37 Matching Annotations
  1. Oct 2018
    1. here is simply too much apathy and too much ignorance.

      I feel like this is pretty accurate regarding today's problem with younger generations needing to be encouraged to vote. A lot of people old enough now to contribute to voting no longer have a want to do so, or may be uneducated in terms of you is running for candidate positions.

    1. Games, of course, reflect the culture we live in—a culture wecan change.

      I agree that this is changing, and more realistic views on the female persona in video games are coming to light. Time will tell if the change actually comes about.

    2. I predict that shooting will be less important and talkingmore important in many games, even shooter games.

      And I think your prediction is true today. Video games now a days (depending on the game) have balanced this out more.

    3. we can learn a lot from thoseyoung people who play games, if only we take them and their games seri-ously.

      Good idea! If only the generation gap would pause for a moment and allow both generations to learn from one another.

    4. they think best when they reason on the basis of patterns

      This is interesting to consider. I always knew humans were pattern/routine seekers but I didn't know we rely on them in even logistic or abstract principles. How does this effect our thinking?

    5. thinking as tied to a body that has experiences inthe world

      This is a good concept to touch on in this book. I think it is extremely important to situate people's learning/study in the world itself. In an ever-changing and advancing society, a lot of social/cultural/economical factors go into each person's cognition abilities.

    6. Marx called the “creativity ofcapitalism,”

      Oooo! Interesting connection between thought and economics! Capitalism driving learning is a good theme to explore. Does it help or hinder learning when compared to economic systems such as Socialism?

    7. baby-boomer ways oflearning and thinking

      I think this is an important point that Gee makes here. It is interesting to see the difference in "ways/types" of thinking over generational gaps. He's right though, us Millennials and after understand video games because we were kinda born into them. Older generations may struggle to connect because they have a larger learning curve to tackle.

    8. even if he choosesto privilege one way of reading—one identity—over another.

      This is an interesting concept, especially since sometimes we do it without knowing. Like if I think about a concept on my own, I will have different ideas than if I were to talk within a group and take a different perspective. Thus, do we eventually learn more and get more out of ideas or texts when we approach them in this way?

    9. ac-tive inquiry and deep conceptual understanding

      Definitely this is something schools are missing out on/lacking these days. I agree that the standardized tests mentality is one schools seem to be stuck on. How could we implement new processes in education that help foster more "active inquiry" and critical thinking on a deeper level?

    10. There are no “private minds” either.

      This connects greatly to the theory that whenever we learn new information we tend to inject it into anything we create. For example, sometimes authors writing a novel will subconsciously put in ideas or writing styles that they have seen in the past. I do this sometimes when I create films without even realizing. Thus what i think to be my "private thoughts" aren't really such.

    11. Different people can read the world differently just as they can readdifferent types of texts differently.

      Dang this is accurate. We live in such a society today thats driven by how people "read" the world around them, especially in regards to things like the #MeToo Movement and police incidents.

  2. Sep 2018
    1. This field of music just broadened my ideas to come

      Musical literacy is a convoluted idea. I think that the debate about it being a literacy lies in the emotional connection one feels in relation to music. It does take a type of literacy to be able to read musical notes and turn them into a beat, but is there a literacy in regards to how humans emotionally connect with music like Kendrick's?

    2. nationwide police-brutality protests and the subject of countless online think pieces and hot takes.

      This is definitely a form of literacy! In regards to the world around us, its important to be literate in terms of news and world events. Without this type of literacy and thus comprehension, people like Kendrick couldn't analyze world events and then provide social commentary on them through his music.