Blessed


Blessed - Hillsong Good Song!!!

When I Come Around (Album Version)

I Can't Explain

Monday, September 28, 2009

Audioblox

http://www.learninginfo.org/index.htm


Found a good website!!!


Audiblox is a multisensory cognitive enhancement program, aimed at the development of foundational learning skills such as concentration, perception, memory, and logical thought. It improves performance in reading, spelling, writing and math.

Audiblox is adaptable for the gifted and less gifted, can be used at home and in school, and is applicable for all age groups. It can develop the learning skills of the high school learner to a very high degree, while it can also be used to prepare the preschool child for reading and learning from as early as three years of age.

Audiblox is effective for a variety of learning difficulties including dyslexia, dysgraphia, dyspraxia and dyscalculia. Learn more about Audiblox…

Good song - Walk on Water - Milk Inc.

There was a time
When nothing would last
There was a time
I held on to the past

I would walk on water
just to be with you
Walk on water
just to be with you
Split the ocean, cross the sea
Walk on water, if you believe...

There was a time
I lost my faith
There was a time
I could only hate

You were my shepherd
you were my guide
I follow your dark eyes
right into the night
You were my saviour
You took control
you came and touched my soul

I would walk on water
just to be with you
Walk on water
just to be with you
Split the ocean, cross the sea
Walk on water, if you believe...

There was a time
when nothing would last
There was a time
I held on to the past

You were my shepherd
you were my guide
I followed your dark eyes
right into the night
You were my saviour
You took control
you came and touched my soul

But why are you still overshadowed by a doubt?
if only you could see
The love that carries me....

I would walk on water
just to be with you
Walk on water
just to be with you
Split the ocean, cross the sea
Walk on water, if you believe...
Repeat 2x

About Myself Part 2

English 302 Sec. 0342 Lab #648
Lab 1 James McGuire
September 3, 2003



Hello! My name is James McGuire as you know. I am nineteen
years old, in three more months, I'll be twenty. I was born December 5
, 1983 up in the Sierra Foothills of Placerville. My goals in my livelihood is to
major into computers and geography. I have found an opportunity to work in Dublin
, California with GPS and GIS at Camp Parks a very small military base run like
Ft. Ord. But, that military base is bigger than Camp Parks. I've found
this really good job opportunity to make enough money through a guy who brings his
baby son which my mother takes care of him. We are using Magnetometer Carts for
this project. My mother does day care. She takes care of babies and toddlers. I'll be working up inDublin with his brother working with Magnetometer
Carts at the Environmental building at Camp Parks. If this job goes so well, I will
look into many classes into this subject to work and dream to make enough money
to good things in my life for the future.

I am taking the Lindamood Program for the second time
and I really like it. My tutor's name, her name, is Morag. Because I
want to major into computers and geography, I can have a wonderful career to make
lots of money to use it for leisure in traveling and have a wonderful life. I can
type up to 52 wpm. I learned French at Seaside High School for 2 years and learning
Turkish language. I worked at Cal State University of Monterey for 3 or 4 years
through the Monterey Youth Program.



Last summer, I worked at the CSUMB's Watershed
as an Intern for Return of the Natives. I got to learn about California's native plants and non-natives like weeds. I went whale watching in Moss Landing
on a Catamaran named Princess of Whales. Their Motto: Whales are for lookin' not for cookin'. I got to see the sails of the sea those things floating
in the water, one dolphin was right by the boat that I noticed, a humpback whale
with her calf, group of dolphins, two blue whales, an another humpback whale breeched
(jumped) 5 times and they have two blow holes and a third humpback whale. Field
trips: Ano Nuevo, I got to see the Elephant Seals, Andrew Molera, Waste Management
place by Marina, worked at Nativadad Creek Park in Salinas, and
Bureau of Land
Management
of Ft. Ord. Now I've crossed-enrolled into a class called
Tech Tools its CST101 into CSUMB's campus and taking classes at MPC: ENG302
CSIS75, LNSK I don't remember the number, and ENG351 which is the Lindamood
Program.

My interests are: Hiking in the woods, I dream to travel
around the world. Geography and study the maps, traveling, bowling, shoot pool,
walk at the beach, explore wildlife, collect coins and foreign stamps, collect post
cards, go horseback riding, take photography, work, fix and open up computers.




My father is an artist. He makes bronze sculptures. You can
see his artwork at
www.kirkmcguire.com and more in his art gallery site you will
click at the links. On July 5, I became an Uncle to a new born nephew at 7:30am
in the morning. I was so anxious to see him and slept half the time at the hospital
down in San Diego. My sister lives in Encitnitas close to San Diego and named the
baby Diego ha-ha. He is a really cute baby. My brother-in-law is a musician who
plays the bass in his band and creates his own music. When I finish with a degree
in College, my parents are going to retire to their 15 acre full of woods and pond
to fish in Grizzly Flats. We go there every weekend as our vacation home and everyday
are pet deer my mother named her Bambie we get to pet which is so cool.





I have a girlfriend who lives in Istanbul, Turkey. I have met
her over on the internet since two years. She is 18 years old and going to be 19
on November 7. Right now she studies really hard at a private high school at Bahcesehir
University and graduated there. It is a sister school to La Costa Canyon High School
down in San Diego. Now she is enrolling into Istanbul University which her father
is a Environmentalist Prof. Instructor there, works at Oktek, a wastewater
treatment plant and looks like she is following her father's footsteps
. Her mother is a skin doctor who she sells her dermatology products at Oktek. My girlfriend wants to major in bio-chemistry. We have been sending gifts
to each other, postal mail, sometimes we talk on the phone, e-mail and mostly we
chat to each other over on Yahoo Messenger. I wish her good luck to major and come
to the states. I love Nilay so much. On August 2, I went to the Turkish Festival
in Monterey by the Maritime Museum and got some taste of the culture. I really
had a great time there.


