E-Portfolio

On to the next (and final) assignment: the e-portfolio!  I’ve decided that my main goal for my portfolio is to showcase a wide range of my abilities.  I know that I definitely want to include my paradigm shift paper, TIB podcast, and TED talk in my portfolio – those were my favorite things from this year.  I also want to include one of the papers I wrote for my other English class, since those papers involved a very different type of writing: choosing one of our readings and creating a thesis, using textual evidence and analysis to support it.

I had also planned on including my rhetorical analysis essay in my portfolio because I remembered loving it, but when I read back through it, I wasn’t as crazy about it as I had been.  Rereading that first essay really allowed me to see how far I’ve come with my writing this year – I now understand why one of my blog comments was that I’ve developed my voice and a presence in my writing.  I might include that essay anyway, however, because it was the first (and only) rhetorical analysis essay I’ve written, and it was different from all of my other essays – but I also want to include a blog since that’s a different type of writing, and maybe my persuasive essay…

I still have some decisions to make, and I have to write my cover letter, but I’m working on it!

Slowly But Surely

I’ve moved out of the brainstorming stages of my advocacy project and into the planning stages!  I actually have a display board now, along with all of the supplies I’ll need (markers, construction paper, glue, glitter glue, a Barbie)… I also made a rough outline of what I’m going to include on my display board and how I’m going to set it up:

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I think putting “UNREALISTIC” under the parts about the body image the media and Barbie promote and across the picture of the airbrushed model will really drive my idea home, especially when I put “REAL” under the section about eating disorders, and I think that having what I’m advocating for in the middle will be the most effective.

I also want to go with the idea of making my own “Operation Beautiful” Post-Its as another part of my advocacy project, but instead of just having them around my display board, I want to put them up all over the HUB – just little encouraging and inspirational quotes and messages dealing with body image and the idea that women of all shapes and sizes are beautiful.  What do you guys think?!

Advocacy Update

I haven’t made much progress with my advocacy project since my last post – I’m still just in the brainstorming stage.  I know that I definitely want to use a display board as my medium, since that’s something I could leave at the Advocacy Fair all day and there are a lot of visuals that I could use: pictures of celebrities and models before and after being airbrushed, a Barbie doll (to accompany statistics about the unrealistic body image Barbie projects), a picture of Marilyn Monroe compared to the models that define today’s standard of beauty, pictures of girls struggling with eating disorders…  Aside from that, there are two other things I’ve thought about including in my project, although I’m not sure how they would work out.

I’m not sure if you’ve seen the “Operation Beautiful” Post-Its anywhere else on campus, but I’ve seen them around my dorm – Post-Its in the bathroom encouraging us to “embrace our morning face” because we look beautiful and things of the like.  I thought about making my own to stick around the edges of my display board, so that the display board itself will encourage women not to feed in to these standards of beauty while the Post-Its promote the idea that all women are beautiful.  I’ve also thought about somehow using mirrors in my project – I thought it would be cool to have a fun-house mirror and a regular mirror along with my display board, to illustrate how these standards of beauty give us a distorted view of ourselves and encourage women to try to see themselves more clearly.

The thing I really have to work on now is going through my paper and pulling out what I think are the most important points to use if I’m trying to advocate for college women to stop feeding into these unrealistic standards of beauty.  Once I do that, I’ll be able to see what visuals would work best and how to best organize my display board.  Now that we’re finished with the persuasive essays, I’m hoping I’ll have more time to focus on my advocacy project and figure everything out!

Advocacy Project

While I’m still just in the brainstorming stages of my advocacy project, I do know what I want to advocate for.  I know girls my age who have and are still struggling with eating disorders; I even feel the pressure to look a certain way myself.  I want to emphasize the idea that women of all shapes and sizes are beautiful – not just women who meet the ultra-thin body image portrayed by the media, and not just women who have curves.  I want to encourage women to be comfortable with their bodies and to stop feeding into these standards of beauty.  I just have to find the best way to convey this message, and what kinds of things I should include.

