Communication is a hard task in the 21st century. I've once read a piece of miscellany where this writer depicts the awkward situation of two girls, each a friend of other, facing each other in a lunch parlor while each talking on their own cell phones. It seems like the real small talks are more and more losing their own values, while more and more people are getting into their own cell phones or Facebook accounts so much that those methods eventually make them pretty numb to the real world situation.
Let's talk about this TED speech. Okay, I admit that at some points the speaker is trying to make her points seem larger than real. Even students right here in KMLA are some kind of multiplayers: they don't have any problem in associating with others while still enjoying themselves with Facebook or text messages. However, let's think of this peculiar case: the film Catfish. Don't know if it's staged or real by myself, but the film at least addresses some of the major issues of people creating a deceptive identity of themselves. Why would that be so? Internet is a space in which everything is so easy; all you need to do to make a new friend is simply typing some few vain words like "hello" or so and posting some photos of yourself. If you're not very proud of yourself, just pretend you are a cool guy with good appearance. Most of those who talk with you would never even try to guess out where do you really live.
Simply put, think of what you talk about through text messages or messenger services. Are they really that meaningful? Mostly not, if you and the other are not that close acquaintances. Even though you are the popular one on the Facebook, that's it. In reality you feel that nothing's changed, and that you became isolated because all the others are the same as you - being logged in their own accounts. So you become very anxious whenver the computer is away from you. Cell phones are very similar. They are slowly becoming the only powerful (and also dangerous) means of communication for many.
I didn't feel that surprised while watching the whole Catfish, since I've heard a similar story from one of my friends before. Now this is a story which can occur to us in everyday lives. I actually sympathize Angela in the story - maybe the Internet was the only space for her where she felt like she was having the privileges that she didn't think of beforehand. People are lonely today, since while the Internet gifted convenience, it also brought away with it our very old kind of communicative mind. So, to sum up (I know my arguments are a bit messy though), I do think that technological development is making people lonlier than before.
White Snail
2011년 5월 31일 화요일
2011년 5월 23일 월요일
CR Topic.
I'm really, really sorry for being so late to post our new CR topic. I have no excuse for my being unable to heed the deadline, and I hope all my peers and Mr. Garrioch forgive me for my sluggishness.
Critical Response: Development in communication technology makes people more lonely.
Critical Response: Development in communication technology makes people more lonely.
Now, this was a kind of clue given by Mr. Garrioch while I was still finding my way, and the fact is I really got into this speech. It's not a hard task, in fact, to see friends or family members or some other acquaintances so engrossed in text messages or some chatting apps in the iPhone. Seemingly, such a drastic development in communication technology tightened our relationships with each other; we can now talk more freely with our friends while comfortably lying on a bed, which is a blissful thing for a more convenient conversations. However, it actually brought some drawbacks as well, as the lecturer here, Sherry Turkle, mentions; we are also very prone to a new kind of loneliness created by this strange mood. What is the real conversation for? Isn't it that we are too obsessed with our own cell phones that we are so anxious about feeling lonely when they may disappear?
I believe that this issue is not only concerend with cell phone text messages or e-mails, but also with social networking services such as Twitter or Facebook. I have worried a bit that whether those ways of communication are really used as online media of "real talks" or simply a place where you feel that you are commnunicating by simply "liking" somebody's photos and so on. I want you all to seriously think about if the communication technology today is really making people closer, or making them simply more vulnerable to loneliness.
2011년 4월 21일 목요일
Why Insist on English?
It is a common sense that Korean parents today are investing millions of wons into teaching their own children English. No wonder, just take a look around us and the first thing to come up from any place in this very KMLA is EOP. Now while I'm not trying to say that English education is meaningless or that we have to reject the fact that English is the no. 1 international language, I do think that we sometimes have to look back on our own language; we have to realize how ignorant we have been to our own language.
Compared to English, how indifferent have we been to our own language Hangeul? Think of Hangeulnal. About two decades ago, the Korean government drew down the day from the long list of annual holidays since the government believed there were "too many" anniversaries to celebrate. Now, what I'd like to question is this: why Hangeulnal, not other days like Christmas? Strictly, Christmas is something Christians would celebrate by their own; Hangeulnal, however, is something very original to us Koreans only, and it simply doesn't make sense not to celebrate the day our very own language is born. This is only a small fraction of our ignorance toward our own mother tongue; there are hundreds of signs all written in English (most of them are so poorly spelled out that even I am hard to recognize, by the way) if you walk out on Seoul streets. Also, institutions which teach English outnumbers any other kind of private education institutions in Korea as far as I know. Seems like everyone is trying to convert their mother tongue into a totally disparate one. This is not even our own case, by the way, since there have always been criticisms that English is encroaching on sphere of influences of other language groups. Linguistic imperialism, we should say: partly to blame the invasion of Mcdonald's, but equally to blame ourselves.
To emphasize again, I'm not saying that we should abolish EOP. I'm not even trying to claim that we should close down every one of English institutions currently present in Korea. Studying English does have a point, considering that English is one of the most frequently used languages nowadays all around the globe. However, there is a huge difference between thoughtlessly abusing English and wisely using English while keeping the importance of our own language in our mind. English education is important as it has always been, but again, we should remember where we are and who we are, at least.