I like to read books at the library or at school. Mostly I read
at school. My favorite books I read are: "The Pearl" by, John Steinbeck, "The Giver
" by, Louis Lowry, "I know why the Caged Bird Sings" by, Maya Angelou,
Old Man and The Sea by, Hernest Hemingway, The Crucible
, Red Badge of Courage, and The Human Comedy
by, William Saroyan at English 322 class with Paula Gibert last semester in
the Spring. I forget the title of this story about a man goes back home to London
from France on horsecar who owns a bank. It was about the French Revolution it’s
called, A Tale of Two Cities. I purchased a magazine during
Turkish Festival which interests me to read called, Turkuaz, Turkish-American
Community Guide magazine.

I liked World History class in High School and I would read
about so many fascinating subjects that happened in names of ages in history. In
5th grade I read a book called, "Sarah Plain and Tall" by, Patricia MacLachlan .
It was a good book. But at the end of the story, the writing was in cursive. I could
not understand it but, I tried. It really amazed me when I finished reading the
last page. I got to watch all of the movies too part of the stories.

In middle school, I read a story about a famous woman in Chicago
who used to work in a candy factory back in those days and eat ice cubes during
the summer. But, I forget what her name is. She had to do with something about
women's rights or, taking care of infants and children (babysit) or (daycare)

Second of all, I'm learning English to improve my reading and
writing. Because I get shy, I'm trying and forcing to communicate to new people
. I hope I will succeed in school with my goals of getting well grades but, it takes
time to take some steps and once you are on top of the world you have success like
how the cartoon Pinky and the Brain are those two laboratory mice are trying to
take over the world...

About Myself

James McGuire
English 322
Lab # 567


Hello! my name is James and I'm 19 years old.
I was born December 5th in Placerville, CA. I will get
to be an Uncle soon. My sister lives in San Diego and
is going to have a son. They are going to name him
Diego it means James in Spanish and San means saint.
She is due in July.
My interests are: Hiking in the woods, I dream to
travel around the world. Geography and study the maps,
bowling, shoot pool, walk at the beach, explore
wildlife, collect coins and foreign stamps, go
horseback riding, take photography, work, fix and open
up computers. I can type up to 52 wpm. Learning French
and Turkish language. I'm in school because, I can
major into computers, geography, have a wonderful
career to make lots of money to use it for leisure in
traveling and have a wonderful life.
Second of all, I'm learning English to improve my
reading and writing. Because I get shy, I'm trying and
forcing to communicate to new people. I hope I will
succeed in school with my goals of getting well grades
but, it takes time to take some steps and once you are
on top of the world you have success like how the
cartoon Pinky and the Brain are those two laboratory
mice are trying to take over the world...
I have a girlfriend who lives in Istanbul, Turkey. I
have met her over on the internet since two years. She
is 18 years old. Right now she studies really hard at
a private high school at Bahcesehir University. It is
a sister school to La Costa Canyon High School down in
San Diego. My girlfriend wants to major in
bio-chemistry. If she passes these big exams in
school, she will be able to come to California to meet
me for the first time. We have been sending gifts to
each other, often we talk on the phone and mostly we
chat to each other over on Yahoo Messenger. I wish her
good luck to major and come to the states.
I like to read books at the library or at school.
Mostly I read at school. My favorite books I read are:
"The Pearl", by John Steinbeck, "The Giver", by Louis
Lowry, "I know why the Caged Bird Sings", by
Maya
Angelou
. I forget the title of this story about a man
goes back home to London from France on horsecar who
owns a bank. It was about the French Revolution. I
liked World History class in High School. I read
about so many fascinating subjects that happened in
names of ages in history.
In 5th grade I read a book called, "Sarah Plain
and Tall". It was a good book. But at the end of the
story, the writing was in cursive. I could not
understand it but, I tried. It really amazed me when I
finished reading the last page.
During middle school, I read a story about a
famous women in Chicago who used to work in a candy
factory back in those days and eat ice cubes during
the summer. But, I forget what her name is. She had
to do with something about women’s rights or, taking
care of infants and children (babysit).

Music Invention

James McGuire
English 322
Section #567


I think the invention that has made a real change
in people's lives is the phonograph. It has helped
people to record music and helped the economy. The
phonography this allowed them to make contracts with
record companies and fame and fortune in newspapers.
Music became so advanced that musicians could make
different kinds of recordings and new music that never
even existed. February 19, 2003's part of history,
Thomas Edison patented the phonograph.
Because this music invention made a real change
in people's lives, it started to revolutionize how to
record are voice over a machine. Now telephones are
made and they record a person talking over on the
other line like a microphone and wearing earphones to
hear the person on the other line. This change
occurred before my lifetime. In the past music
recordings were on vinal records, military uses the
morse code (an another form of speech) the radio and
using records in the 1920's till 50's. In the 1960's
and 70's music was recorded through a tape and then
recorded to a record.
Suddenly, people started using eight track tapes
in their veichles and then cassette tapes arrived as
disco fever began. Jazz, Blues, Rock n' Roll, British
Rock, Pop, Classical music started before those
periods of history. Today in the present future my
brother-in-law records his music onto the computer and
edits the sounds with a program he's been using. You
can make electronica music with a different similar
program which makes a lot of techno beats without
vocals. People consider is the music even with no
vocals.
Millions of people download MP3's to get music
today instead of buying it in the market. But, the
artists loose some of their profit from their music
and their record company as well. My brother-in-law is
a bass musician and he's trying to get a record deal
with a dude from the band called O-town. He has a
monkey I heard. I hope my brother's deal succeeds.
Lastly, people record music on a black Compact Disc
(CD) or DVD's to make their own movies.

Disability? Maybe?

