Friday, October 28, 2011

Blog #4 To AP or Not to AP

                It has always been known that the student who studies harder or earns better grades is placed into a higher than average class.   The question that stands is does the higher class really help prepare you for college more than an average class?  The true answer has to do with how well the teacher teaches or how well the student takes what they learned from that class and apply it. Each student comes out of the class with a new vision of what they learned.  It may be the same as the person next to them or it may be something totally different. Kids who are spontaneous and undecided should not be allowed to take high level courses nor should they be reprimanded for not taking them.  Those high level classes were meant for the fittest. I will discuss in this blog how hard students who dream of entering the medical field work to earn what they make. I will also discuss the level of difficulty AP and Honors classes have as well as who should and should not enter them using a few quotations from The Chem 20 Factor.
                The “smarter than average” student has always been expected to take a higher class such as an AP or Honors course of the topic that they excel in.  I will use the medical field as my example throughout this blog.  If a child wants to become a doctor in the future, they must begin at an early age preparing and studying for that field. They must take all very advanced classes.  “Chem 20, therefore, became a combat mission. Each grade was a life-or-death matter. It reeked of Olympian anguish and Olympian competitiveness. It taught people whose goal in life was the relief of pain and suffering that only the fittest, most single-minded, would survive,” (The Chem 20 Factor, Ellen Goodman, paragraph 2). This excerpt from The Chem 20 Factor is basically explaining how tough higher classes can be and the level of expectations those teachers require.  Students who are the most fit and focused on the topic should be required to enter such a class as Chem 20.  The high level classes require a level of commitment and competitiveness that many students do not have. 
                The next question to academic excellence would be is the student just taking the high level class for the credits or because they love the field of the class? There have been students who push themselves their first two years just to get into the AP or Honors course for simply the credits and the ability to slack off their next year.  Those students are the type of students to take up space in the classroom and give those who really desire the course less of a chance to get in. “On the whole. Doctors made a commitment to go into medicine when they were eighteen or nineteen years old, with the full knowledge that they would be “practicing” until they were thirty or older. In a “Now Society,” they would hold the record among their peers for delayed gratification. The sort of laid-back, noncompetitive person who wants to “live in the Moment” would drop out of Chem 20 with an acute case of culture shock in a week” (The Chem 20 Factor, Ellen Goodman, paragraph 5).  This quotation is elaborating on the idea that higher classes are meant for students who have immersed their lives into studying medicine and only medicine. Students who have the idea to just gain credits would not last in this class. A “spur of the moment” kind of student should understand that in order to get the best education to help them with college, they should take classes that are at their level of understanding. Goodman uses the “Survival of the Fittest”, theory that Charles Darwin had developed, to explain how difficult the AP classes truly are.  If you aren’t tough enough to handle an AP class, it will most likely come as a struggle once you enter into college.  
                In order to succeed in an AP or Honors course, effort must be priority.  Life is to be focused entirely on succeeding.  I believe that taking an AP class could either prepare you for college or frighten you more.  College professors, just like AP high school professors, push their students very hard; the only difference between the two is that high school professors generally do whatever it takes to prevent the student from failing the course. College professors usually don’t tell you when you are failing and leave the responsibility up to you. Thankfully, in taking an AP class, you are gaining that competitive side to force you to fight for the highest grade but what if you take an AP course that seems easy to you? What if you have been practicing to be a doctor all your life and chemistry comes naturally to you and when you take Chem 20, you are already naturally good at that course? That would mean that the course isn’t actually helping you in the long run.  You may learn a thing or two here and there, but when you are not being pushed to the absolute max with your knowledge in an AP class how can it possibly prepare you for college?
                In taking all the highest level classes in high school and college, you are only improving your future.  The better you are at studying a subject, the higher chance at success you have.  In the medical field, people generally continue into becoming that rich and well known doctor. They make ten times the amount an average person would all because they worked hard and took all high classes in high school. “Today, residency is not the financial hardship it was when most practicing doctors in this country were young. The magazine Hospital Physician says that the average doctor in training earns $12,500 to $15,000” (The Chem 20 Factor, Ellen Goodman, paragraph 7).  All of their hard work has paid off in the end, leaving them in a high-stress and happy lifestyle.  Those “smarter than average” kids should only be required to take a certain high level course if it helps their future career goal in life.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

comparing and contrasting the best

This blog will elaborate the differences between comparing and contrasting. In this blog I will compare the two figures Will Smith and Johnny Depp. These two actors have achieved greatness at such an early age, i felt it fit to elaborate between the two. Not only were the two similar in there acting but in music and awards. From the beginning, the two were destined for greatness. Neither had any idea what to do as they got older. Both men had talent dropped right onto their shoulders. The similarities between these men were not well known facts whereas the differences were extremely prominent. Each had began life in two totally different ways only to enter nearly the same future, fame and fortune.

