This blogging experience is nothing new to me. Having previous experience in keeping a blogger and I used to write a journal all through high school really helped in this activity. It's nostalgist to come back to blogging or keeping a personal journal in my life.
I usually don't blog except for strictly class purposes because I'm usually not the type to share my feelings outside family and close friends. It was really interesting to come across other blogs that had the similar ideas for topics as I did coming into this assignment. I also loved how something as researching a topic for class lead me into helping a fellow student with their personal life. That was a feeling of accomplishment for me.
I was able to put forth the effort I learned from researching and blogging into action, which at first I never thought it could be of much helped. It helped me learned to research effectively and see the progress it came with it since this assignment was first issued to me.
Sunday, February 26, 2012
Friday, February 24, 2012
Vegan Life: Blog 3
(1) Some of us struggled a bit with the infamous "list" on pg. 2 of our textbooks, so I'd like to revisit some of those concepts here...
Who will YOU be writing to? Can you decipher yet who will make up your audience, even in broad terms?
Investment: Your investment in your topic goes right along with timeliness; if you don't care about your topic, why should anyone else? Why are you invested in this topic? (In other words, why do you care about it?) Why do you think (many of our) high school teachers instructed you to write objectively without any sort of personal investment in your writing? Why do college teachers suddenly care that you care about what you're doing?
(2) Are you starting to see multiple viewpoints emerge in your research? Can you list them here?
Who will YOU be writing to? Can you decipher yet who will make up your audience, even in broad terms?
- Initially, my audience was intended for people who practice veganism. The more I researched, I narrowed down my intended audience for parents who are raising their children on vegan diets.
- My topic about children raised on vegan diets is timely in this generation because children's health has always been a major concern. Knowing the advantages and safety risk that can impact your child, if you have any, is very important. Every parent is worried about their child's well-being and what their child eats. Parents are gonna take measurements that they believe is correct for their children and knowing the facts is benefiting to that purpose.
Investment: Your investment in your topic goes right along with timeliness; if you don't care about your topic, why should anyone else? Why are you invested in this topic? (In other words, why do you care about it?) Why do you think (many of our) high school teachers instructed you to write objectively without any sort of personal investment in your writing? Why do college teachers suddenly care that you care about what you're doing?
- I care about this topic because my roommate is on a vegan diet and he's the reason why I choose to dive in veganism. I feel that I can provide the information he may not know because we've known each other for years and he's like a brother. I will hate for him to fall ill because he's not getting enough nutrients in his system.
(2) Are you starting to see multiple viewpoints emerge in your research? Can you list them here?
- The viewpoints I've come across are the views from medical doctors and individuals who placed their children on vegan diets.
- I learned that a poorly planned vegan diet leaves a person with too little protein, calcium, zince, vitamin B12, and vitamin D. Also be wary about iron intake and Omega-3 fatty acids tend to be low in the vegan diet. The process of which I'm going about researching is fun. I'm learning more nutritional value with eating properly.
I looked at Jordan Buchanan blog like you recommended and provided some information about the finding an alternate way of receiving vitamin B12 without the need of shots and eating meat.
Sunday, February 12, 2012
Living a Vegan Lifestyle: Blog 2
Tell us about the most interesting source you've found so far. What type of source is it? What's the title, and who is the author? Why is it interesting? Give us a brief summary of the source, in 5-6 sentences.
- The most interesting source I've found so far is how a woman claimed that veganism is destroying her two youngest daughters health. It's a electronic article titled "How our vegan diet made us ill" by Natasha Mann. The article is interesting because I've only know about the positive myth about eating a plant-based diet is only healthy for your body. This article is about a woman who claims that the vegan diet was making her daughters unhealthy. She noticed some signs that her younger children were developing slowly compared to her older children. The topic of dieting for children was heavily discussed when a reported 12 year old girl had a spine of that of an 80 year old. The article discusses it’s possible to raise a healthy child under a vegan diet with proper supervision. The point is that the vegan diet works for some people and it’s not for some.
- My topic has only changed slightly. At first I was looking into the reasoning why people choose to became vegan but after researching a little into my sources my question now became "is a vegan eating diet really healthy?". I came across several facts in my sources stating the high risks involving a plant-based diet in adults and children under 12.
What challenges are you facing in your research? How might you address these challenges? What research "tips" do you have for your peers?
- The most challenging part I'm facing in my research is finding where and how these health studies took place. I found one reported health incident that involved a 12 year old girl who under a vegan diet was diagnosed with rickets, her spine was that of an 80 year old woman, but I couldn't find anything about that report itself. I gonna go into more library databases and medical databases and email Ms. Gunter about her opinion about finding some sources on the medical degree of my topic.
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Research: Living a Vegan Lifestyle
My research question/inquiry questions is the vegan eating style more healthy than my regular eating life style? How is being a vegan different from being a vegetarian? I wonder if you get the same nutrient without eating anything with animal products? What can you eat in the vegan life style? What can't you eat? I wonder how many type of veganisms are there?
-Why did you settle on this question? What interests you about the topic? Explain.
I settled on this question because the night before this assignment was issued, my roommate Torrence told me he was going on a vegan diet. I'm interested in the vegan eating habits because 1) In one of my favorite comic series, Scott Pilgrim Vs The World, there's a character named Todd Ingram who lives a vegan lifestyle and is granted massive telekinetic powers 2) I'm interested in how much healthier would one person be without indulging animal products into their system. 3) I love eating animal products and can't imagine not eating them, so I curious as to the reasons to why some people choose not to.
-How is your question/topic timely? Why is it important to address this topic? Why should people care about it?
Health issues and looking 'fit' is stressed highly in today's media. It's important to address it because health issues regarding food and diet is high in the U.S. People should care because it's our health we deal with everyday. We can't take a break on our health. What we ingest has positive and negative effects on our health and knowing a better eating life style that can save your life one day is helpful.
-What do you expect to find in your research? What preliminary research have you done that makes you expect this?
I exepect to find alternate products for certain foods like veggie burgers, veggie meatballs, tofu, soy, etc. I'm hoping to find some research documents that examined one group of participants that took a vegan diet and compared their health to a group who's diet consist of anything. I want to find supporting arguments that at least shows a health improvement in individuals or a decline in fitness. According to one of my preliminary research, the American Dietetic Association stated that a vegan diet can reduce an individual's chances of developing heart diseases and cancer. This document will surely help me support my argument in improving one's fitness and health.
-Are you coming across scholars w/ different answers to your question, or different views of your topic? (If you're NOT and people seem to all agree, then your research question and topic probably aren't worth pursuing, right?) Explain what these answers/views are that you are finding. (Remember that our textbook warns us of the dangers of binary thinking on pg. 6.)What do you think about the different viewpoints? Where do you stand on the issue, and do you think your mind could change the further you get into this semester-long inquiry?
I haven't came across scholars with a different view than mine but I have came across an article where a woman claims that the vegan lifestyle made her and her daughters extremely ill. Her daughters had
stick-thin legs and rotten teeth before she realized that the vegan lifestyle was instead making her family worse. I can't imagine myself going into the vegan eating habit but I'm for pro vegan lifestyle and this article about vegan diets will definitely help me address both sides of my topic. I'm hoping that looking at this topic from both issues will help me choose if I will partake in a vegan diet for my health down the road someday.
-Any questions or concerns you'd like to address?I personally want to know one of the diet plans of reducing obesity in more detail and does it really lead a healthier lifestyle than my current eating habits?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)