James McGuire
February 27, 2003
English 322 Section #567

I want to tell you that I'm in the Lindamood program
with Gaely helping me with me visual, auditory and
language skills in English 351 and/or 352. It's a very
good program to improve your dendrities more better.
I've been learning dendritites in Ms. Gilbert's class.
They are your brain cells :) In my own words, dyslexia
isn't a disease but it is part of family history in my
genes. I may have some disabilities in always
listening to the teacher but, some people may distract
me becase, they talk or I hear a noise from the door.
It's a disability when one of my visual, spelling,
reading, speech or language and hearing skills lacks
out because, people can miss out learning how to do
these things or they could have problems. Dyslexia
could be when your brain can't do this function, does
this incorrectly and couldn't memorize everything but
do it slowly step-by-step so you can understand the
information. Otherwise, your brain cells functions not
so well and strong in one of these disabilities people
often could have that could be dyslexia.

Cheating in Schools

James McGuire
March 6, 2003
English 322 Section #567


I find out that cheating doesn’t get me nowhere
in life. Because, it won’t learn me anything. I have
to find the information on my own without any help and
preview the paragraph to find the answer. Then, I will
learn what it is all about. In High School if the
teachers caught you cheating, they would take your
paper away and throw it in the trash. Testing becomes
pretty hard to memorize amass of information compact
into my brain then it becomes confusing to get the
right answer out because you think a lot about which
one is it or you would daydream about something else.
I hate it in exams when you lost the memory to the
answers. When people are talking, teachers teach you
more after they take the test. I wish it would be more
better if the instructors let you study for some more
time in class for exams and maybe I would get a better
grade. When students are cheating they would write in
the back of people’s chairs, hide answers and then it
would appear like magic, whisper to each other and
from the story, “Lets Put the Heat on Campus Cheats,”
they would use a cell phone. Students do this because,
they want to get a better grade like a 4.0 grade point
average, they want to graduate out of school more
quickly and have a better pay job in the future. I
don’t think it is worth it to cheat because you can
get into trouble and instructors may lower your
grades. People tell you the right answer and it can
could be the wrong answer. I hate it when people copy
your homework when students haven‘t done their work it
really wastes my working time when they don’t return
your paper back to you because, they will backstab you
many times. You may get into detention, suspension and
into plagiarism. Many others go to websites which
offer already made essays on many different topics
ranging to anthropology to zoology some of them are
free sites and other websites you have to pay money
for expensive fees.

Disscussing the Secrets of Straight-A Students Part 2

I think these 11 steps are really good to follow to get Straight A's. But, you must have to make a schedule so I can plan what to do in certain hours while doing college work. If I don't plan to do my work, I will be procrasinating. I'll be watching my favorite television shows, playing video games, relaxing and playing on the computer.

These steps I would follow is to Speak up, Take good notes, Test yourself, Schedule your time, To become a better reader is to read, Study anywhere -- or everywhere, Set priorities, Take good notes, Get organized, Clean up my act, and Do more than you are asked.

I think these steps are really helpful for me. These abilities will work out for me and keep me learning new information following these directions on the list on how to get straight A's. I need to work more harder than before like how the slaves of Ancient Eygpt built one of the 7 wonders of the world called The Great Pyramaid.

The step I didn't follow is to "Study together." I don't have a friend who can study with me when I am done with my classes at MPC. I can only ask questions to my parents and do the work on my own if it is not really riskfully difficult and confusing. I am sure tutors at the English lab can help me out too. I go to the Lindamoodbell program. I really like the program here. The teacher and me study one-by-one with each other; it helps to build my learning, study and communicating skills and intellengence of my brain. At my web design class my eyes get weaker from looking at the screen for too long and makes me want to leave at home to do the rest of web publishing work there. Although I don't have Front Page unavalable at home, I wish I had the program. I can work at home and at school would be more easier and get the web design task done.

Discussing the Secrets of Straight-A Students

James McGuire

March 16, 2003

English 322, Section #567

Discussing the Secrets of Straight-A Students

The 11 steps to, “Secrets of Straight-A Students are:

1. Set priorities. Students brook no intrusions on study time which is business that comes before recreation.

2. Study anywhere -- or everywhere. Students get persuaded by a tutor to use the time to memorize biology terms. An another posted a vocabulary list by the medicine cabinet and learned a new word every day while brushing his teeth. Some worked late at night when the house was quiet, wake up early in the morning, study as soon as they came home from school when the work was fresh in their minds.

3. Get organized. Keep a pencil, paper, pens right where you can put your hands on to it so you don’t waste time looking for them. Use folders to track your assignments and another for papers that are completed and graded. File day’s papers in color-coded folders by subject so, they’ll be available for review at exam time. Students who don’t have a private study area remain organized. Use a backpack or drawer to keep essential supplies together and cuts down on wasting your time searching for them.

4. Learn how to read. Take speed reading classes it will also learn you how to look at the book’s table of contents, graphs and pictures. You can retain a lot more information when you begin to read. “Be an active reader -- one who continually asks questions that lead to a full understanding of the author’s message” - Gordon W. Green, Jr., in his book, “Getting Straight A’s”

5. Schedule your time. When a teacher assigns a long paper, draw up a timetable, dividing the project into small pieces so it isn’t so overwhelming. “It’s like eating a steak, you chew it one bite at a time” - Domenica Roman. Research and Outline a report first, then try to complete the writing in one long push over a weekend. “I like to get it down on paper early, so I have to polish and review”- Melendres. Even the best students procrastinate. But when it happens, they face up to it. It comes down to late nights to homework. “You make sure to hit the deadline if you want straight A‘s.” -Christi Anderson.

