the Indian Epics class have found the SoundCloud recordings helpful; those of you in Myth-Folklore can see how that works here: Vyasa and Ganesha. There are some units in the Myth-Folklore class that have audio from LibriVox, but I was thinking that I might record at least one story from each of the Myth-Folklore units so that there would be more audio available. Also, I was thinking that if there are any of you in the class who like to read out loud and would want to share recordings back with me, I could make that into one of the options for extra credit reading so that you could share your mp3 audio recordings, and I could put your recordings at SoundCloud to share with the class too. So, let me know what you think both about me creating some more audio and also about creating audio together as a class.

Again, I never used this option because I'm a visual learner. When I was in grade school I had a hard time focusing because some of the stories would be read using a recording, and I never could figure out how to pay attention and comprehend. But again, I think this would be useful for other students. 

Create writing tutorial videos. There are some writing areas that could benefit from a video presentation. For example, I could do some screencast videos working through the process of finding comma splices and fixing them, and also videos on how to write dialogue with correct use of quotation marks and punctuation. Since those are both complex writing topics, I was thinking that a step-by-step process could be helpful. If you've ever watched Lynda.com or Khan Academy videos, that's what I have in mind, although obviously my videos would not be as sophisticated in terms of production values. I think I could learn how to make something simple, though, that might be useful. If you are interested in something like this, let me know what writing topics you would like for me to focus on.

I like this idea. I'm not sure I would ever use it, but I like the idea for other students. Again, I'm more of a read-on-page learner rather than a video/audio learner. 

Create thematic reading units. Right now in both classes the readings are organized around selections from books so that in any given week you are reading selections from a specific book (or the whole book if the book is short). I was thinking, though, that it might be useful to build some thematic units, kind of like the way the thematic Storybook projects work. So, for example, in the Myth-Folklore class, I could create a week-long reading unit of "Ghost Stories" or "Trickster Stories," while in the Indian Epics class I could create a unit of "Love Stories" or "Dharma Stories," etc. If this is something you think would be good to do, please let me know what kinds of themes you think would be good choices!

YES! I love this idea. I think this would get me more excited for the units to come and it would actually help my brain organize the units since they go by themes instead of geographical location or countries. 

My own suggestions for this class:

I would suggest try to cut down the amount of text used to explain assignments. Sometimes I felt overwhelmed with beginning an assignment due to the amount of text was there. After reading through all of it, I realized that the assignment wasn't as difficult as the text made it out to be. I'm the type of person that like to read bullet points or lists of instructions. It helps me understand concepts better and I can read through it quicker. Maybe having shorter instructions but then using bolded text with questions if students get lost. 
For example: Word Count? 500
Don't know how to do a bibliography? Click here. (But again wherever the link leads, the text should be short, concise so that it doesn't take the student more time to read the instructions than to actually do the assignment.)

THAT'S ALL I HAVE. This is a great class. I've already recommended it to my friends! 



Sunday, April 9, 2017

Reading Notes: Lang's European Fairy Tales I

These notes are from Lang's European Fairy Tales I unit. Story source: The Blue Fairy Book by Andrew Lang, illustrated by H. J. Ford (1889).

The Master Cat, or Puss in Boots
I have not read the original story of puss and boots, but I have seen the Puss in Boots from the Shrek movies. This is one of my favorite characters.
I think I would write a story in which I tell the history of how Puss in Boots came to be an adult. He would have grown up with a mother who was a seamstress. She fed him milk and spoiled him. Until one day she died, and Puss was all alone. What his mother didn't know was that he was teased in school a lot. And so he would wait after leaving the house to walk a different, more dangerous way to school because everything he usually walked with teased him. But after his mother died, he didn't know what to do anymore. He was so ashamed he hadn't told her that he was teased.
Fast forward 15 years, not in actual cat years, and he is all though. Thus the name, Puss in Boots.
Puss in boots. Source: Shrek. Wiki


The Dirty Shepherdess

I would change this story and make it two sons. It's always daughters who seem to be in a castle. For this story I would make it a father and his two sons. And the son that he kicks out isn't as smart or bright and intelligent as the other. The king doesn't think he can carry on the family name very well. So the youngest boy leaves and throws his crown on the dirt road as he leaves the castle. One into the poor village, he tries to find a job, but no one will give him one since they all know who he is. They remember him. He isn't very nice to them. When he comes to shop, he is rude and when he comes to eat, he never tips. So no one gives him a job.

Reading Notes: Italian Popular Tales, Part B

Reading Notes from Italian Popular Tales by Thomas Crane.

Reading Notes, Part B


The Language of Animals

Animals in a zoo. Source: Youtube
I would create a story in which a boy has been raised from birth in a zoo. His family are not gorillas. They are not monkeys. They are not anything you've heard before. They are giraffes. This boy can talk to the giraffes and his mother, Delila, has raised him as her own. This would be loosely based
off the reading but also off The Jungle Book. I would have everything be normal, until one night the zoo night guard comes by and thinks someone is trying to steal the animals, meanwhile is only the boy. They have never been caught before this. The boy runs away and hides as best he can, but because he doesn't understand how the real world works, he hides in a cage. The night guard calls the police and an entire investigation is started. The boy is scared. So he escapes as soon as he can with the help of his mother and her long neck. The boy runs as far away as he can. Then I would start to base the story off Elf, where he discovers the city and the fascinating things it has to offer him.