I know I want to focus specifically on college women, and I was thinking of using a display board as my medium (like the ones we had to use in middle school for science fair projects).  I could have a picture on it of one of the typical airbrushed models we see in magazines with the headline: “SHE doesn’t even really look like that – so why do you feel like you have to?”  I could also use other pictures of celebrities before and after being airbrushed, along with one or two statistics about the prevalence of eating disorders among college women, encouraging everyone viewing my project not to become another statistic.  I know that I also want to address the pressure that women feel to look a certain way from their peers, not just from the media, I just have to figure out how to go about this.

If anyone has any suggestions, I’d love to hear them!

Persuasive Essay Draft

Looks don’t matter; beauty is only skin-deep.  We hear these sayings every day, and yet we live in a society that seems to contradict this very idea.  If looks don’t matter, why does the media use airbrushing to hide any flaws a person has?  If looks don’t matter, why are so many young women harming themselves because they’re unhappy with the way they look?  It’s because our society promotes a certain body image as being beautiful, and it’s a far cry from the average woman’s size 12.  The unrealistic standard of beauty that women are bombarded with everyday gives them a goal that is impossible to reach, and the effects are devastating.  These impossible standards need to be stopped, and society instead needs to promote a healthy body image along with the idea that women of all shapes and sizes are beautiful—not just women who are a size 2.

The media’s use of airbrushing is one of the major causes of these impossible standards of beauty.  Leah Hardy, a former Cosmopolitan editor, admitted that this is true—many of the stick-thin models in Cosmo were actually struggling with eating disorders, but were airbrushed to look less unwell (Crisell).  In an interview with the Daily Mail, Hardy stated, [the models had 22-inch waists, but they also had breasts and great skin.  They had teeny tiny ankles and thin thighs, but they still had luscious hair and full cheeks.  Thanks to retouching, our readers never saw the horrible, hungry downside of skinny.  The models’ skeletal bodies, dull, thinning hair, spots and dark circles under their eyes were magicked away by technology…  A vision of perfection that simply didn’t exist. (qtd. by Crisell)           By airbrushing these models, the media gives young girls the idea that this body image is attainable—and by trying to look like these models, these girls become just as unhealthy.

Cosmopolitan also asked their readers if they were confident with their bodies.  Of the 1000 women surveyed, over 60% revealed that they weren’t (Cosens).  Psychologists and doctors are beginning to push for a ban on airbrushed images, stating that these images are causing eating disorders and depression in girls as young as five; a survey by Girlguiding UK found that over half of girls ages eleven to sixteen are dieting in order to be thinner (Couzens).  And these airbrushed images don’t only have a negative effect on the women who see them—can you imagine being one of the women in these advertisements?  Myleene Klass spoke out about what it’s like, stating that in some photographs she’s seen, she looks absolutely nothing like herself.  “It’s always weird to see what an art director creates as a flawless version of yourself,” she admits (Crisell).

Studies have also been done concerning the influence of magazines on women, and the results make things perfectly clear: the media needs to stop promoting unrealistic body images.  Turner, Hamilton, Jacobs, Angood, and Dwyer conducted a study in 1997 in which thirty-nine college-age women were randomly assigned to two different tasks: one group of women viewed a fashion magazine prior to taking a body image survey, while the other group viewed a news magazine.  The women who were assigned the group that viewed the fashion magazine stated that they wanted to lose more weight and viewed themselves more negatively than the women who read the news magazine.  A study performed by Marian Morry and Sandra Staska in 2001 found that “media exposure to the ‘ideal’ form is being internalized” (Chojnacki).  However, this ideal form, quite simply, doesn’t exist—“print and electronic media images blur the boundaries between a fictionalized ideal and reality.  Therefore, these ‘ideal’ images that are represented in the mass media are not only unreal, but also very misleading” (Thompson and Heinberg, qtd. in “Dissatisfaction”).

