Thursday, January 31, 2013

Malcolm X, Franklin and Rose...My Favorite

These three essays were very different from one another. I didn't enjoy Benjamin Franklin's essay mainly because the it was very hard to understand. I enjoyed both Malcolm X's and Rose's essays, but I think my favorite was Rose's. I liked that it wasn't just a timeline of how he learned to do something, instead, it examined how Voc. Ed. effected him and the other students that were in it. Rose talked about how in order to overcome the negative labels that are put on the students in Voc. Ed., some of them just embrace the labels. They accept the fact that nobody expects them to do anything worth while and they should just be happy doing the jobs that designated for the less-educated people in society. He also mentions that some students have other ways of coping with the labels like, "If you're a kid like Ted Richard, you turn your back on all this and let your mind roam where it may." Rose's essay was a great reminder of some of the negative effects that some programs have that are supposed to help young people, not hinder them.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Paper number 1: Rough draft

If you were to ask a little boy what are the top five things he wants to be when he grows up, chances are pretty good that “I wanna be a Fireman!” would be one of the things he said. Growing up I actually wasn’t one those kids with the toy fire trucks and Dalmatian dogs, it wasn’t until high school that I really decided I wanted to pursue a career in the fire service. Right out of high school I applied at North Kitsap Fire and Rescue in Kingston for their Resident Firefighter Program. There are three main steps to the Resident program.
The first step after getting accepted into the program is an 8-10 week fire academy. The academy was half classroom learning and half drill ground and practical learning. On the first day of the academy I really didn’t know what to expect. There were 12 of us, all nervous as hell but excited for an opportunity to become a firefighter. The first thing our training Captain said to us was “The fire service is paramilitary, that means you will march, you will not speak unless you are spoken to and the only thing you should be saying is yes sir or no sir!” After that pep talk, we were issued our bunker gear and spent most of the next three days putting it on, taking it off, putting it on, taking it off… until we could literally do it in our sleep. After the first week we began learning basic firefighting skills and practiced them over and over again on the drill ground until we were absolutely exhausted. I never would have guessed how tiring basic activities like just walking around can get when you have 50lbs of gear on that traps all your body heat inside. It sucks. Once we had learned enough of the individual skills, we began putting it all together in “pretend” fire situations, usually with flares and smoke machines to simulate fire and smoke. When we started these drills we realized we were still a long ways from being competent firefighters. We were a mess at the beginning, but slowly, after weeks of messing up and getting yelled at, we started to understand the importance of teamwork in situations like this. I still remember one day, it was late in the afternoon and we had just finished cleaning up all the hose and tools that we had used that day. Our instructor had us huddle around him for the usual review of the days drills. He said to us that we looked like real firefighters out there and he wouldn't think twice about walking into a fire with every one of us. That was a proud moment for all of us for sure. After that day when everything "clicked" in our minds, I think everyone felt pretty confident about the rest of the academy. We had just a couple more weeks before our live fire training in North Bend and the drills were becoming much more fun now that we were working together as a team and applying the skills we had learned correctly. The day of our live fire training we met at our station at 5AM to get everything ready and catch an early boat to Seattle. I will probably never forget that day, it is very hard to describe the first time you're inside a burning building that is hundreds of degrees inside and you can see the instructor's flashlight literally dripping from his helmet because of the heat. It was amazing, but humbling at the same time. We learned quick that there's times when it is just too hot, even in all our gear, and you just have to back out to safety. We went over basic operations like the effect of different types of fire attacks and ventilation for about 5 hours but the time went by too fast, and before long it was time to pack up and head home. The completion of live fire training marked the end of the fire academy. Only 8 of us graduated but it was a proud day for us and our families. We received a national Firefighter 1 certification as well as a national Hazardous Materials Operations certification. 

After the fire academy, the next step is EMT training. Not nearly as cool as fire fighting but a very important part of the job because about 75 percent of the 911 calls NKFR responds to are medical calls. The EMT class was about a month longer than the fire academy and there was much more bookwork and it took a lot of studying and homework to pass. The main instructor, a Paramedic from Central Kitsap, was a bit hard to deal with sometimes, one of those guys who thinks he is way funnier than he really is. He had one of the most monotone voices too, his lectures seemed like they took forever. On Saturdays, we had class all day and it was usually a day of practical learning. We got hands on time, actually learning the skills and techniques. The Saturday classes were actually kind of fun. When we were learning about removing a patient from a vehicle we went out and used the students cars to get a feel for what it would really be like in the field. My EMT class was not easy and took a lot of dedication to get the work done and learn everything we were required to learn, but it all paid off in the end. I am now a nationally and state certified EMT and get to take care of people everyday that I'm on shift.