The Sexton's Nose

I would write a story about how a young man found a hundred dollar bill on the floor and had a small idea that he had been dreaming of every since he was small. He took the hundred dollar bill and invested it by gambling. He scored big. What can he say? He had great luck. He takes all his winnings, because where he lived and in the age he was in, he was allowed to gamble. So he takes all the money and becomes a millionaire by the time he is 22. But he doesn't live a normal life. He never grew up understanding how normal people live. He didn't understand the struggle. Story to be continued...



Reading Notes: Italian Popular Tales, Part A

Reading Notes from Italian Popular Tales by Thomas Crane.

Reading Notes, Part A

Zelinda and the Monster

This story reminds me of Psyche and Cupid because there are three sisters, two of whom are jealous of their sister. I think I would set this story in Mexico. There would be three triplet brothers and each of them would be married with kids. But they still live off daddy's money and none of them know how to work or the value of a dollar. So the boys are trying to raise their own kids but don't know how because they were never forced to understand.
One day the monster comes by all three boys' house. In this case, the monster is not an actual monster but a dealer. He is a liar. But he tricks people into thinking that they can play card tricks with him and if they win he will pay them money. Their wives tell their husbands not to give in and play this dirty game. But the first born man (only by 5 minutes) can't stand to say no. So he tells the monster that he will play one game, but that's it. Story to be continued.

The Fair Angiola

The Little Mermaid. Source: Giphy
Wow. Seven women in the original story. I would make them sisters. I would also have this story take place under the sea, like the little mermaid. Instead of a desire for jujubees, I would write about their desire for sea shells. But it's hard to find big round beautiful sea shells because they can't be found in their part of the reef. So some of them venture out to find them, but their father tells them it is too dangerous. The girls don't understand why they can't go beyond the reed, kind of like in Moana, and so Petria goes out one day past the reef, only to be caught in a fishing net. But thankfully a dolphin sees Petria and cuts her loose from the net of fish that is going up toward the fishing boat. Story to be continued. 

Reading Notes: Through the Looking-Glass, Part A

Reading Notes from Through the Looking-Glass, Part A from Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There, a sequel to Alice in Wonderland.


Looking-Glass House

First off, I've never read the sequel to Alice in Wonderland. So this is a first time for me. I think that Alice will be grown up and she will still be as curious as ever. She wonders into the mansion after school one day, and instead of being cautious, she starts looking around. Nothing really catches her eye. So just as she is about to leave, she sees something out of the corner of her eye. She jumps back and screams. But have no fear, it wasn't a person or even an animal. It was her own reflection inside this old mirror. As she looks more closely, she see's not only herself but other creatures that she remembers from her adventures with the Mad Hatter, the Queen of Diamonds (previous reading A) and the rabbit that she had followed around. So, as this mirror plays back memories, she cries. Then the mirror stops the memories and a face appears. The face tells her not to cry anymore. Alice is scared at first, but then musters up the courage to ask a question of this face in the mirror. She asks, "Why should I trust you? Who are you?" The face waits a moment, and then it replies, "My dear girl, I gave you these memories so you would look back on them and be happy. There comes a time when memories will fade, but for now you should remember everything in good light." Alice understands and continues talking to the mirror. 



Queen Alice

I would make Alice a Queen of Hearts, and she and the Queen of Diamonds would get into arguments over who had the most power. I would kind of play off the Wizard of Oz themes with the two queens, one good and one bad. But in the end, both queens learn how to get along together. 

Reading Notes: Alice In Wonderland, Part B

Reading Notes from Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, British/Celtic Unit.

Reading Part B:

A Mad Tea Party

illustration by Sir John Tensile




I think instead of a table on the ground here in this story, there would be a table in a tree house. The rabbit goes up the tree into a tree house. Alice must figure out how to get up there since she is still sort of dazed by the caterpillar's candy. As the rabbit disappears out of eye sight, Alice sees a nearby river. She goes over to it to drink water. She feels much better. As she feels better minute by minute, she figures out a way to climb up the tall tree to get to where the rabbit has gone. She can hear voices, but doesn't know what's going on. As she is so curious, she finds a branch and uses it to propel herself up into the tree. She accidentally sticks a rough landing, and lands on top of the table. The Mad Hatter, which in this case will be a fox, is not happy. He leans over to eat Alice right up until the rabbit stops her. He says, "Wait!" We mustn't. She is important later on today. 
Then he gets up and scurries out of the tree house screaming, "I'm late, I'm late, for a very important date!" 
The rabbit disappears again out of Alice's sight. She must follow him. 


The Queen's Croquet-Ground

I think instead of the Queen of Hearts, she will be called the queen of diamonds. Why? Because what woman doesn't love diamonds. I understand that the original queen can control others' hearts and it is a source of power, but what about a queen of diamonds? I think she would rule over a land of diamonds and her servants are called diamonds in the rough. Ha! But anywhere, instead of roses being in the garden, too, there would be flowers that shine as much as a diamond would. The queen also kills the enemies and the ones who get in trouble with diamonds. 