6. Take good notes -- and use them. Reading the textbook is important but, the teacher is going to test you on what he or she emphasized. It is what you find in your notes. Top students also take notes while reading the text assignment. Use this homemade system David Cieri has used which he draws a line down the center of a notebook. Then, writes notes from the text on one side and those from the teacher’s lecture on the other. He is able to review both aspects of the assignments at once. Before the bell rings, students want to leave early out of class but, Anderson uses a few minutes to write a two or three sentence summary of the lesson’s principal points, which she scans before the next day’s class.

7. Clean up your act. Neat papers are likely to get higher grades than sloppy ones. The student who turns in a neat paper is already on the way to an A.

8. Speak up. Class participation goes beyond merely asking questions. It is a matter of showing intellectual curiosity. Better grades come from better understanding.

9. Study together. The value of hitting the books together was demonstrated in an experiment at University of California at Berkeley. Uri Treisman, a graduate student there observed a freshman calculus class which Asian-Americans scored higher than other minority students from similar academic backgrounds. These students discussed homework problems together, tried different approaches and explained their solutions to one another. The other students, studied alone, spent most of their time reading and rereading the text, and tried the same approach time after time even if it was unsuccessful. Treisman suggest teaching group-study methods in the course. The groups performed equally well.

10. Test yourself. As part of note-taking, Domenica highlights points she thinks may be covered during exams. Later she frames tentative test questions based on those points and gives herself a written examination before test day. “If I can’t answer the question satisfactorily, I go back and review,” she says. Students who make up possible test questions often find many of the same questions on the real exam and thus score higher.

11. Do more than you’re asked. If your math teacher assigns five problems, do ten. Read more than eight pages, do 12. Part of learning is practicing and the more you practice, the more you learn. From infancy, the parents imbued them with a love for learning. They set high standards for their kids and held them to those standards. They encouraged their sons and daughters in their studies but, did not do the work for them. The parents impressed the lessons of responsibility on their kids and the kids done very well on school work.

Multiple Intelligences

James McGuire

April 29, 2003

English 322, Section #567

Multiple Intelligences

My assessment of my 3 top intelligences is Nature was (4.43), Body Movement (4.14), Language (3.86), Spatial (3.71), Logic/Math (3.71), Social (3.29), Musical (3), and Self was (4). I wasn’t surprised but, I thought this was pretty different or awkward. But, it was interesting. It could be accurate, but I would like to take some free time to read the other intelligences. I think this type of view of intelligence is fairer than traditional IQ tests that just measure on different types of intelligences. Nature tells me that I am sensitive to nature and environment. You probably know the names of rocks, flowers, birds, and trees. You love the outdoors. Then it teaches you some ways to use your intelligence in your learning: Working in the garden. Read about plants and/or animals. Study habits of fish or birds. Read nature magazines. Go hiking. Take photographs of what you find on your hike. Write a story describing the photographs. Body Movement: I like to move, dance, wiggle, walk, and swim. You are likely good at sports, and you have good fine motor skills. You may enjoy taking things apart and putting them back together. Incorporating body movement into your learning will help you process and retain information better. Self: I have a very good sense of self. I like to spend time by yourself and think things over. You will often take in information from another person, mull it over by yourself, and come back to that person later to discuss it. I like working on projects on your own. I often prefer to learn by trail and error. Effective techniques to enhance your learning include keeping a journal and giving yourself time to reflect on new ideas and information.

Violent Video Games

James McGuire

English 322, Section #567

April 30, 2003

Violent Video Games

At home I rent violent video games when I was 15 and 16 years old. I would rent Turok a game where you have to shoot Dinosaurs. Doom was pretty in a killing outrage in glorifying pink ugly bloody demons you have to shoot down after blood gore killed on the ground. Today, I like to play Medal of Honor which doesn’t have blood in the game. It is situated on a WW2 battle against Nazi Germans. On Nintendo 64, my favorite game was Goldeneye 007 and Killer Instinct on Super Intendo. This video game reality is like the movie, “The Matrix.” How Artificial Intelligent human robots go into a computer based dream world for your mind where people live everything is unreal. It’s not a reality world it is like a game for your mind. But, Neo has to get out of the fake world to be free to live in the real world. If I had my children allowed to play violent video games, they would have to be older to play them and take the individual responsibilities to know a lesson between violence and non-violence. I think these violent games should be illegal to sell or rent to young kids. They should be controlled into not buying them till you are older and wiser. Because they contribute to violence in society, I see violence around the world that involves around us. I wish there was peace in this world, but what can we do it just never stops. We have these dreams and we want them to become good in way to happen in a real way.