Will Smith was born September 25, 1968 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He began his career at age 16 through a party. That party was the beginning of his rap career. Smith's amazing success in rap gave him the incentive to do more. Johnny Depp was born June 9, 1963 in Owensboro Kentucky. When Depp turned twenty he met and married make-up artist, Lori Allison. Lori Allison's ex Nicholas Cage was introduced to Depp and took an interest in him. The two began working hard and made Depp immediately famous.

Both Depp and Smith began their fame as musicians. Depp started in a small band called the Kids and made a small fan-group. He gained fame throughout his whole home town. Depp was noticed through most of his music which led to his first marriage. Smith was an average guy with unnoticed musical talents until he met a very important man at a party. The DJ of the party soon signed a record deal with Smith and he became very famous for his amazing rap talents. Smith focused on positive lyrics and aimed for a younger audience where Depp had no care for who listened to his music. Though Smith continued to rap even after fame, Depp saw his new found fame as a chance to break away from music. The Kids broke up within that year.

Neither of the two had time for college. Both of them felt that with their success college wasn't an option. With college off the plate, Smith began to take interest in acting. Two years after beginning his rap fame, NBC hired him to act on a sitcom. The two began their career on T.V. sitcoms. Depp in 21 Jump Street and Smith in Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. Both Depp and Smith enjoyed the idea of daring roles in movies of all sorts. Neither of them had a preferred genre of movies. As the two got older, harder roles became the only way to gain more fans. Depp led off into a fifties musical called Cry Baby, a great change in his acting appearence. From that movie hit, Depp went on to take roles like Edward Scissorhand gaining him fifty million and a very mature audience. Smith's fame slowly improved after taking the role in Where The Day Takes You. Both actors began forming a very mature audience. Smith's life changing role in Bad Boys established the leading role talent. Both had proven major talent before the age of thirty.

Along with gaining major roles and a large salary, the two were also nominated for at least ten awards. Depp earned an Academy Award from staring in the film Pirates of the Caribbean. Smith was also nominated for best leading actor in Seven Pounds and Hancock. Not only where the two men noticed in front of the camera but behind it as well. Smith was a co-producer in Hancock where Johnny was the producer in The Rum Diary; The two earned several awards for their productions.

With all their talent, came drama and troubles in their private lives. The paparazzi were following the two non-stop waiting for someone to mess up. Johnny was the first to crack. His first marriage broke apart to shambles causing heat and anger between the two. After many short relationships the actor became deeply depressed and had many outbursts. Though through it all, the actor produced and starred in some of his best films. Smith was quite the opposite; he managed to keep his personal life hidden. Smith rarely showed up in any sort of magazine except for positive things. It wasn't until recently, that Smith has begun showing up under negative circumstances. The two actors were both married more than once and dealt with many relationships. The two were both extremely smooth when it came to women as well as skilled at getting out of trouble easily. Both actors are known for being great fathers.Though Depp's children are too young to act, Smith's aren't. Smith's son is known for starring in a film along side his father. Smith and his son Jade both played major roles in The Pursuit of Happiness. Smith's daughter, Willow, is also famous. Willow is a well known singer at just the age of ten. Smith's talents were passed down to each of his children. Depp also believes that his children will gain great talent from both him and his wife, Vanessa Paradis. The children of both Depp and Smith were the talk of the paparazzi making them the instantly famous. It is rumored that Depp's children have future roles preset.

Depp and Smith are some of the most popular actors of our generation, producing in over thirty different movies each. Though the two actors have wildly different personalities, the two have many similarities as well. Both are known for their acting but many don't know of their unique talents. Depp and Smith also excel in athletic talents as well as musical talents. Both men lived a normal life with no interest in acting to begin with. Neither men went to college yet both were extremely intelligent. Success was a natural gift to each of them. This is some of the many comparisons and contrasts of the two world famous actors.