Reading Notes: Alice in Wonderland, Part A

Reading Notes from Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, British/Celtic Unit. 

Reading Part A: 

Down the Rabbit-Hole

I think I would have a parent reading a story to the little girl named Alice. I don't think they way this story opens is all that appealing. I would make the child of a younger age as well with a vivid imagination. The story would include the rabbit that was talking and saying he was going to be late. 
I think I would write a story kind of resembling Beauty and the Beast. Where whatever Alice runs into — supposedly intimate objects at first — they will talk back to her telling her she shouldn't be as curious as she is. 
The bottle she finds would say 'Don't Drink Me,' because we all know that children are notorious for doing the opposite of what they're told to do or not do. After Alice drinks it, she begins to speak in different languages. This is where the story would start to really differ from the original Alice in Wonderland stories. 


Advice from a Caterpillar

illustration by Sir John Tenniel
The caterpillar can talk, but he doesn't smoke. Instead he talks and if starts talking very emotionally, candy starts falling from his eyes. I would take the idea from the movie Inside Out. As he talks, he gets emotional and then candy starts coming out of his eyes. Alice wants to eat all of it. When she does though she starts laughing. The candy has magical powers in it that make anyone happy and laugh. But it also makes people unaware of what is going on around them. So the caterpillar knowing Alice is under the influence of the eye candy, tries to lure her into his cave so that he can eat her. But when that happens, the rabbits comes by and snaps Alice out of her trance but still says that he's late for a very important date. 

Reading Notes: English Fairy Tales, Part B

This story is part of the English Fairy Tales (1) unit. Story source: English Fairy Tales by Joseph Jacobs with illustrations by John D. Batten (1890).

Reading Notes, Part B:

Henny-Penny
This story is extremely interesting. I found it difficult to read because of the different punctuation used throughout. The dashes and the names within single quotes was confusing. Also, I know these are fairy tales, but the names are crazy. The long, rhyming names make it confusing to follow along. I wouldn't want to read these fairy tales to my children.

Molly Whuppie
After reading quote a few of these stories from the British unit, I have come to realize that I wouldn't have enjoyed these stories growing up. Or maybe I would have, but something about them isn't the same as the stories that I grew up with. This story here is not morally OK. I wouldn't read stories to my children about leaving children in the woods. That's called neglect. And I don't think it's humorous either. Then again, I don't find The Office to be funny either.
The giant in this story is quite interesting though. This story is confusing as well. Too many characters for me even to focus on rewriting this stories.

Mr. Fox
OK. This story is more creepy than any of the British stories that I've read. It started out sweet and what seemed to be a love story, but it is not. The story goes on and talks about blood and skeletons and I got so freaked out that I stopped reading halfway through. These aren't fairy tales. It makes sense, I think, because the British never seemed to be much of the fairy tale type.

Johnny-Cake

This is a story that I like. It reminds me of a gingerbread man and how he popped out of the over. I like the name for this one because he was baked and he probably is a cake. This story makes sense to me. This is a story that I could see reading to my kids.

Source: OU Blog Spot




Tech Tip: Canvas Calendar

I think what I like most about the Canvas calendar is the options for professors/TAs, etc. I think the freedom it allows is great, and overall it then helps students too. 
I don't personally use the calendar, because it gives me dates that I don't necessarily need to know about. I have a planner of my own that is broken down by hours from 7 a.m. until 9 p.m. every single day. It is my bible. I follow it like someone else follows their religion. That being said, I'm sure the calendar is helpful for others. But I don't use it all that often.


Tech Tip: Canvas Mobile App

I already have the Canvas Mobile App. I downloaded it this summer even before the new academic year was here. I think it is more intuitive than the D2L app, but I still had to turn off a lot of the new notification preferences. I like it overall, but I don't use it that much, since this class, especially, uses so many notifications when I do the declarations. So, sometimes I miss important things, but it's fine. I also think it's helpful to use the app, because when using a web browser, especially on my phone, it is hard to view.


Tech Tip: Pinterest, Embed my profile

This is it.



Tech Tip: Pinterest Board/Embed

This is my Pinterest account link: pinterest.com/ougal17.

I made a Pinterest account when I was either a junior or senior in high school. I remember my chemistry teacher talking about it and how it was the newest thing. I also remember having to wait for a link to sign up to even get an account because there were so many people trying to get accounts. Now I don't it it used as heavily, but it is still just as popular as ever! I use/used pinterest for cooking, crafts, clothing, shoes, pursues - basically anything and everything. I like to use it for inspirational quotes as well. It is a great app to help pass the time.

I'm going to go ahead and get another tip out of the way by embedding my account here in this blog post.


Review: Take Risks

The announcement I enjoyed the most was from Week 11, Saturday. It was about Growth Mindset and I think it really helps me to understand life, especially right now.

Source: OU Class Announcements Blog

As I am about to graduate in less than 35 days, I have to remember that in order to succeed at anything in life, I have to take risks. I can't just sit back and expect things to happen to me, good things at least.