Body Image and Advertising

James McGuire
English 322, Section #567
May 6, 2003
Body Image and Advertising
I think advertising has an impact on how people see themselves physically attractive in advertisers attempting to sell their products. Researchers concerned undue pressure by women and men to focus their appearance.
A survey by Teen People magazine, 27% of girls feels the media pressures them to have a perfect body and a poll in 1996 by international ad agency. Saatchi found ads made women fear being unattractive and old. Advertising media adversely impact women’s body image can lead to unhealthy behavior. Women and girls strive for ultra-thin body idealized by media. Advertising images been recently accused of setting unrealistic ideals for males. Men and boys are beginning to risk their health to be media well-built standard.
An average woman sees 400 to 600 advertisements per day. By the time she is 17 years old, has received over 250,000 commercials through media. Only 9% of commercials have a direct statement about beauty. But, many implicitly emphasize the importance of beauty who target women and girls. A study ofSaturday morning toy commercials found 50% commercials aimed at girls spoke about physical attractiveness’. None of the commercials aimed at boys referred to appearances.
50% of advertisements in teen girl magazines and 56% of television commercials aimed at female viewers used beauty as a product appeal. Constant exposure to female-oriented advertisements influence girls to become self-conscious about their bodies to obsess over their physical appearance as a measure of their worth. As a standard for beauty, the bodies idealized in media are atypical, normal, and healthy women.
Today’s fashion models weigh 23% less than an average female. Women between ages 18-34 has a 7% chance being slim as a catwalk model. 1% chance being thin as a supermodel.
I’ve seen some Hollywood Stars on television who have some problems with eating and these women become anorexic. They try to solve their problems by eating more or going to a psychologist and a hypnotist. I hear from television commercials about exercise machines and medicine/drugs to help people who are skinny and those who are obese. I’ve seen those hiking bars that can help you loose weight. Also, many people do Weight Watchers. Doing drugs for an example: smoking cigarettes and tobacco cigars can be addictive and people wouldn’t live a long happy life. But, I don’t think it causes people from their weight, although it could affect in an assuming part of the human body.
In today’s society to have an “ideal” boy or appearance isn’t important. People’s perspective and their personalities are all different. They can choose whether to be fat, skinny, muscular-shaped, slim body. Are bodies affect with illnesses and diseases that scientists are trying to find a cure for them. Only God knows. The trend in advertising should change by using health products. Not to use drugs. So, people’s bodies can be regular fit sized. The Barbie dollstoys is a great idea but they take it too far to be way more for boys to be like the Incredible Hulk to take steroids. Even women wants to have a nice butt and bigger breasts so they have them implanted or take a drug. Even the caffeine we drink; eat assuming it can have an affect on are diet and people acting hyper over sugar and these addictions.

TV News and the Culture of Violence

James McGuire
English 322, Section#567
May 7, 2003
TV News and the Culture of Violence
The aftermath of Columbine High School tragedy in Littleton, Colorado, a national debate developed in, American Culture about violence. Parenting and school security is not helping to these victims of teenagers. Who have access of guns, and police find evidence ofDNA fingerprints from, holding the trigger. Innocent citizens of our nation see killing innocent school students is, sickness of murder and violence. It’s concluded in violence, film, video games, television, internet, and music. 75% Americans who watch TV News, are into to a catastrophe of, death and blood. These plagiarized television news has generated copycat crimes, mass murdering, terrorism, kidnapping, molesting, affairs, hijackings, workplace violence, product tampering using dangerous experiments to explode, hate and love crimes and killing yourself. Viewing violent video teaches, violent conflict which, encourages aggressive behavior, and makes a depressing emotion to victims.
I have watch TV News programs such as: BBC, Fox Worldly News channel, KION on CBS, NBC and CNN. Also intelligent people on television go on debate, or arguments about these violence’s. Yes I have notice what has been going in much of the number of programs related to violence. I think the violent content of news programs is affecting people by making them understand the violence’s makes them worried, terror sadness, depression, they stay in their houses for protection and have fear. Others who view the violent content of news programs are having a crime and killing addiction. The violence makes a pressure. I suggest to have protection not to enter into crime events but, these news programs gives you information, about what is happening with are world today, from are newscasters, and the people, who produce the television news.

School Sport Culture

James McGuire
English 322, Section#567
May 7, 2003
School Sport Culture

I feel about the points the author makes about school sports culture, leads to violence. Becomes, a tournament against each other, who millions of people, who watch athletes get knocked out. In different regions of the world, people play sports differently than America because, Americans rather watch baseball, American football, and basketball. It is hard for athletes to be an outsider around thousand and millions of fans watching them makes them become embarrassed from people on the stands calling them bad names. Even violence occurs when sport fans hate teams and the players who are not so well doing worse they are playing but they are doing the best as they can to be good. Many other people feel jealous about the coaches or, judges to the athlete to be accuse of cheating.
About the status athletes achieve in schools can be a hero for a day. Young people get attention and get to be popular from witnesses from towns in England and around the world. A legislation called Title IX, passed in 1972, girls are equal spending support in sports and their parents respect to pay the game to watch and cheer for their daughter. Girls’ soccer is bigger than boys’ version. In fact, the women’s team won the last World Cup.
I think it leads to bullying or mistreatment of those who aren’t involved in sports. There are school shooting stories of bullying innocent non-athletic people calling people nerds, dweebs, how they are ridicule and being taunted restricting school “jocks”. A frustrated schoolboy shot two students in Santee, CA because, of bullying. Many other people take sports too seriously and may hurt anyone in P.E. class or, one can be killed, and end up in jail.
My personal experience I’ve had related to this topic, were some bullies who picked on me during P.E. and in Middle School and High School. But, I am glad it is over because, I am tired of being bullied from punks. I wish life was more easy without this.

Growing up in Multicultural Families

James McGuire

English 322, Section# 567

May 8, 2003

Growing up in Multicultural Families

My own feelings about the trend to multicultural families isn’t right, how some Europeans don’t like Americans because, they are racist. But, migrates came here to long before they called America the New World . British settlers brought in Africans as the slave trade triangle to make sugar out of rum. I don’t think it is right for people brought up for slaves. To me it’s alright to be multicultural because, I am related to people who came here from different countries. It is like the melting pot I learned from U.S. History class at High School. I don’t think my family comes from a multicultural background but, I get to learn about my ancestors and who I am relate to Scandinavian, Irish, Scottish, English, French, German, Dutch; some Native-American: Cherokee and one Natives who came from Canada. My girlfriend she is Turkish and I love her. But, I get to know about her culture and language from communicating over on the internet. In Turkey , people celebrate Ramadan and they fast for a couple of weeks. After Ramadan ends, they have a sweet festival and eat Turkish candy. Turkish cuisine people eat sheshkabab and have rice and meat stuffed bell peppers. I got to know some people on my train trip back home from San Diego who came from England but they lived in Italy and spoke Italian. These women thought I looked European but I wasn’t. I told them, “I am an American.” They put me on their video camera while I was eating snack food for lunch. I got embarrassed from camera. I feel that a multicultural background is a positive thing in today’s society because; I feel special who I am personally. All types of good food here is multicultural. I like to eat Chinese food, Japanese food, Italian food, Mexican food and there are all different kinds that have delicious flavors. Back east in America the cultural is different. I don’t like it there when I went to New York City it’s too crowded and some people have a cynical mood. I am glad to be in California its so beautiful here even the Western States.

