Midterm Reflection

Everything we had discussed and went over in class was presented in the midterm, especially in the first part. How I prepared for the prompt question for the second part was I annotated the hard copy that was given to us in class prior to the exam by highlighting and writing in the margins my notes for it. It really helped me to be able to understand the article as well as use some personal experience and relation to it especially when asked to compare and contrast the description of the environment displayed in the text to my experiences at this campus.

 

Thesis

How does the design of Georgia State University’s library affect people’s’ relationships on that space?

Thesis: Georgia State University Library promotes interaction, togetherness and group work among students.

T: The computers are aligned together so when students whether they are partnered in pairs or groups are able to interact and collaborate with one another. Some have walls built around them like a mini cubicle space but are still in an open space.

T: The second floor of Library North near the computers and study rooms are chairs that are grouped in fours around a small coffee table. This interior of the chairs promotes the idea of group work and collaboration among students that are studying, however, from sitting in these chairs and also passing them while going through the library, most of the students that sit together are not interacting with one another.

T: In the library, there are some but very few spaces where students that to study alone are located. There are some cubicles students can occupy in closed spaces such as the ones near the bookshelves in the third and fourth floors. Sometimes, students would even sit between bookshelves to create and amend their own space.

Conclusion: Students are limiting interaction with other students by attempting to create their own closed-out cubicle space. This isn’t anything personal towards other students regarding to communication and relationships with one another. This is primarily for academic reasons being if a group of students were studying at a table and a student by themselves was studying at the next table over it is because that one student is probably more comfortable working alone than in pairs or groups.

Summary of “Recognizing Campus Landscapes as Learning Spaces” by Kathleen G Scholl & Gowri Betrabet Gulwadi

This article by Scholl and Gulwadi discusses the changes in a college or university campus that affect the students learning and concentration. It discusses how the structures of the campuses can impact the student’s willingness to learn in a type of space outside the classroom whether if it’s in a study room, the library or outside amongst nature. “American high education institutions face unique twenty-first century changes and challenges in providing good, holistic learning spaces for the diverse and evolving needs of today’s college student.” (Scholl and Gulwadi). Due to the changes in technology advancement, these new structured environments attempt to cater to the students by inserting computer and media labs giving the students an opportunity to be able to quickly access and navigate content.

The article also presented the idea that college and university students are most likely at a higher risk of fatigue than most adult groups. This implies that due to the conventional hours of studying, the pressure of obtaining a degree to get what society deems as a “good-working” job, and the finance coverage to attend a higher education institution that college students are more stressed out than those who have “9 to 5” jobs. As a college student myself, I believe this to be true. It is quite stressful no matter what field you are studying in. Every student experiences it differently, but the majority is likely to relate when it comes to feeling fatigue about it.

Another topic the article goes about is the impact that technology has upon a student. The article stated that “increased technology use within today’s multitasking society is likely to hijack a student’s attentional resource placing her/him at risk of underachieving academic learning goals and undermining success at a university” (Scholl and Gulwadi). This, I personally believe, is not true. First, unless the student is willingly to distract themselves by consistently checking their phone, that’s their own issue at fault. It’s not necessarily a problem if a student is use technology as an escape or a break while studying. Second, with the advancement of technology nowadays it is easier for students to be able to access and research information quickly. Whereas in about two decades or so prior where one had to research prints, books, and copies of information which would take hours, there are now online archive resources where it makes it easier for the student to be able to access information they need within seconds. If anything, the quicker the student is able to obtain the information, the more content can be used for the research by the student.

Lastly, the article discusses how the built environment of college campuses can impact the student’s learning process. “Open spaces and “zones” for disciplines became far more common than closely clustered buildings previously designed to protect students from the lures of the outside world” (Scholl and Gulwadi). I annotated that traditional college campuses that have been around for nearly over centuries were created in rural areas to keep the students in almost separating them from what they call it “the outside world” or in this case: the real world. However, newly built college campuses have been built in either urban or suburban areas to expose the “outside” and “real” world to the the students. I added in examples stating how when I was previously at Valdosta State University, it was a small campus in one general area that the city actually was surrounded by it. And because they campus is small, it took nearly two to five minutes to walk from one of the dorms to the classroom buildings. When I transferred to Georgia State, the campus is so exposed in the middle of downtown Atlanta that it takes nearly ten to fifteen minutes to walk from the dorms to the classroom buildings as well. Sometimes, it took five minutes if you were able to get onto the shuttle routes. While most campuses that are tight and close-knit communities, sometimes they are to believe to have the mind feel closed up. Whereas in exposed an expanded campuses are stated to be help open the mind allowing it to circulate.

