Sunday, January 26, 2014

TOW #17: Deport Justin Bieber?

       Justin Bieber. Two words, one fragile image. The recent actions from Justin Bieber has just showed us what growing up in the limelight does to an individual. The Canadian native was arrested earlier this week for street racing in a Lamborghini, driving without a valid license, resisting arrest, and under the influence of alcohol and drugs. Now that doesn't sound like a nice role model image for all the young kids who look up to Bieber. Since Bieber is actually an immigrant, he is retained in American with an O-1 work Visa, used for foreigners with "extraordinary ability in the sciences, arts, education, business or athletics." While Bieber was spending his minutes in jail in South Florida, his team hired the number one celebrity defense attorney Roy Black. 
     The author of the article, Ruben Navarrette, introduces writes this article to argue the unfairness of treatment between rich celebrities and poor immigrants. Immigrants that get deported because they are caught for just one headlight out, or a rolling stop sign, don't have the connections to hire someone like Roy Black to defend them. They just get deported right back to where they started. But on the other hand, someone like Bieber who was caught for destructive driving under the influence without a license, just needs to higher a fancy attorney and he's good. Even with a green card or permit, one can stay in the country if working or studying, but one mishap with the law and back to the motherland they go. Navarrette is arguing that if Bieber is convicted of the alleged crimes in South Florida, he should be sent right back where he came from just like any other immigrant would. 
   

Friday, January 3, 2014

IRB Intro Post #3: Sex Sleep Eat Drink Dream: A Day in the Life of Your Body

   

  Sex Sleep Eat Drink Dream: A Day in the Life of Your Body by Jennifer Ackerman takes the reader through exactly what it sounds like: a day in the life of your body. Ackerman breaks up the book by the body waking up in the morning, all throughout the days activities, to ending the day in bed. Most people do not know, or take for granted, the importance and utter genius of the body's functions. Little things such as telling time in your sleep, that women have more nightmares than men, that the best time to run is late afternoon to evening, that half of the calories you consume can be burned off simply by fidgeting, are all told in this book.
   I am a student very interested in biology and neurology, so any kind of book like this interests me. I love to know what is going on with my body, why it is happening, and then connecting it to all different types of daily life. By reading this book, I hope to gain a better understanding and appreciation for my body.

TOW #16: The Bling Ring by Nancy Jo Sales (Part 2)

      In 2009, seven audacious teenagers broke into multiple A-lister celebrity homes in California, on multiple accounts. Stealing almost $3 million in merchandise, victims of the burglaries include Paris Hilton, Lindsay Lohan, Orlando Bloom, Rachel Bilson, Audrina Patridge, and more. When word broke loose of these group of robbers known as the Bling Ring, everyone wanted to know how and why. Journalist Nancy Jo Sales took on the challenge to dig deep into the teenagers' juvenile, immature, crazy minds. She writes The Bling Ring  to publish the motives and tell the story of the robbery case that left Hollywood scratching their heads.
    Sales uses detailed imagery and anecdotes to reveal the real story, coming from the teenagers themselves through interviews. She also integrates psychological statistics to get behind the reasons of the crime. The teenagers lived in the affluent city of Calabasas, California outside of Los Angeles. What more would a teenager need growing up in a city like that? The answer: everything. Our society is so obsessed with getting closer and closer to owning everything they can, spending every cent if it makes them happier and presentable with more materials. For the Bling Ring, it was that, and more. Each stolen item brought them closer to living the Hollywood dream. It wasn't the money they wanted, it was the obsession with being famous. The purpose Sales portrays is to inform about the wild desire to be that much closer to being a Hollywood celebrity, and the consequences the teenagers' endured because of that. Sales achieved her purpose by explaining the story and digging deeper into the motives of the teenagers.

TOW #15: When Teachers Favor Attractive Kids

      As some people say, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Beauty is opinionated depending on culture, experience, taste, and many different factors. So does attractiveness affect daily human interactions? Could it be possible that a more attractive human being will be treated more favorable? Pepper Schwartz, professor of sociology at the University of Washington, agrees and claims that teachers favor more attractive students. 
      Schwartz introduces with studies proving her claim. A book by Wiley says, "the difference in GPA and college graduation rates between youth rated by others as attractive, versus average in looks, is similar to the differences in academic achievement between youth raised in two-parent versus single-parent families." That shocking claim of fact is introduced within the first few paragraphs of the article, catching the reader's attention. Using credible sources as evidence to back up her claim creates a strong logical structure for her argument that attractive students do better in school. But studies have also shown that this success goes well beyond high school. The key is that these students with lucky DNA start to build their self-confidence early, every time they hear a compliment or receive good grades. Confidence is a key trait in life, and those who gain it early, will go much further than those who are struggling with esteem issues. 
     With Schwartz claim backed by evidence, she then goes on to display a claim of policy. She proposes that teachers should think a minute before giving that grade to an attractive student unless they truly deserve it. In society today, we have put a lot more stress on the importance of stopping bullying because we have advertised the repercussions of it. We should also pay attention to how fairly we treat everyone, no matter how they look. Discussing this openly can help people in our world today realize the impact their words or actions have on young students. I think Schwartz crafts her argument well, backs it up with striking evidence, and then eases into her claim of policy to form a well-written article.