Famous Last Words: Faking It Until I Make It

The reading for this week went well. I did not have to time to do both portions of the reading, as norma. So, instead, I just did the second half of the reading. I remember that most of the stories I read from the British unit were extremely interesting and many of them I didn't like. There was one story that I skipped completely because it was too graphic for me. It was a story about a woman who had killed her daughter and chopped her up and served her in the soup. I almost got sick reading it. I can't stand reading stories like that. I did not experiment with a new creative writing style this week. 

Things are going fine in my other classes. Right now in my capstone class, we are reaching the very end. I have 4,000 words to write before May 7 I believe. So that's what the title of this post is: Faking It Until I Make It, because I am indeed faking it until I make it. I'm trying to finish up this class so I have more time devote to my capstone class. As of right now, there isn't anything I'm reading in this class that correlates with sometimes I'm doing in another class. But I do love it when that happens. 
This past weekend, I was honored at the OU Campus Awards Ceremony for being Gaylord College's Overall Outstanding Senior as well as Letzeiser Honor List. I've very honored to have been recognized for my achievements as my college career comes to an end. Now on to find a job. I have applied to several places, but something just doesn't feel like a good fit yet. Until yesterday, I applied to a Marriott training program and a copy editor position at an advertising and marketing firm. I'm still waiting on a couple of other applications, but I am keeping my fingers crossed. 



Graduation Caps Being Tossed Into Air Source: Programming Librarian

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

Reading Notes: English Fairy Tales, Part A

This story is part of the English Fairy Tales (1) unit. Story source: English Fairy Tales by Joseph Jacobs with illustrations by John D. Batten (1890).

Reading Notes, Part A:

Tom Tit Tot

For this story, I would set the location in Italy. I would have the father wishing that someone would come by and take his daughter's hand in marriage. One day, he is out in the garden and he is singing a lovely tune about his daughter. A man walks by and inquires about who the song is about. When the father tells him, the man wants to marry this girl at once. The father only assumes that because the man is dressed well that he is the prince everyone has been talking about for days. The village said he would visit. So the man says that he will marry his daughter and give her everything she needs for 364 days of the year. But on the 365th day, she must make dinner for him and his friends to their liking. If she does not listen to him on this day or make food to their liking, he will kill her that night. It seemed like an easy task. So the daughter marries the man, but she finds out that he is not a prince, but a businessman who happened to be traveling through the village on business. When the daughter tells the father that the man is no prince, the man gets upset. He tells the girl that the deal is off. He tells the daughter that he will return her if she does not cook and clean for 364 days of the year. 

Source: Shutterstock

She can have one day off. Horrified, she does as she is told. She pretends to be the perfect wife when the friends come over and when other people visit. But deep down she is sad. Finally her father comes to visit her, and he can see in his daughter's eyes that she is not happy. So he plans a getaway for his daughter in the night.

The rest is history.

Note: I don't like the british fairy tales. They are too blunt and too scary.

Thursday, March 30, 2017

Week 10 Storytelling: Clouds get their head out of the clouds

Clouds get their head out of the clouds


It was a stormy Wednesday afternoon in the Shin-ge-bis tribe sacred lands. Trees were shaking and the animals were crying out. The native peoples of the tribe had taken shelter in their homes and hadn't come out since the storm had started that morning.

In the sky above, among the lightning, harsh winds and heavy rain, were two brother clouds, Omi and Oli. They were in a fight. Omi had called Oli a mean name after they had played a game of soccer. Omi was so upset that he yelled and screamed that morning, which had started the storm. They had ultimately caused this harsh storm, as the clouds ruled the sky. If the brothers were happy, then the sky was clear and blue. If the brothers were mad, the sky was a storm. If the brothers were sad, not only did it rain, but it was cold and windy. The brothers today, though, were mad.


Source: Beta News

So the storm raged on and on. After a week, the people didn't know what to do. So they prayed to the winds and instead of a rain dance, they did a wind dance. The children would get dressed up in all their rain gear and venture outside and brace themselves against the wind. The children liked dancing in the rain and the wind. But they were still learning the difference between their rain dances and their wind dances. A rain dance mean that they danced and prayed for the clouds to bring them rain to replenish the earth. A wind dance was when they danced and prayed to the clouds to change the weather from whatever it was. Unfortunately, the children and the people learned that it was hard to get much out of the wind dance. The people only did the wind dance when a storm had erupted. The clouds didn't ever seem to care. Of course they didn't. The clouds caused storm when they were fighting.

Back in the sky, the brothers still didn't care that the people were being affected. They cared more that each of them weren't going to give in then they did about helping the people. They continued to fight and they caused so much damage to the tribe's village. The storm had been raging on for 3 days now with no end in sight.

So the people decided to rebuild their village to fit the harsh winds and storms that continued to come. Many got sick for being outside in the rain for so long, but they knew that they would have to live in a safe spot if the storms continued — if the clouds didn't stop their feud.


Then the brothers finally saw the damage they were causing. They looked at each other for a long time. Oli apologized. Omi accepted. They decided to stop the fight for the good of the people. The people did one last wind dance, and the winds and storms finally stopped. They were so happy that they cried and thanked the clouds.


Bibliography:
This story is from American Indian Fairy Tales and based off the Shin-ge-bis Fools the North Wind story.