Some companies have already begun to take the necessary steps to put an end to these impossible standards.  In 2004, Dove started their Campaign for Real Beauty, in which they feature women of all shapes and sizes in their advertisements and don’t retouch the images (Cosens).  Dove also includes self-esteem toolkits and resources on their website as part of their mission: “to help develop girls’ self-esteem from a young age, so they have the confidence to feel happy in themselves and reach their full potential” (“Our Mission”).  H&M has also recently joined in the effort to promote a healthier (and more realistic) body image by using bigger mannequins.  While most mannequins are sizes 4 to 6, these mannequins are a size 12—the size of the average American woman (“Photo of plus size mannequins”).  This seems like another step in the right direction; however, H&M has met worldwide debate as many feel that these mannequins encourage obesity and unhealthy lifestyles.  One man commented on the article about the new mannequins saying, “Cover those fat women up. This is sick.”  Another stated that this is just an attempt to lower men’s expectations of an ideal mate and is encouraging “mediocrity, laziness, and self-indulgence.”  These comments are exactly what’s wrong with today’s society, and are why things need to change.

While many young girls are aware that the photographs they see of celebrities have been retouched, they don’t realize the women they see in movies, music videos, and TV shows have also been airbrushed (Crisell).  Not only that, but as former actress and singer Demi Lovato pointed out, the stars of many TV shows have also been getting considerably thinner: “Is it just me, or are the actresses getting THINNER and THINNER… I miss the days of That’s So Raven and Lizzie McGuire,” Lovato tweeted, referencing actresses Raven Symone and Hilary Duff (Piazza).  Lovato isn’t the only one to hold this view, either.  Psychotherapist Dr. Jenn Berman stated that “networks and shows that cater to children need to be more mindful in both casting and writing to ensure that children of all shapes and sizes are represented”; similarly, Dr. Jeffrey Gardere stated that “constantly portraying these so-called perfect bodies in the media… can promote unhealthy eating, diet, and food disorder practices that can cause injury and sometimes death, not to mention the psychological damage that can severely impact self image and self-esteem” (Piazza).

Things haven’t always been this way; in the 1950s, Marilyn Monroe epitomized the standard of beauty at size 14.  However, the ideal body size for women keeps going down, and with it, women’s self-esteem: the average model today is 5’11” and weighs in at 117 pounds, whereas the average woman is 5’4” and weighs 140 (“Dissatisfaction”).  Actresses are getting thinner; models are getting thinner; and as if these models and actresses aren’t thin enough already, the media proceeds to airbrush them.  What was wrong with Marilyn Monroe’s size 14?  Absolutely nothing, and since this was the image that the media promoted, this look was accepted.  Why can’t we go back to promoting curves instead of skin and bones—or better yet, why can’t we promote the idea that women of all shapes and sizes are equally beautiful?  We can, and the place to start is with the media.

The sad thing is that these unrealistic body images don’t just exist in the media; they surround us, although they’ve become so entrenched in our society that we don’t even notice.  Take the Barbie doll—many young girls grow up playing with Barbies, but have you ever stopped to think about the body image that Barbie promotes?  If Barbie was real, “her body fat percentage would be so low that she would not be able to menstruate.  Her measurements would be 38-18-34.”  Comparatively, the average woman’s measurements are approximately 41-34-43—only about one in 100,000 women even come close to matching Barbie’s body image.  These unrealistic body images are introduced at such a young age that it’s no surprise young girls struggle with their weight; about 90% of all cases of eating disorders are diagnosed before the age of 20, and the majority of those diagnosed are young women (“Barbie”).