With the completion of the fire academy and EMT class, the third and final step of the program is on the job training. I learn more and more about the job everyday, there are a lot of things that they just cannot teach you in the classroom or even on the drill ground. Every patient I see is different than the one before and I can't treat them the same or care for them the same way, it all takes experience which is the main benefit of this program that I am so lucky to be apart of. Along with experience, I am provided with additional training opportunities, I am now a Wildland Firefighter type 2 and a member of the North Kitsap Wildland Team. When there is a wild fire in eastern Washington, we go for weeks at a time sometimes to help with the confinement of the fire. In my time with North Kitsap I have also been trained and certified to drive the engines and operate the fire pumps on the engines. The on the job learning is never ending, it doesn't matter how long I remain in the fire service or what department I work for. There is always more to learn and more ways to improve myself to become a better firefighter.

In my year and a half with North Kitsap Fire and Rescue I have learned so much more than I could have ever expected. I have learned the skills of the job but also so much more than that. It has taught me that if I set my mind to something I can accomplish it, no matter how hard it is or how many people say I'm too young and immature. I've learned teamwork, I have played sports before and I can honestly say the fire service has taught me more about working together than anything else has. There's nothing out there that will teach you how to work with others quite like the fire service will. You work, live, eat, hang out with, and trust, with your life, the guys that you are on shift with, it truly is a brotherhood unlike any other that I have experienced. I have learned more from the fire service than I can write about in this paper. It isn't like anything I can explain but I love what I do and I cannot wait to see what the future holds for me.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Malcolm X, Franklin and Rose's essays

All three of these essays were very different. Benjamin Franklin's essay was obviously written in a different era and had a much more formal feel to it than the other two did. I think that Malcolm X's was much more of a timeline type of essay than the other two. At the beginning of his essay he had practically no education and he explained each event that led to him becoming well educated. He also seemed very passionate in his essay about helping fellow African Americans, which seemed to be his main motivation for educating himself in prison. Rose's essay talked more about his experience in Voc. Ed. rather than a step by step of how he became educated like Malcolm X's essay was. He made observations like "What Ken and so many others do is protect themselves from such suffocating madness by taking on with a vengeance the identity implied in the vocational track" more than he explained the steps he took to become educated. Franklin's essay was just confusing and hard to follow.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Cubing for my paper

Describe it: Fire Fighter 1 Academy
My fire academy started September 1, 2011, but weeks before that day I was testing and having interviews. The process started with a written test, it was just your basic, common knowledge test. The people who failed the written test were excused from the testing process, and the ones who passed moved on to the physical test, consisting of walking on a stair machine with a weight vest, lifting rolls of hose, dragging a charged hose line one hundred feet, and a few other tasks as well. It was basically just to make sure all the candidates were in "decent" shape. If you finished the physical test under a certain time limit (which is not known to you), you move on to the interview. The interview consists of you, sitting by yourself, looking at a row of chiefs, captains and lieutenants who interview you to decide if they should accept you into the program. Now, if you make it through these three steps then you get a phone call saying you got accepted and to show up for the first day of the academy, don't be late!
Analyze it:
As I already described, the academy started out with the testing process. After that, we were issued our bunker gear and department t-shirt. Yes, just a t-shirt, because we were only in the academy so we didn't get uniforms, yet. Once we had our gear and shirt it was time to start, most of the academy consisted of mornings in the classroom and afternoons on the drill ground busting our asses with instructors yelling at us. After 8 weeks, we had our live fire training in North Bend, a day I will probably never forget. Following our live fire training was another great day, graduation. We were given our uniforms, new bunker gear and a three inch thick binder that said "Probationary Firefighter Training Manual"
Apply it:
Since I have been working at North Kitsap Fire and Rescue I have applied the skills that I learned many times. I'm on shift over 48 hours a week and I get to use my skills as a Firefighter and EMT to help the people in my community whether their house is burning down or they need help medically. I can also apply the things I've learned beyond just firefighting, like leadership, professionalism, teamwork, and many other traits that it has taught me.
Associate it:
The things I've learned in the past year and a half at NKFR will help me for the rest of my life. I've learned determination, compromise, teamwork, and how to cook!

Mike Rose's "I Just Wanna Be Average" Questions

1. Even though Rose did not learn a lot "educationally" in Voc. Ed., he learned a lot about the people around him and society in General. His teachers didn't seem like they really cared about the students' education, maybe because they didn't care about the Voc. Ed. kids or maybe they just didn't care about students at all. Some of the teachers would just let the class do whatever they wanted and some would resort to verbal and physical abuse to keep the students in line. I have never had any experience with teachers that were that bad but in high school there were always the teachers who would get overwhelmed with a rowdy class and let it get a little out of hand.
2. Voc. Ed. kept Rose and his fellow students from progressing and living up to their potentials because it just gave them a lower level education instead of just teaching them to work through their disadvantages. Because of this, the students got used to just scraping the bottom of the barrel and doing just enough to get through, not only in school but in other parts of there lives as well.
3. High school was disorienting for students like Ken Harvey because you will always come across people who have different beliefs than you. You grow up being taught to believe one thing than when you get to high school you have to deal with people who don't belief the same things. Also people with totally different backgrounds, if you're used to always being with one group of people then you get thrown into somewhere were there is all different backgrounds, ethnicities and religions it can be very disorienting. The way he copes with it is he accepts the labels that have been put on him because he is in Voc. Ed.
4. The main thing that was disorienting for me about college was just getting back into the whole school atmosphere. I only took one year off school after I graduated but it was a little weird starting school again and having to do homework and go to class.
5. I can picture people I went to school with who are just like the people Mike Rose describes. Students who would rather say "screw this" than do the school work or even go to class. I was one of them for awhile, I really didn't enjoy high school very much, but I realized that school is important and you can't go very far in life without it.