Author's Note:
This story is loosely based on the Shin-ge-bis Fools the North Wind story.


Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Reading Notes: Native American Marriage Tales, Reading A

This story is part of the Native American Marriage Tales unit. Story source: Tales of the North American Indians by Stith Thompson (1929).


The Girl and the Turkeys:
Using a couple of main ideas from this story I would have a tribe that was very rich and enjoyed all the luxuries that nature and life had to offer them, but unlike others, as long as they had more money and fortune than everyone else then one of their sons and daughters had to marry animals. Of course, there was no reproducing with an animal and a human, it was just a pure marriage and the human would take care of the animal as a pet. But they could be married to another human. It was a sign of good luck, but the rich tribe didn't feel like this was something the rich would be forced to do by the sky, clouds and sun above them that ruled over them. Well one day, one of the daughters was set to marry a cow, but was not happy about it. She didn't understand why she must marry a cow. So she talked to the clouds. The clouds answered back to her in a way no one else could have understood. The next day, when she was set to marry the cow, as the entire tribe was gathered, instead of getting married she removed herself from the tribe and told them she didn't want to be rich anymore. That she would rather be poor and more unfortunate than marry a cow. She realized that having money wasn't what life was about and wasn't worth sacrificing a good, meaningful life with other people. Having to marry an animals was absurd. 

Source: The Huffington Post

Saturday, March 25, 2017

Famous Last Words: Spring Break Blues

I have a major case of senioritis hitting in. It probably doesn't help that I have a white board that I update everyday with a countdown until graduation. That being said, my focus coming back from Spring Break has not been good. This week I have put my health first, ha, and that has caused me to get at least 8 hours of sleep and eat right. But there are other things that have been sacrificed. Such as doing homework. I feel I am behind in this class. I should just pick a time to sit down and has out this entire class so I don't have to worry about it as much. It's an interesting class, but time consuming during the week. But anyway, I read Native American fairy tales this week. They were very interesting. I'm not sure I liked them very much. I found it hard to think of ways to write my own story simply because I didn't find myself meshing with any of the stories that I read from the fairy tales. I did my best writing at work this week with the kiddos that I work with. Sometimes it's nice just to write for people who don't have an advance vocabulary. I read an awesome story this week for this class about a war dog. I love dogs. But this author wrote in first person as the dog, and it just really tugged at my heart strings. The author did a great job. It was a great idea. Outside of school, I attended the Made in Oklahoma showcase event put on by OU Housing & Food. It was a great event, a little windy, but that didn't stop me from eating some chocolate covered bacon with jalapeños on top. It was yummy. This Sunday/Monday I will be attending the Rokerthon event. I will probably be dead after work by 6 p.m., but I'm excited for it. 

Review: Life Advice

Life. Here is some life adviceEvery morning we wake up is the first day of the rest of our life.

This post is from Saturday, March 24 announcements. 


This was my favorite part from announcements because I really need this kind of motivation every day I wake up. As a senior, I'm trying to figure out what my next steps are in this crazy thing called life. I try my hardest to not compare myself to others every single day, those with jobs, those with internships, but I know that I will find my way eventually. It takes hard work and effort, and I can do it. SO this piece of advice really struck a cord with me. I must must must must wake up every morning and be glad I'm alive and strive to be better than the me I was yesterday. 

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Reading Notes, American Indian Fairy Tales, Part A

American Indian Fairy Tales

Notes, Part A

Shin-ge-bis Fools the North Wind

I would write a story about how the winds were brothers and they would laugh and cry and fight, and when that would happen, it would control the weather due to the brothers being different winds. Well one day they get in a huge fight and it causes a storm bigger than any other the tribe and its fishermen have seen. So the storm raged on and on. After a week, the people didn't know what to do. So they prayed to the winds and instead of a rain dance, they did a wind dance. The brothers still didn't care that the people were being affected. They cared more that each of them weren't going to give in then they did about helping the people. So the people decided to rebuild their village to fit the harsh winds and storms that continued to come. Then the brothers finally saw the damage they were causing, and decided to stop the fight for the good of the people. The people did one last wind dance, and the winds and storms finally stopped. They were so happy.


The Little Boy and Girl in the Cloud

I would make the fire tell the stories. Through the storyteller, though. I would write about how the people would build a fire for storytime, and once the flame was big enough a story would appear from the fire and be told through the storyteller. Or I could write about how the native peoples used clouds to tell stories and at the end of each story would predict something about the next day. But to get the clouds to tell a story, the native peoples must correctly chant toward them and request a story.


Butterflies. Source: PBS


This story is part of the American Indian Fairy Tales unit. Story source: American Indian Fairy Tales by W.T. Larned, with illustrations by John Rae (1921).