This includes how nature spaces can impact a student’s learning mode as well. “Interaction with nature, in particular can help to maintain or restore cognitive function such as direct attention, problem solving, focus and concentration, impulse inhibition, and memory, which can become depleted from fatigue or with overuse.” (Scholl and Gulwadi). This states that a human in a structured environment makes them feel “boxed” in as if they are a bird in a cage feeling stressed whereas being out in nature reflects back onto the student where they can feel open and “one with nature” itself and are able to communicate and circulate thoroughly. Although the idea of nature helping to ease the student’s mind is intact to benefit a student to relax their auras while in their learning process, some students may prefer a different approach and would prefer to work in closed in spaces as well.

While traditional college campuses have nature quads and courtyards set to help the student relax and free their mind especially with the installation to the latest technology being used to rapidly conduct their research for courses, new and recently built college campuses are breaking the traditional “in-one-place” areas that college and university campuses are constructed and are helping the students being able to expose themselves to the outside, real world around them.

FBED: Centennial Olympic Park

 

Sitting down on Centennial Olympic, the noises you mostly hear is either the multiple conversations of other people, the splashing water of the water fountains, car tires roaring and screeching against the paved streets and the bell-like sounds alerting you that the Atlanta Streetcar is nearby. So when I took this video, I mostly wasn’t trying to get a particular sound, but what the area is surrounded with from multiple sounds going off all at once. In this video, you can also hear even the slight heaviness of the wind as it picks up because that time of the year has come: fall. And with fall, comes the wind as well.

In this video, you also are able to see a skyline view of the city of Atlanta itself from the eyes of Centennial. You are able to see Skyview, the ferris wheel, in the center move. Also, there are two things that pass through in the video: a flock of birds and a man walking by. By doing this, I captured a major sight of the city looking upon the city.

PSR: Centennial Olympic Park

One of the brief yet most cherished memories I had a child visiting Atlanta was playing in the water fountains at what I didn’t know was at Centennial Olympic. Transferring to Georgia State University, I was eager to visit places that were said to be near the Atlanta campus. So the day before classes began for the semester, one of my roommates and I walked from our dorm all the way down to the park and right then and there my childlike heart was full as I stepped into the park. We sat on the grass and just relaxed as I was also very impressed how close everything was to the park: Skyview, World of Coke, the Georgia Aquarium, CNN and Philips Arena.

Self-timer selfie I took the day I visited Centennial Olympic Park since my childhood.

Self-timer selfie I took the day I visited Centennial Olympic Park since my childhood. August 21, 2016.

And ever since that day, I would go visit the park as often as I could or when I felt the need to step away from campus for awhile. This past weekend, I visited the park again and sat down on one of the concrete infrastructure that was near the steps of the far side of the park near the Embassy Suites and wrote in my journal. I took pictures and panoramas of the area.

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Pictures and panoramas I took at Centennial Olympic Park. October 1, 2016.

Just recently yesterday, I went back to the park after my last class that was at Aderhold. This is something I’ve been meaning to do for the past couple weeks since classes started. It was a quick five minute walk and when I arrived, the park wasn’t as full as it usually is with families. I walk over to the granite and concrete bench area that sat right before the water fountains and usually while I saw mostly children around this area playing in the water, this time I saw grown ups and adults playing with them and taking pictures in front of them. It was like their childlike playful instincts took over and with the nearly emptiness of the park, it was a perfect opportunity to play in the park.

Visiting Centennial has become one of my favorites things so far while living in Atlanta. I love visiting the park on deserted days like how it was yesterday and even on busy days such as during the weekends. It brings me a childlike wonder just like that most cherish memories I have when I was younger and was playing at the water fountains at the park.

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Picture of the water fountains at Centennial Olympic Park I took yesterday when I visited the park after my last class. October 3, 2016.

#BLACKLIVESMATTER

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Photograph of two men at a Black Lives Matter peace protest.