Malcolm X Vs. Benjamin Franklin

These two essays were very different in the way they were written. It was very hard for me to understand Franklin's essay. I found myself going back and re-reading the sentences I had just read multiple times just to figure out what he was trying to say. It is obvious that that the two men were from different eras and the two eras had very different writing styles.
The two essays are similar in some ways though, they both tell the story of how the writer became educated and learned to write. Malcolm X and Franklin both seem very passionate about education and writing in their essays. In both essays, the authors state that in basically any free time they had they were reading books or writing. They did not stop at simply learning to read and write, they constantly wanted to be better and be the best that they could be.

Pre-writing I've Used in The Past

In the past, I'm pretty sure the only form of pre-writing that I have used is writing drafts. To be honest, before I read pg. 1-9 of our book I had no idea there were so many forms of pre-writing! I think now that I know of the different types of pre-writing it will be much easier to write my education narrative than it would have be if I were to only use drafts a pre-writing technique. I've never been a very good writer so this class is challenging me quite a bit with all of the blog entries we have, but I'm hoping that using the techniques in the book and talking in the groups will help me become a better writer and do well in the class and classes in the future.

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Cubing

Cell Phones: What are they similar to and how so?
Cell Phones today are more comparable to a computer than to an actual telephone. We can surf the web, take online classes, and post a status on Facebook… all from our cell phones. When the cell phone first came out I am sure the people who thought of the idea first had no idea it would progress and grow to what it is now. There is really nothing that compares to a cell phone these days, nothing that can do almost everything a computer can do but fits in your pocket.

Ducks: What defines it? What can be explained about it? Colors, shapes, sizes, etc..
A duck is a type of bird that lives by water, has a very loud and distinguishable “Quack” and is quite tasty when cooked correctly. They are usually brown with white and grey and the mallards have a very colorful head. Ducks are hunted for sport but there seems to always still be a lot of them flying around in flocks.
Cubing could help with writing my paper because it helps bring ideas forward that I might not have thought of before. It is a good technique for being creative and thinking of different angles or perspectives to write about in my paper.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Response to Malcolm X's "Learning to Read"

Malcolm X's "Learning to Read" relates to our first unit because he is writing about an important educational experience in his life which is what we are to do in our first paper. He follows a clear timeline throughout the entire excerpt, from the time he first got his hands on a dictionary to the end when he had mastered reading and was checking out more books from the prison library than they would normally allow an inmate to have. He also uses illustrations to keep the reader engaged and to help the reader picture what he is talking about, one example is when he wrote, "In my slow, painstaking, ragged handwriting..." Using an illustration like that is much more engaging and intriguing than if he had simply said, "In my messy handwriting." Our assignment sheet for the first paper states that our paper can be "less formal" and use "I" and personal opinions based on experiences. I think "Learning to Read" is written in the same "less formal" way and uses "I" and personal opinions, similar to what our papers should employ.
I feel like Malcolm X's excerpt "Learning to Read" will be much more helpful when I begin to write my paper than the previous two Education Narratives will be.

What to do to get an A on Paper #1

To get an A on our first paper we must write about something significantly educational to us. Our Education Narrative will be a formal paper so we need to write it following the rules of Standard Written English, but it will be less formal so we will not need a thesis statement and we can use "I". It should be detailed and provide a timeline that explains what exactly we learned. It should contain Illustrations that provide detailed examples of what we learned. It should be clear to the reader what we are trying to convey. The paper should analyze our learning experience and explain it in depth. It needs to be at least 1200 words long and not lazily written. Nothing on the paper can be copied unless it is from something we wrote in a blog. The writer should identify their audience and write accordingly. The paper should be in correct MLA format. And that's how to get an A! I hope.

Our First Homework Assignment

After reading the two papers I don't feel like they are going to help me to decide on a topic for my paper, but I think they did give examples of how our education narrative should look and "feel" when we are finished. I guess as far as "A model for our first paper" these narratives could be useful to me. In "How I Learned to Program Computers" Feross used a lot of examples and illustrations to show his progress as he learned more and more about programming. I can do the same thing in my narrative to illustrate how I progressed as I learned whatever it is I decide to write about.
I didn't find "How I Learned to Live Google Free" very helpful, but that might just be because I had pretty much already figured out what I wanted to write my paper on before I read it. I'm most likely going to write about my time so far as a Firefighter, mainly focusing on the Fire Academy. I want to focus on the academy because it was one of the hardest, but most rewarding things I have ever done.

This blogging thing is going to take some getting used to...