The Widening Marriage Gap

James McGuire

English 322, Section #567

May 9, 2003

The Widening Marriage Gap

I agree that being married can be stressful. Even though single mothers need support their self independently, they are on welfare and need to have a job. Early teenagers have this urge to get pregnant immediately but they don’t know the lessons of full responsibility of taking care of babies. I think getting married isn’t the right time for me. College and having a career soon is important after marriage. It seems weird for young couples to be married they don’t understand how are they going to take care of living and having a roof over their head. Some kids without a parent only a mother have to take care of his brother and work for money to have a job. People decided to be married to people as the same racial color. Others want to be multicultural. It doesn’t bother me. All I care is that I have a girlfriend who loves me but, she is all the way from Turkey which being far apart is ok. When I am more mature enough, I should not be playing around on the computer or watching my favorite television shows. I should work hard as I possibly can in college so I can get an Associate Degree in computers. It will take me a lot of patience and time to do all the courses here.

From the article it amazes me about 60% of all American children born in 1990s will spend some significant portion of their childhood in a fatherless home. The great engine of single-parenthood is no longer divorce, as it was in the 1960s and 1970s; it’s the rising share of births to people who never marry to begin with. Nearly three-fourths of children in single-parent families will experience poverty by age 11, as against only about a fifth of children in two-parent families. Children raised in single-parent homes are at greater risk of poverty, school dropout, delinquency, teen pregnancy, and adult joblessness. I think the points Rausch makes about poverty is correct because, some teen-parents who don’t graduate from High School don’t make it in life and others do if a single one marries a rich person. Although there are chances than race or income, but married people without any kids learn from their selves, learn well independently and make enough money.

Stereotypes in New Media

James McGuire
English 322, Section#567
May 9, 2003



Stereotypes in New Media



The points Parker is making about the stereotypes
that are presented in the news media I agree because,
she discussed how the media are biased against men and
women. Parker observes, “Men get short shrift in
matters that traditionally were the domain of women:
family, children, and health. Second, women get short
shrift in matters traditionally associated with men:
government, politics, and business.” “We ignore men’s
hearts and women’s brains.” I think males are
portrayed in increasing negative terms about to let go
of our old stereotypes: Men must be tough (protect
women, hide their pain, be strong ‘n silent); women
must be attractive and nurturing (be devoted to
spouse, be fertile, have consistently good-hair days).
Male stereotypes: stupid, philanderers, deadbeats,
disposable, pedophiles, batters, Sodomites, and losers
etc. This effect I think this has about judging
people’s personalities what other people think how
they want them to be. But, it isn’t right judging
people. People are human beings like everybody else
although, they have a different sex appeal. The way
females are portrayed isn’t fair because, there are
abuses from wrong men and women could be murdered like
that one case about a man having an affair with a
women. Only, he drowned his pregnant wife off his boat
in the San Pablo Bay near Vallejo. But, I knew it was
Peterson who killed his wife and he felt really guilty
about it. Even though he was going to run away down to
Mexico from San Diego with a whole lot of cash and he
was disguised. Though the police got the Peterson
criminal. I think he should get the death penalty for
what he done was wrong.
One of Farrell’s theory about male and female
behavior, “A women has anger toward men comes from
their feeling of rejection as they age and becomes
less attractive.”

Evaluation

James McGuire

English 322, Section#567

May 9, 2003

Evaluation

I find the lab lessons were very valuable. The lessons made me motivated to read, interest me to write, and learned every topic. I find I am reading more from printing these lab projects online than I did before. Even, reading, “The Human Comedy,” by William Saroyan, wrote a four-page essay about from what is related from the book, and about what I have read from the story.Microsoft Word and Works are cool because, it checks your spelling and grammar, which makes me, improve my writing much better. The lab I liked the best was: The Secret History of Technology and Pop Music. I never knew Thomas Edison invented the phonograph in 1877 and it started to make a music industry in America. Also, I liked, Growing up in Multicultural Familiesbecause, it learned me about families; are ancestors who are related that are involved in multicultural events and makes me learn different culture from people all around the world. It is like a box of crayons. I evaluate my improvement in my reading gives me more understanding and it helps me to become a better reader. Even, from the Lindamoodbell program I really like it there and helps me able to communicate a lot to my instructor, Gailey. I hope to be in the program again with Gailey, thanks to the program. I find the ESSC environment as students’ doing their work reminds me of my old job at CSUMB at the World Languages and Cultures building where students work in their computer labs typing essays and doing videos about different languages and learning the cultures. I was a lab assistant there and loved working with Gus Leonard; he is the Language Lab Coordinator and my supervisor. I thank him for taking me to Mac World in San Francisco a couple months ago. Mac World was very educating about Apple Computer technology and I get to learn about different programs like Macromedia. I like using e-mail to communicate with my lab instructor.

The Dating Dilemma - A Brief History of Dating

James McGuire

September 23, 2003

Eng. 302

Lab 3: The Dating Dilemma-A Brief History of Dating


I think speed dating wasn’t around in Colonial Times you would have to date a person who has grown up with you. You have to pick and choose in someone you are in love with. Speed dating involved with people who place ads seeking a date or love ones living in the world and finding them on the computer. You can rate people who put their pictures on this internet site called hotornot.com. If you want to date them, you can, but it costs money to subscribe and you can talk with them. There are many dating patters that exist during the past and more are used now since the history of dating.