Sunday, March 5, 2017

Week 8 Growth Mindset

My strengths related to growth mindset: 
- Taking a long-term view than taking a short-term view
- Finding motivation inside myself rather than looking for praise and other rewards (I do this in other areas other than class.)
- Being willing to try new things rather than staying in my comfort zone
- Setting my own goals rather than letting other people make choices for me (I ask for advice, but I normally make an informed decision on my own. If I can't, I reevaluate if what I'm doing is something I should truly be doing.)
- Being confident that I can improve rather than thinking I'm not good enough (No one can every get better if you have the "Not good enough" outlook
- Setting my own schedule rather than doing things last minute (I do classwork last minute, but I don't do organizational and non-class related things last minute because most of the time they are incredibly important and related to my reputation and my work ethic.)
- Being open to any and all feedback rather than wanting only positive feedback (You can't grow this way)
- Asking lots of questions

My weaknesses related to growth mindset:
- In classes, I do the minimum, but I do it correctly. 
- I focus on grades, because that's what I've been taught you must do to succeed. At this point in my life, I just want to graduate but I have set high standards for myself, so even though I say I don't care, I always try to do my best. 
- Choosing what's easy (This depends on what it's related to. Class? I choose easy. Organization? I choose the best. Anything related to a job or internship? Choose the best.)
- Doing things last minute (class-related things that I know I can get done)
- Being a perfectionist (I can't change this quickly. I am a perfectionist, and I'm constantly working on it.)

Source: Frabz.com

- Feeling defensive about mistakes (This goes along with being a perfectionist)

I will work on my weaknesses, but honestly I just want to get a job and graduate. 

Week 8 Reflections

1) READING. 
I believe that all my reading choices have been good choices. I enjoy every story I read, except for a snake one. The reading I enjoyed the most was from the Asia unit titled, The Favorite of Fortune and the Child of Ill Luck.

(Twin Dragons, Source: Luck)

I usually do my reading before I go to bed on a Tuesday night. It helps me to focus better and it's more like a nighttime, reading-for-pleasure more than for homework time. I also am able to sleep on my ideas that pop into my head. 
At first my reading notes weren't helpful, because I was taking ideas from a couple of lines and thinking about ways I could change it for a story I created. But now when I take notes, I tend to make up a story on the spot and then go with it as long as my imagination will take me. So I usually take those notes and expand for the story post that week. 



2) WRITING. 
I am very happy with all the stories I've written. I've learned that I'm a fast writer when it comes to writing fiction. Being a journalism major, I wrote only nonfiction stories. But thus far, I've really enjoyed going back to creating stories in my head and typing out whatever comes to mind. I find it more entertaining and fulfilling. 
Looking ahead, I don't see any storytelling experiments that I would necessarily want to try. As for writing skills, I think I just want to be able to write in different styles and make it entertaining for the reader.

3) CONNECTING.
When I look at other people's stories, I admire the details. Again, with my background in journalism and nonfiction writing, I have lost my creative mind, in my opinion. I don't feel like I have gotten back into touch with a way to create vivid details. I could do it with nonfiction/journalism, but it took a while to master that because I had to create vivid words (not details) using the actual details the source had given me. So there wasn't much leeway given to me. So I truly enjoy seeing the creativity of the students and hopefully I can force my brain into letting it be more creative. The only thing I will always try to avoid in stories is grammatical errors. Not typos. Grammatical errors. I hate them. Also, I don't consider passive voice to be a grammatical errors, but some might. Feedback has been good. I enjoy getting feedback more than I enjoy giving it in this class. I think if I was editing for a publication, I might enjoy it more, but I hate to edit a story online only and not being able to edit pen to paper. That's how I edit best. In the latter half of the semester, I think I can give better feedback by just staying focused on each story I read. 

Famous Last Words: Make it to Spring Break

My reading for the week went well. I wasn't so interested in the Filipino stories from this week because all them were detailed up until the end; the end always had a happy, abrupt ending in my opinion. I don't think this is the way life works most of the time. Also these aren't fairy tales, so I don't necessarily see why they all must end happily. But for my story, I framed it similarly, with a happy ending. I didn't have time to both portions of the reading, but that's normal for my schedule. I do reading A and then the extra credit to make up the reading. I tend to find inspiration for my weekly story through the first set of reading.
I do my best writing when I am focused and determined. At this point in the semester and in my life, my best writing is on cover letters and application essays. In all honesty, that's where my focus and best writing should be. I need a job!
One of the blogs I read this week had a wonderful introduction paragraph. In addition, the whole story was mysterious and interesting throughout. I really thought this person was a great writer.
Things are fine in my other classes. I'm just trying to work ahead because I have a lot of organizational/leadership obligations this week. I'm just ready for spring break. I'm going to Galveston, Texas, with a group of my closest girlfriends. I need a mental break. 

Beach at Galveston, Texas. Source: RoyalCarribean

I hope to keep up with this class. Some weeks, I wish I had worked ahead, and other weeks, it's fine. I enjoy writing the stories, but I don't always enjoy reading the stories and taking notes. I work better trying to understand the overall picture of stories and rethinking ideas that way. But my capstone class is the most important class to me, and I hope to do well in it. The goal is to graduate!


Review: Focus, venn diagram


I enjoyed the venn diagram from Saturday, March 4 announcements. I think I relate to this because of where I am in my life. I'm about to graduate and I'm trying to search for jobs that I qualify for but also think I will enjoy. It's nerve-racking. I'm a control freak in many ways, so even if something doesn't truly matter that much, I try to control it anyways. I'm always known to be bossy and take control of situations, in a good way, most of the time. But I should do better, as the venn diagram shows, to try to control the things that I can that matter. I love this diagram.