College women also face these ideas of the ideal body image every day, and from their own peers.  Many fraternities judge women solely on appearance when it comes to deciding whom to let into parties, as they only want “attractive” women; we also see examples of this in movies such as Knocked Up, where there’s a long line of women waiting to get into a club… but if you look a certain way, you can skip the line.  In this way, women feel a lot more pressure to look a certain way than men, as much of this pressure comes from the men—and this peer pressure actually “influence[s] women to compare themselves to the models in fashion magazines and on television,” leading to further body dissatisfaction.  Faced by all this pressure to look a certain way, is it any wonder that 88% of women want to lose weight (Sheldon)?

We see these unrealistic body images in the media; we grow up surrounded by them without even noticing it, because they’ve “seeped into American culture” (Kantor).  As a result, this idea of the ideal body image has become internalized, along with negativity toward fat.  Dr. Michael Levine, co-author of The Prevention of Eating Problems and Eating Disorders: Theory, Research, and Practice, proved this point by proposing a hypothetical scenario: suppose someone comes up to you and tells you that you’re looking really good because you’ve put on some fat.  While this statement is intended to be a compliment—telling someone that they’re looking really good—because the word “fat” is included, it’s perceived negatively (Kantor).  But if so much negativity toward fat exists, and so many young women are struggling with eating disorders, why are obesity rates skyrocketing?

Our nation’s obesity epidemic is actually related to these unrealistic body images—the same unrealistic body images that are causing eating disorders.  “American society is not suffering from two distinct health problems,” Kantor of the Harvard Political Review writes, “It is experiencing two symptoms of one serious disorder.” Dr. Allison Field, Associate Professor at Harvard Medical School, noted that, “as obesity has become more and prevalent, the ideal standard of beauty has not changed, resulting in a growing gap between the average person and his or her ideal body image,” a contrast which fuels the obesity-eating disorder paradox.  As our society emphasizes this negativity toward fat and obesity, while holding up these stick-thin, airbrushed models as the ideal body image, it’s actually causing depression, dieting behaviors, excessive weight concerns, and loss of control eating—many of the things that lead to both obesity and eating disorders, according to Dr. Marian Tanofsky-Kraff of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.  Tanofsky-Kraff also makes sure to point out that “dieting frequently backfires and can lead to more weight gain,” although that’s what many young women feel they have to do in order to meet these unrealistic standards (Kantor).

These unrealistic body images are a huge problem in today’s society, as their effects are detrimental—but there is a solution.  The media can stop airbrushing; more companies can follow in Dove’s footsteps and feature women of all shapes and sizes in their advertisements.  Quite simply, “the environment in which [we] live needs to change in order to foster healthy behaviors and prevent a situation that further stigmatizes overweight persons” (Sheldon).  Instead of focusing on weight and dieting in order to meet an unrealistic standard of beauty, we can promote healthy lifestyles for the sake of being healthy—thus putting a stop the obesity-eating disorder paradox and allowing women to feel good about themselves again.  And once the media starts promoting the idea that all women are beautiful, women can stop feeling pressured to look a certain way.  It’s time to prove that these sayings aren’t just sayings: looks really don’t matter, and beauty really is only skin-deep.

Impossible Standards

The first idea that popped into my head when we got this assignment was to write about gay marriage – however, I feel like that’s always my go-to topic, so I want to try to do something different this time.

Another idea that I had was writing about standards of beauty, and why these standards need to be eliminated.  I could focus on these standards in the media, and how every picture we see of a celebrity has been airbrushed;  I also remember watching a TV show a long time ago (I can’t remember what the show was) where a woman was made over to look more attractive before going into a store to see how she was treated, then went back into the store after getting made over to look more homely in order to see the difference – and there was a huge one.  It’s not just the media that needs to stop employing these ridiculous standards, we need to stop, too, and I could argue this by looking at the negative effects that these standards bring about.

The only concern that I have right now is that I won’t be able to write 6-8 pages on this topic, whereas I know that I’d definitely be able to if I wrote about gay marriage.  I’m hoping that as I actually begin to do research, I’ll find statistics and examples that’ll make 6-8 pages come easily – but if not, at least I have a back up!