Dyslexia

James McGuire
English 322
February 25, 2003
Section #567


Dyslexia it is a learning language-based
disability. Symptoms result in people having
difficulties with specific language skills are
reading. Students with dyslexia experience
difficulties in spelling, writing and speaking. Its
life-long impact can change at different stages in a
person's life. Because dyslexia can make it very
difficult for a student to succeed academically in the
instructional environment, it is referred as a
learning disability.
The causes of dyslexia shows difference that
anatomical and brain imagery studies the way the brain
of a dyslexic person develops and functions. People
with this have been found to have problems with
discriminating sounds within a word, a key in their
reading difficulties. Dyslexia isn't due to a lack of
intelligence or a desire to learn and with teaching
methods people can learn successfully.
One type of learning disability is dyslexia
others include: Dyscalculia (a mathematical disability
in which a person has unusual difficulty solving
arithmetic problems and grasping math concepts.)
Dysgraphia (a neurological-based writing disability in
which a person finds it hard to form letters or write
within a defined space).
Dyslexia is not a disease and there isn't a cure
for it. The best way to find out that if you are
dyslexic is through testing by qualified examiner(s).
People who are very bright can be dyslexic and it's
unidentified as you get older. People are often gifted
in areas that do not require strong language skills
including: art computer science, design, drama,
electronics, math, mechanics, music, physics, sales,
and sports.
Dyslexia is diagnosed by a formal evaluation. It
assesses intellectual ability, information processing,
psycho-linguistic processing, and academic skills.
It's used to determine weather or not a student is
reading at the expected level and takes into account
the individual's families' genes and overall school
performance. Testing can be conducted by trained
school or outside specialists.
Dyslexia is treated by getting help from a tutor,
teacher and therapist trained in using a multisensory,
structured language approach instructing individual
students who go to school for the need of education.
The rights of a dyslexic person are the
Individual with Disabilities Act (IDEA) and the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Individuals are legally
entitled to special services to help them overcome and
accommodate their learning problems. Services include
education programs designed to meet the needs of
students. The Acts protect people with dyslexia
against unfair and illegal discrimination.
I may have experience with signs of dyslexia are:
Learning to Speak. I need to use my vocabulary in
English well every time. I probably have some memory
problems. It is hard to memorize everything at once
but, I need to take it by step-by-step one at a time
to memorize. I used to go to special education classes
and needed help with my speaking, what I really needed
to say is this and this. I had lots of special friends
in my classes who probably had the same problems as me
and we would talk a lot really well. But, some friends
can disappear in my life because, their lives have
changed. I think my family has some problems with it
too but it seems sometimes I have a lot of difficulty
when I speak with them or they just don‘t listen well
and say “what?” every time may drive me insane…laughs
out loud.

Facts About Dyslexia: Studies show that
individuals with dyslexia process information in a
different area of the brain than non-dyslexics. Many
people who are dyslexic are of average to above
average intelligence. They are behavioral disorders.
15-20% of the population have language-based learning
disabilities. Students with specific learning
disabilities receiving special education services,
70-80% have deficits in reading.
Dyslexia is the most common cause of reading,
writing, and spelling difficulties. Dyslexia affects
males and females nearly equally, and people from
ethnic and socio-economic backgrounds. Individuals who
are dyslexic can learn to read so they can process and
express information. Research shows that programs
utilizing multisensory structured
language techniques can help adults and children
learn how to read. There's a diagnosis about
appropriate instruction, hard work and support from
family, teachers, friends, and others as individuals
who are dyslexic can succeed in school and later as
working adults.

(Common Signs of Dyslexia: High School and College
Students): May read very slowly with many
inaccuracies. Continues to spell incorrectly,
frequently spells the same word differently in a
single piece of writing. Avoid reading and writing
tasks. Have trouble summarizing and outlining. Trouble
answering open-ended questions on tests.
Difficulty leering a foreign language. Poor
memory skills. May work slowly. Pay too little
attention to details or focus too much on them.
Misread information.
Have an inadequate vocabulary and store of
knowledge from previous reading. Difficulty with
planning, organizing and managing time, materials and
tasks.

Signs of dyslexia:
-Learning to speak
-Organizing written and spoken language
-Learning letters and their sounds
-Memorizing number facts
-Spelling
-Reading
-Learning a foreign language
-Correctly doing math operations

History: The Orton-Gillingham approach grew out of the
work of Dr. Samuel Torrey Orton (1879-1948) and Anna
Gillingham (1878-1964). Dr. Orton, a professor of
neuropsychiatry and neuropathology at the Neurological
Incertitude of Columbia University was a pioneer in
focusing attention on language differences by bringing
together neuropsychiatry information and principles of
remediation. As early as 1925, as a psychiatrist in
the Iowa Psychopathic Hospital, Dr. Orton noted a
similarity between an intelligent 16 year old dyslexic
boy's inability to learn to read and a "stroke"
patient's difficulty when the ability to read has been
lost.
(This reminds me of a black and white French
movie I watched at French class in High School. A wild
boy was found out in the woods and was captured by
adult wilderness hunters using dogs. They brought the
child over to a village and see if he had an ability
to learn but he had a disability. They took the child
to a hospital and a doctor took him to his house to
teach him new things and how to eat, walk; talk. The
doctor would analyze him in a book. This was in the
19th century and "probably early 20th century?"
although there was horse-carriages.)

Individuals can succeed in varied fields
dyslexia. Examples of some famous people:

Ann Bancroft - First woman in history to cross the ice
to both the North and South Poles.
Web site: http://www.yourexpedition.com

David Boies - Trial lawyer whose high-profile clients
have included former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, Jr.,
Napster, and the U.S. Justice Dept. in its antitrust
suit against Microsoft.