Source: What You Should Focus On

Thursday, March 2, 2017

Week 7 Storytelling: Sisters Unite

Three women shopping together. Source: Hercampus.com
Once there were three young girls: Ella, Kate, and Lee. They were from a rich family. Their dad was a lawyer, and their mom was the district attorney. Not only were they rich, but their parents didn't spend a lot of time with them due to their jobs. So at age sixteen, they were all very used to doing whatever they wanted and whenever they wanted. Unfortunately, they weren't intelligent. They went to school but spent most of the hours on their phones, never paying much attention to the teachers. The only special thing about the sisters was that each had her own special talent.

Ella could charm her way out of any situation, good or bad.

Kate could calm anyone down or make anyone immediately happy.

As for Lee, she could enter and leave a room without ever being seen or heard, just due to her quiet nature.

It was Christmas Eve, and the girls were at the mall doing last minute shopping for Christmas — not for others, but for themselves. The more presents, the merrier was their thinking. The girls weren't about giving; they were all about receiving. As they left one store, they passed by the Santa Claus doing pictures with the children. Suddenly, there were screams.

A mother shouted out, "He's taken my baby!"

The sisters looked around to see what was going on. Ella turned just far enough to her left to see a quick flash of a person in a hoodie running around the corner past the pretzel shop.

The sisters looked at each other as if to ask, "Should we help?"

Ella didn't really feel like helping.

Kate thought the mother might benefit from her gift of being able to calm anyone down or make anyone immediately happy, but she still didn't see what she would get out of it.

Lee didn't see what she had to offer with her gift of entering and leaving a room unsuspected. The vote was two to one to help after a mild staring contest among the three of them. The three rich sisters decided to use their powers for good.

Kate went over to the mother to console her. She asked the mother what had happened. As the mother began to shriek while retelling the story, Kate placed her hands on the mother's shoulders. The mother immediately stopped shrieking. She sat down and started from the beginning of the story in a calm but concerned manner.

Lee and Ella were brave to go after the kidnapper. Lee was able to catch up to the kidnapper without being heard. After making sure the kidnapper had no weapons, she cornered him so that Ella could catch up. Lee's job was done.

Then Ella finally caught up. She used her gift to sweet talk the kidnapper into setting the child down for a moment. When he set the child down, Lee quietly picked the child up and walked away. By that time, the mall cops were nearing, and so Ella continued talking to the kidnapper to keep him distracted.

Meanwhile, Lee returned the child to the mother. The mother was, of course, ecstatic. The mother asked how old the sisters were. They said they were sixteen. The mother couldn't believe they were so young and so generous to help a mother in need.

The mother thanked them profusely, and Santa Claus even wanted a picture with them.

The sisters from then on found that using their powers to help others was much more fulfilling then using them to manipulate people to get what they wanted.

Author's Note:
This story is loosely based off Filipino Tales: Three Brothers of Fortune. The three brothers each have an item to help them in their time of need. Each of the brothers comes together during a bad time to help save the day. They unite by using all their gifts as a solution. Just like the brothers, I wrote a story about three sisters who have innate gifts who use them to help others instead of manipulate people to get what they want out of life. I based this story loosely off the movie Mean Girls, where the girls are simply involved with themselves and like to shop a lot. Except, in my story, the girls use their powers for good. But I wanted to write a story with a good ending and also a lesson to takeaway. In addition, I based this story loosely off Paul Blart: Mall Cop, since I've always enjoyed watching that funny movie. Lastly, I based the story during Christmastime, because not only is that my favorite holiday, but it is the holiday that I think most people associate good acts with. Christmastime is a time where people come together and help each other, and I think it's the most beautiful time of the year.

Bibliography:

Filipino Tales: Three Brothers of Fortune. This story is part of the Filipino Tales unit. Story source: Filipino Popular Tales by Dean S. Fansler (1921).

Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Reading Notes: Filipino Popular Tales, Part A


The Three Friends: the Monkey, the Dog, and the Carabao

Honestly, I didn't read this story because I have a slight phobia of snakes. So when I saw the photo, I immediately clicked to the next story.

 
Three Brothers of Fortune

I think the boys should be homeschooled and the boys should be triplet girls of the age of 12. I might make the book, the mat and the stone different objects. This story seems to be genie like in a sense, and I think I would make the story more practical and use objects that could actually fix things. There wouldn't be a woman dying, but instead a woman almost drowning and the girls have to figure out how to save her with the three tools each of them has. But they three girls are so spoiled rotten and don't think for themselves that the woman almost drowns because it takes forever for the girls to figure out what they should do. The story would continue on to that the woman says she owes the girls, but can only pay one, give food to the other and give books to the last. The girls don't want any of it.
The Clever Husband and Wife

I honestly would not make this a happy ending. I would make it so that the husband and his wife learned a valuable lesson about money and faking death and lying. 

 
The Devil and the Guachinango

I would change the end so that the devil died once all the bells were rung. I think the princess shouldn't have married the guachinango at all. She should marry a poor boy, whom I would add in as a character. She would fall in love with the poor boy, but instead have to be forced to marry the guachinango because of the devil. When the guachinango sees that the princess isn't in love with him but instead, the poor boy, he would try to back down, but the devil would insist that he stay and finish what he started. 