Moderator Philosophy Draft

As a moderator, you have a key role in the deliberation.  Your job is to ask questions and guide the discussion, but you still should remain impartial.  I’ve realized that the latter is easier said than done.  It was hard for me to sit back and guide the deliberation without throwing in my two cents.  I think that, as a moderator, it’s okay to contribute to the conversation – although you need to keep in mind that your role is to guide the deliberation, not completely take it over – but you should remain unbiased and keep in mind that there’s a fine line between being too involved and being too removed, and this line is tricky to navigate.  This wasn’t an extremely controversial issue, but I still found myself jumping in and agreeing with the position everyone else in the group took, and I don’t think a moderator should take a stance on the issue.  Instead, to remain active in the discussion and promote deliberation, the moderator should listen to everyone else’s point of view and ask questions based on the points that others bring up.  A moderator should also give people time to respond to what one another have said before jumping in with another question.

The moderator is also responsible for keeping the deliberation from straying too far off-topic, something that I struggled with since I’m not a particularly assertive person.  There were times when there was a lull in conversation and someone brought up something completely unrelated to sustainability.  As a moderator, I would try to introduce another question to bring the focus back to sustainability during a lull in that conversation, but sometimes it seemed like we had just exhausted the topic.  I think that, in order to prevent situations like these, a moderator should be well versed in the topic at hand, which I, unfortunately, was not.

All in all, I learned a lot from my experience as a moderator, and I now have a better idea of what I should and shouldn’t do if I happen to moderate again.  A moderator shouldn’t be afraid to be assertive when they need to be in order to keep everyone on-task; a moderator should be knowledgeable about the topic at hand; and a moderator needs to understand that, while their job is to guide the discussion, it’s more important for them to be an active listener than an active speaker.  The moderator’s job is to interject when it’s necessary or beneficial to the discussion, but otherwise should let others take the discussion where it may.

Status Update

I just got done commenting on my first few forums!  Now I just have to wait for replies, and I’m keeping my fingers crossed that there will be some.  I commented on one post about ideas for going green in your own home, suggesting to any fellow college students on the forum to invest in a Brita filter; another about a form of alternative energy developed by a green-energy company in Singapore; and another posted by a girl whose town doesn’t recycle green glass.  I offered the girl some suggestions about what she could possibly do, and gave my opinion and posed a question for the author on the post about the alternative form of energy.  Someone already commented on that post after I did, stating that he thought it seemed like a scam – while this wasn’t a direct response to me, I commented on the post again, agreeing that that had been along the lines of what I was thinking.  It seemed too good to be true, and I had been wondering why I hadn’t heard of it before. Hopefully this leads to more back-and-forth!  In the meantime, I plan on leaving a few more comments on some other posts.  If I don’t receive responses on any of them by the end of the week (or see any interesting comments by or between other users after mine), I’ll probably end up switching to another site.  Seeing as I just got done commenting, however, I think I just need to have some patience!

Forum Watching

While I made my account for http://www.altenergyshift.com/, I haven’t actually participated in any of the discussions yet – I’ve just been casually observing.  While I haven’t seen anything like the “three comments until there’s a Hitler reference,” I have seen that people don’t seem to care for each other’s opinions – it’s not that they don’t respect them, I just don’t think they even bother to read them.  Or if they do, they don’t acknowledge it.  While there are a few exceptions to this, it seems to me that most people just use these forums to express their own opinions, not necessarily to “deliberate” – although one trend I’ve noticed is that if someone poses a question at the end of their spiel, they’re more likely to get responses.

I’m hoping that, having observed this, I actually get responses to my comments on the forums – when it comes time to for us to do our online deliberations, I plan on stating my opinion (and commenting on other people’s to hopefully engage them in a conversation) and then posing a question at the end for deliberation.  Even if I don’t get responses, I still feel like it’ll be interesting to participate and see what happens!