Erin Brokovich - Real-life heroine who exposed a
cover-up by a major California utility that was
contaminating the local water supply. Their actions
had severe, even deadly consequences to the members of
the community. With her help, the townspeople were
awarded a $333 million settlement, the largest ever in
a U.S. direct-action lawsuit. (Julia Roberts played
her in the movie with the same name.)

Stephen J. Cannell - Author and Emmy Award-winning TV
producer and writer, who has created or co-created
more than 38 shows, of which he has scripted more than
350 episodes and produced or executive produced more
than 1,500 episodes. His hits include "The Rockford
Files," "A-Team," "21 Jump Street," "Wiseguy,"
"Renegade" and "Silk Stalkings."
Web site: http://www.cannell.com

Whoopi Goldberg - Actor and comedian, winner of an
Academy Award for her supporting role in "Ghost," also
an Academy Award nomination for her role in "The Color
Purple."
Web site: http://www.whoopi.com


Sir Richard Branson
British businessman and founder of a global group of
companies, which include the Virgin Megastore retail
chain, Virgin Atlantic Airlines, V2 Records and Virgin
Net.


John T. Chambers
President and CEO of Cisco Systems, Inc., a worldwide
leader in networking for the Internet with assets
exceeding $30 billion.

Cher
Singer and actor, who won an Academy Award in 1987 for
her leading role in Moonstruck.
Website: http://www.cher.com

Danny Glover
Award-winning actor, who starred in Lethal Weapon
(I-IV), The Color Purple and many more movies.

Tommy Hilfiger

Dr. John R. Horner
Noted paleontologist and technical advisor for Steven
Spielberg on the movies, Jurassic Park and The Lost
World.
Web site: http://museum.montana.edu/

Bruce Jenner
One of the world’s greatest athletes who won the gold
medal in the Decathlon at the 1976 Olympics.
Web site: http://www.bruce-jenner.com

Greg Louganis
Considered the world’s greatest diver who in 1988,
competed against divers half his age to be the first
to win double gold medals for diving in two
consecutive Olympic events. He also holds 6 World
Champion titles, 47 National Championship titles, 6
gold medals in the Pan Am Games and numerous other
awards.
Web site: http://www.louganis.com

Rob Lowe
Actor who co-stars on the Emmy Award-winning TV show,
West Wing, and also starred in the movies: St. Elmo’s
Fire and The Outsiders.

Craig McCaw
Billionaire founder of McCaw Cellular. Currently
working on a business venture (Teledesic) to put more
than 300 communications satellites into space.

Patricia Buckley Moss
Award-winning painter, best known for her paintings of
the Amish and Mennonites, which "thousands of
collectors in the United States, Europe, and Japan
have come to recognize, appreciate, and treasure."
Web site: www.p-buckley-moss.com

Don Mullan
Best-selling Irish author/journalist and broadcaster.
His book Eyewitness Bloody Sunday (1997), about an
event he witnessed in 1972 as a 15-year-old-boy, is
considered the catalyst for British Prime Minister
Tony Blair’s decision to conduct an inquiry into
Bloody Sunday, which will be the most expensive
investigation in British legal history.

Paul Orfalea
Founder and Chairman Emeritus of Kinko’s, world’s
leading provider of visual communications services,
document creation and copying with more than 1,100
stores worldwide.

Robert Rauschenberg
Painter who played an important role in the transition
from abstract expressionism to pop art. His works span
more than 50 years and are owned by numerous
collectors and museums worldwide.

Nolan Ryan
Baseball Hall-of-Fame pitcher, Ryan played for the New
York Mets from 1965 through 1971, contributing to
their 1969 World Series victory; California Angels
from 1972 to 1979; Houston Astros in 1980 and the
Texas Rangers in 1989.

Charles Schwab
Founder and Chairman of Charles Schwab & Co., a
holding company that engages in securities brokerage
and related financial services with assets exceeding
$800 billion.

Jackie Stewart
Among the most celebrated British professional racecar
drivers of the 1960s and 1970s. Stewart had 27 Grand
Prix wins in 99 Formula One races and won the World
Drivers Championship in 1969, 1971, and 1973, and was
runner-up in 1968 and 1972.

Henry Winkler
Actor, producer and director; studied at the Yale
School of Drama from 1967 to 1971; starred in TV’s
Happy Days as "The Fonz" from 1974 to 1984; recently
seen in the movie Little Nicky, as himself.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

T-Mobile Blink182

http://sidekick.com/blink182.aspx?g=38063&s=m

Some cool quotes from the book Three Cups of Tea by Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin

"It is time to stop worrying about whether someone likes us and decide we

are going to be respected again in the world." - Ronald Reagan

"Let nothing pertub you, nothing frighten you. All things pass. God does not

change. Patience achieves everything." - Mother Teresa

THE CLASSES I TOOK AT MONTEREY PENINSULA COLLEGE

FALL: 2003

SPRING:2003

SPRING: 2004

FALL: 2004


COMPUTER SCIENCE AND INFORMATION SYSTEMS


CSIS 77 PUBLISHING ON THE WORLD WIDE WEB: GRADE: B CREDITS: 3.0


ENGLISH


ENGL 321 EFFECTIVE WRITING SKILLS (LEVEL 1 ENGLISH): PASSED CREDITS: 4.0


ENGL 322 EFFECTIVE READING SKILLS (LEVEL 1 ENGLISH): PASSED: CREDITS: 4.0


ENGL 351 PHONEME AWARENESS FOR IMPROVED READING, WRITING AND SPEECH: 0.5+0.5= 1 CREDIT


ENGL 352 COMPREHENSION AND CRITICAL THINKING SKILLS: 0.5 CREDIT


LEARNING SKILLS

LNSK 331.4 CREDITS: 3


15.5 CREDITS
I TOOK 22.5 UNITS
MY LocalGPA: 1.600