Church bells. Source: Imagejournal.org

Bibliography: These stories come from Dean Fansler's monumental Filipino Popular Tales, published in 1921.


Note: All of these stories are well-thought out, but the endings seem abrupt and too positive. I would definitely change my own story to make a lesson out of the characters that are negative or evil. 

Monday, February 27, 2017

Review: Prefectionist

My favorite thing from the announcements was from Saturday, Feb. 25.



Source: Announcements 

I identify with this comic in a lot of ways because I love editing, resumes and being a perfectionist. It's hard to be all, and it takes me a while to write nonfiction because I'm constantly editing myself. As for resumes, I'm working on resumes right now for jobs, so I think this is funny but also terrifying.

Sunday, February 26, 2017

Week 6 Storytelling: A Series of the Ill Luck Child

The birth:
0 months old.

There was a daughter born to two beautiful actors. They had a scary birth, but overall they thought they had borne a healthy child. But when she was born, the doctor told them that she was a child of ill luck. At first they were scared, but then they remembered that it was just an old myth from Chinese culture. And it made sense because their doctor was Chinese. But they decided to ignore the doctor and continue on with life.

The Childhood:
2 years old.

Julia's childhood wasn't difficult, but she was prone to accidents and had a lot of back luck. When she turned two, the accidents and bad luck were at their worst.

Accident 1: At home.

She tripped and fell while walking from one end of the house to the other and sliced her knee open. They rushed to the hospital.

Accident 2 (within 3 weeks of the first): At school.

She was sitting at her desk working on her own coloring project when another child ran by with scissors. He ran into a nearby desk and fell, accidentally stabbing Julia in the arm. They rushed to the hospital again.

Accident 3 (1 week later): Backyard.

Julia was in the backyard playing in her sandbox when a snake slithered by from their garden and bit her on the foot. Hospital again. Only this time, after blood tests were done, the doctor came back with other results.

Julia had cancer. A cancer classified as neuroblastoma, a common childhood cancer.

The two beautiful actors cried. They were scared and exhausted. They didn't understand how a two-year-old could be prone to so many accidents and then be diagnosed with cancer. That's when they decided to call their doctor who had delivered Julia.

The phone rang once. Then twice.

"Hello?" said the male voice. "This is Doctor Lee."

"Hi Doctor Lee. This is Shriva and Lucas Martin calling about our daughter, Julia, that you delivered about two years ago."

"Oh yes. I remember Julia. She is the child of ill luck. But, uh, what seems to be the problem?" Doctor Lee asked.

"Well, our daughter has gotten into three serious accidents in the past two months, and now, we just found out she has cancer," Shriva said, shrieking into the phone.

"Ah, I see. I'm sorry, but this is normal. What don't you understand about a child of ill luck? Julia is not set to have a normal life. She will have bad luck for eternity. Nothing can solve this issue," he said.

They both cried and hung up the phone. They both thought, "How could this be? How could this ancient Chinese myth be true?"


The Meeting:

30 years old.

Julia made it to her thirtieth birthday. Of course, bad luck was part of her everyday life, but somehow she managed to power through all the bad accidents and bad luck. She also lived thirty years with her cancer. Her parents believed it was a miracle — the only good miracle — that she lived to see her thirtieth birthday. Julie wasn’t in pain, but her strength weakened with every passing day.

One day, she was at the grocery store buying her weekly list of food. Julia bent down to grab a can of beans on the bottom shelf. She brushed against the cart, causing it to move slightly. All of a sudden she heard a low-rumbled “oomph,” from a brown-haired, good-looking man about thirty.
Julia stood up and immediately apologized.
“I’m so sorry. I didn’t realize you were standing there,” she said.
The man with no name waved his hand, as if it were no big deal.
He said, “Oh, it’s not a problem. Really, it’s my fault. I shouldn’t have been standing so close to a shopping cart. Those things are just waiting to cause accidents.”
Julia laughed.






She was laughing so hard that she dropped the can of beans on the attractive man’s foot. He winced in pain. Julia always knew how to make a good impression, especially with her bad luck.


The Cancer:
32 years old

Julia and the man with no name married shortly after meeting in the grocery store that day.

Before you continue reading, beware, this isn’t going to be a happy ending.

OK. So you’ve decided to continue reading.

Back to the end of the story then: Julia got sick a few months after they were married. The doctor told them that the cancer was finally taking over, but that she probably had another ten years to live, if she was lucky. But she knew with her luck, it wouldn’t be good.

Her husband with no name couldn’t stand to watch Julia in this pain, especially for ten years. So he took it upon himself to go and find a cure for this cancer. He kissed Julia on the forehead and left for five years. He told himself that he wouldn’t return unless he had found the cure to the cancer. He had to.

The Death:

36 years old.

The husband with no name came back six years later. Don’t worry, Julia had her parents and other family members watching over her while he was gone.

He had finally found the cure. He immediately sent Julia to the hospital to be treated for the cure. She was cured within one week. But one must remember, she is a child of ill luck. As her mom drove her back from the hospital, a semi-truck hit the car head on, and both Julia and her mother were pronounced dead at the scene.