 

This image shows two men in a #BlackLivesMatter protest where they are holding signs asking the audience or the viewer, or in this case, those who are involved in police brutality, if a black man’s life is inferior to a white man’s. This is a powerful image because it questions the media, also America, something that has been engraved in the country for so long that they chose to live in denial for. American history has always favored the white man over the black man. So this picture with these two men coming together to peacefully protest as the white man supports his black counterpart and questions the media for their injustice, the black man also questions the media a question they chose not to directly answer.

The design of the GSU “quad” discourages unity.

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A photograph of the Georgia State University Plaza from Atlanta Preservation.

The Georgia State University quad, or as the students refer to it: plaza or courtyard, has been a wide ranged space that is in the center of all the classroom buildings and library. Although this space is provided for the students be able to hang out and for student organizations and small businesses to set up tables and tents, the space is really expanded to the point where it is so spaced out that there’s enough room for almost anybody to sit away from each other.

I was walking through the courtyard the other day and despite seeing groups of students bundled up, students also isolated themselves from such groups  by sitting on the concrete benches  or on the unused tables through the plaza and would be on their electronic devices. Because the design of the quad is divided having so many of these miniature plant gardens, this encourages students to find their own little spots to sit away from tables and benches that are being occupied. Even if the majority of the space was being currently occupied, that doesn’t stop students from sitting near each other but not interact with one another.

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A photograph of the Georgia State University Plaza taken for Georgia State University Magazine in 1985.

Referencing to this picture, as the courtyard is covered with students all over the area, despite many sitting in groups together or near one another, if you look closing there’s still some isolation occurring. So even though the plaza was designed to have enough space for students to relax before or after class, it still expands opportunities for students to stir away from one another sitting in their own spots or hangouts.

Artifact: Butterfly on the steps of the University Commons @ GSU

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A butterfly on the steps of the GSU dorm University Commons stairs.

As I was walking down the steps from the University Commons courtyard, there was a large yet petite figure on the steps. The butterfly laid there and hadn’t moved or flapped a single wing. I couldn’t tell if it was dead or not considering that it was very still. I assumed it wasn’t because when I had came back, the little thing was gone.

Glossary

Affordance: Something a design enable you to do.

Genre: A kind or type of something.

Conventions: The characteristics that define a genre.

Constraint: Something a design restricts us to do.

Summary: Pulling out ideas in the text and using your own words.

Paraphrase: A very short summary putting your ideas to what the text means. Goal is to get close to the meaning as possible.

Lexicon: A list of terms from a text, subject, and/or discussion.

Claim: A statement put forth as true that needs evidence to be convincing. Commonplace.

Thesis: The main claim of an argument.

Abstract: The overview.

Rhetoric: The art of crafting a message to affect change in a particular audience. The art of persuasion. Being able to see the available means of persuasion in an given situation.

Primary Research: Gathering the data yourself.

Secondary Research: Reporting and using data others have gathered.

Multi-modality: Bringing together different modes of communication. This includes: Linguistic, Oral, Visual, Gestural, & Spatial.

Content: What you say or what is being said.

Style: How you say or how it’s being said.

Digital Literacy: Our ability to work with the particular affordances of different medias.

Metadata: A set of data that describes and gives information about other data.

Explicit Claim: Stated outright

Implicit Claim: Suggested. Hinted

Exigency: A reason for being. “So What” test.

The Academic Blog: “We Make Money Not Art”

The Academic Blog, We Make Money Not Art, was founded by Regine Debatty who is a writer, curator, and critic. She is known for her writings on the intersection circulating between art, science, technology and social issues. She also ran a weekly art and science programme #A.I.L. (Artists in Laboratories) from 2012 to 2014.

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http://we-make-money-not-art.com/

One article I read was “The Woodpecker: Could Fake Birds Save Our Forests?”, which was posted on August 30th a few weeks ago, talks about the artist Richard Vitols explored a way to replace some of the bird species with artificial ones. He installed thrifty custom-made woodpeckers in a forest near Dusseldorf and visited weekly documenting the “health” of the artificial woodpeckers. He also made observations to see how the other inhabitants of the forest interacted with them. After his observation, some would be knocked down from their positions, others would have insects living in them if they battery was no longer in use. His experiment is still a working progress. And in September, he will be traveling to the LabVerde in the Brazil Amazon rain forest to further explore tree sound emissions and insect behavior under a different climate. Once he returns to Europe, he plans to build a second generation of artificial birds hoping they will be stronger and monitored 24/7.

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Link to the article: http://we-make-money-not-art.com/the-woodpecker-could-fake-birds-save-our-forests/