Good day. This week's assignment requires you work with a classmate in a pair or small group. The idea is to create a portrait of one or two of the individuals attending Ai and to bring out something of the shared student experience and the individual nature of your subject. As you are yourselves students here, you have that perspective and experience to aid you in the interview or dialogue, which is the first step to creating the student portrait. The Character Profile or study requires you present a "portrait" of an individual. It includes the individual's background to some degree and a look into their current endeavors, activities, interests, ideas and attitudes. To put it together involves an interview of sorts, a two-way exchange in which the pair members dialogue to come up with enough information and first-hand impressions to write the piece. The purpose is to gather and then bring to readers a sense of the background, motivation, and personality of the students pursuing specific degrees or interests here at AiFL. It will be a chance to exchange personal stories, interests and ideas with others. The focus may be on academic matters or personal. The student's particulars should illustrate some central idea, your thesis. Imagine the audience as students and others in the local community or any who would be interested to learn about the experiences, concerns, and interests of college students today. Key will be eliciting from your subject(s) detailed background experience and personal stories that reveal character and personality, and recording it all in such a way readers feel like they are meeting this student in person, seeing and hearing the student gesture and speak. Some questions to ask to get your subject's story include the following: *What's this experience or period of your life really about? *What is the emotional truth of your life today? What matters? *What do you feel good about, uncertain about? *How did you get to this point or place in life? *Describe a past or current struggle in some detail to show the kind of challenge you know best. *Who were the important people in your life? How did they influence or shape you? *What are your near and long term goals? ----------- Notes *Include a brief description of your meeting place, the setting of the interview. *Include notes on the subject's appearance, style, voice and gestures–the face-to-face impressions and image created by your subject. *Use some quoted speech, something your subject has said that epitomizes or illustrates clearly his or her point of view. Q&A Form There are two ways of structuring the piece. One is to introduce the subject in an opening paragraph, providing context and a lead-in that generates reader interest. (See the introductory paragraph description below for more details.) Imagine a target audience of your peers or some other reader group. Follow the introductory paragraph with a transcript of the questions posed to your subject and the responses elicited. Shape the dialogue so that the questions and responses, from beginning to end, are expressive of the subject's history, interests, and future prospects or concluding thoughts on this stage of life. At the following URL you will see the format demonstrated: http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1644040,00.html Essay Form The second way of structuring the piece is to summarize much of what you learn from your subject, shape the main story line around a theme, and illustrate the whole with a few well-chosen quotations from your subject. The second way is the article or essay form, as described more fully below: In the introductory paragraph, the writer must say something of the personal impressions your subject makes in a face-to-face meeting. We want readers to feel they are meeting this individual in person; of course the impressions are those you have drawn in meeting and talking with your subject. The body paragraph(s) will recount history and current endeavors, any conflicts or issues the subject is adressing, and how they are being addressed. The body material is meant to illustrate the nature of the personality and character of the individual subject. Again, the pairs or groups will be talking and exchanging information in an informal flow of give and take as you establish rapport and commonalities and differences. You will take notes on each other, specific background information, career goals, interests, concerns, etcetera, which later you will incorporate into the essay. You will unfold something of the life of your subject to illustrate a point about students or student life today. Your conclusion will bring the presentation back to the central idea, underscoring it, and providing final comments. You may want to incorporate direct quotation of one or another remark your subject has made, as well, to give some sense of the individual's actual speech or voice. Dialogue or direct quotation is a dramatic device and draws readers into the presence of your subject. You may use present or past tense overall. Bringing a sense of the subject individual's physical presence is a means of creating interest and imaginative appeal. Description of hair, eyes, gestures, clothing, in some brief but telling way will allow readers to actually "see" the subject person as they learn something of the story he or she embodies in the role of student. The following is part of the opening paragraph of an article about Justin Bieber written by Vanessa Grigoriadias, and published in Rollingstone(March3, 2011): Today, I'm the luckiest girl in the world. I'm flying to Atlanta to interview pop-culture crush, Justin Bieber. He's only 16, it's true, but half of womankind is in love with him, like Kim Kardashian (who wanted to spend Valentine's Day with a life-size poster of him), Rihanna (who has tweeted about his six-pack) and Katy Perry (who once said, "I would tap that. Yummy"). To the Biebers, Justing is the most adorable kid in the world. I've watched his videos at least a dozen times each, I own two of his three albums and I have him on my Twitter feed . . . . Assignment 7: A 400-500 word portrait in words of a fellow student. Use visual description, dialogue, and narrative detail to bring your subject's life into view. Title the piece. Double-space the lines. Due week 9. | 10/4/10 | by Doyle Writings |
Monday, February 28, 2011
Week 8
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