2011년 3월 31일 목요일
30 Days of...
The idea might sound at first pretty confusing, what I'd like to propose for a 30-day program is to switch the night and daytime for 30 days. This means a person would have to sleep during the daytime and lead his major life cycle during the nighttime: he or she could play video games whenever bored, and he or she could take a part-time job in fast food chains, bars or restaurants that open for 24 hours. One could also meet his or her own friends, only if they are still awake.
Why am I proposing this? Because the topic was always something fascinating to me: at least a day of living the nightlife instead of the busy life during daytime. Any kids would have experiences of trying to stay awake during all night with their might, even though there's really no practical good in it. The silent, furtive nighttime can offer people some rest from the mundane daytime lives, could provide them some time to reminisce over themselves, and make them to give more attention to places or people they would not have noticed ordinarily, such as salesmen working from early dawn or taxi drivers who stay awake during the nighttime.
I also want to know that if people could sustain their ordinary lives still pretty normally if they change their life cycle so radically. As a proud student of the KMLA, I'm pretty sure that anyone suffers a lot from a sudden breakoff of their daily life cycle. Also, I'm pretty curious if 30 days are enough period for a person to again completely change into a nighthawk; I don't know if someone's daily life cycle built up for several years could change so dramatically in just a month of period.
If I was given a chance, I would love to take the opportunity to lead a month of nightlife. Of course it might be a bit more lonley than before, since anyone I'd like to have a friendly talk would be sleeping, but I think it would be very "romantic" to be a nighthawk around quiet midnight.
2011년 3월 10일 목요일
CR: Does education kill creativity?
The TED speech about how the current education system kills the students' creativity was one of the most compelling and persuasive speeches I have ever heard. Though there might be some different opinions about the topic, I think the speaker had a critical point. I do agree that there should be something done on the current education system in order to foster a more creative and productive atmosphere among the students.
Why is creativity so important for us? It is because creativity is one of the most important factors that motivate the capitalist society. Creative people change the society, make a progress, and benefit the whole society eventually. Then why do I argue that current education system is harmful to fostering creativity? This is because the current education system only focuses on teaching certain 'practical' subjects, e.g. calculus, language arts, etc. Why do art classes have to be taught less frequently than such subjects? This is simply because the majority of people on the world lead 'ordinary lives', and getting into companies is a crucial factor for such lives. Companies seek for someone who is intelligent enough to do certain assigned tasks, not for someone who can dance, paint, or sing. The problem here is that although many children have infinite possibilities and so diverse interests, such education system pushes those different children into one stereotype and eventually kills possibilities of kids becoming a Picasso or a Beethoven. Lack of creativeness does not only plague the fields of art; already in Korea right now, companies are complaining that the employees are nothing more than machines only pouring efforts on assigned tasks. People should stop seeking for someone who can prove a higher IQ, but start searching for the ones who think of something nobody else can ever imagine; otherwise the Google or the Apple would remain only as a dream workplace for us.
So, let's make the point simple and plain here: current education system needs to be changed. Otherwise, people should not expect their own children or employees to be creative.
2011년 3월 2일 수요일
My Debate Motions
THBT violence in military interrogation could be justified.
THS sports club activities in school.
THBT cigarette prices should be raised.
Sorry for posting so late. I slept before actually posting it, though I've already came of the three most easily debatable motions.
THS sports club activities in school.
THBT cigarette prices should be raised.
Sorry for posting so late. I slept before actually posting it, though I've already came of the three most easily debatable motions.
2011년 2월 24일 목요일
Opinions on Michael Moore's "Join My High School Newspaper"
Michael Moore's argument about suppressed freedom of speech of high school students had a strong appeal to me. What made me interested in the issue is that through my own experience, I am pretty sure that Korean high school students' freedom of expressing their own political viewpoint is almost completely objected. I do not know whether American high school students experience the same kind of prejudices and objections as us Korean students do, but as Michael Moore presents political assembly of students as something "unusual experience," I do not think there is much difference.
Some arguments against high school students expressing "too much" opinions of theirs are that some regulations on students' freedom of speech, because growing students are more prone to dangerous perspectives. Is that really so? For example, let's say there is a high school student who has some voice to speak out against the problems of his school, such as that teachers do not respect the students enough or that the school facility is too old and inconvenient. If he or she wants to publish his opinions on the school newspaper in order to inform everyone, however, his or her opinions will be censored because the teachers would consider those to be too radical. Of course, some can also argue that there are other means of expressing students' own voice, such as many online community sites. However, due to the fact there are tons of facts floating out there on the Internet, I doubt that many people would consider those voices anything more than whimsical complaints toward grown-ups.
For such a reason, I regard Michael Moore's idea of creating an uncensored, liberal press containing high school students' political viewpoints is a great idea. Adults might say that students' duty is to study, but we also are human beings with their own perspectives; the fact that we are young does not justify the ignorance of our voice.
3 motions I derived from Michael Moore's arguments:
1. THB that students should be able to speak out their own perspectives toward social issues more clearly.
2. THS high school students making their own press.
3. THB that censoring teenagers' opinions should be banned.
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