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blog #4 09/18

Personally, I do not think email is becoming or will become a legacy medium. The form of email between professor and student holds a standard of professionalism that texting, Facebook, and WhatsApp lack.

Students in high school were never taught how to properly email teachers which is why they enter college clueless about email etiquette. However, the high school teacher-student relationship is probably more relaxed and casual compared to the college professor-student relationship. Whenever I would email teachers in high school though I would always try to keep the email as respectful as possible because I knew they would be taking time out of their day to read and respond to me. I have never thought about casually addressing a teacher in email because I understand there is a professional relationship that still needs to be maintained.

I think especially in college that professors need to be addressed in correct email etiquette because as our educators they need to be shown respect in their rightful positions of authority and expertise. Email etiquette also shows that students know the proper way to address others in a professional manner, such as potential employers. Professors are used to writing in such a formal manner because they have to address other professors and coworkers with the same respect when making a special request. For students, they are used to addressing each other via texts in shorthand notation so formal emails in a letter template seem almost foreign.

Hopefully email as a media stays relevant because texting professors or Facebook messaging them would seem really weird and too casual for an educational setting.

Email Isuues

I personally do not see email as a legacy medium. While I may no longer email my friends and grandma on the regular, I still send and receive emails every single day. After reading the articles, I can easily relate to the ignorance of the student writing the email to their professor. During my junior year of high school I did dual enrollment, so I was taking classes at a local college. After taking my final exam in Sociology, my grade dropped from a 95 to an 89.46. I was very upset because I had never gotten a B before and I had worked so hard in that class. I emailed my profesor basically asking if he could possibly bump my grade up so that way I can end with an A. This email was the most unprofessional email I had ever written. It basically went similar to this: “Hey it’s Dakota Gulasa. I was wondering if you could possibly bump my grade up so that I will end with an A. I don’t want it to mess up my high school GPA.”

My profesor was livid! He made me meet with him to learn email etiquette because it was that bad. This issue may seem familiar with several college students. I believe that it suggests that young adults in this decade are living in a world of texting and messaging. They are not accustomed to formal writing when communicating with another individual. This leads to emails similar to mine where the student is basically texting their professor as if they are best friends. I can understand why professors get so outraged over this situation, because I am sure it happens very often.

I think that universities and professors prefer email is because any other type of media would simply be too personal. Having a professors phone number, Facebook, or even WhatsApp account information would cross a certain professional line. I would be very uncomfortable having to text my professor. I would much rather type out an email and have to wait for a response, then be able to send my profesor a text expecting an immediate answer.

All in all, I’m glad that I’ve learned my lesson about emailing professors and hope that next time I need my grade bumped up, it will happen without a problem.

Blog Post #4: The Email Issue

Is email another “legacy medium”? Maybe so, but universities still seem to run on it. Read this serious piece (How to Email Your Professor…) and this jokey one (Every Email College Students Send Their Professors) and respond to the issues they raise. Some possibilities:

  • Do these pieces tally with your impressions (or experiences) of students, professors, and email?
  • What larger issues do they suggest?
  • Might students and professors have different understandings of email (and different understandings of college!) that come out in these mismatched exchanges?
  • What’s your own relationship to email?
  • Why do you think universities are so email-crazy? Why do you think they haven’t embraced alternative media (texting, facebook, WhatsApp, whatever) to the same extent?

Legacy Media: MySpace

I can distinctly remember begging my parents to allow me to create a myspace page in the fourth grade. Everyone who was anyone had one, and I couldn’t resist to follow the trend. I somehow convinced them to let me create one. When I was in the fourth grade, MySpace was all that people would talk about. It was an engaging, yet simple website that everyone was familiar with. Here we are nine years later, and look where MySpace is now. What was once an enormous media platform for individuals to socialize and interact has now became a graveyard of untouched profiles. As time passed, people began to transition to a different platform – Twitter. The idea behind a “legacy media” says that every media will eventually go out of date – typically within 10 years. Even though Twitter is the biggest rage currently, by the year 2030 will anyone still be using this platform, or will we have moved on to the next BIG THING? We can already see this transition beginning to happen. In the last three years, Twitter’s number of active users has began to drop. The drop has not been extremely significant, but I believe that it may be the beginning of a new legacy media.

legacy media

There are several forms of legacy media that I’ve used and still use in my life.  The main one being books.  From the moment i was conceived to now I’m still reading books (my dad used to read to me while I was still in the womb).  I don’t feel like they’ll ever completely disappear or be replaced by eBooks or the internet mostly because of the “sentimental” value that they have.  Physical books can be passed down or held onto for generations; my family has kept my dad’s children’s bible forever even though its falling apart, and I’m pretty sure my brother tried to eat it when he was a baby, but it still sits on our bookshelf, along with a lot of other books we read as children.

Today, most the books that I am reading are textbooks that I’ve been assigned, but I still prefer physical books over online textbooks.  I feel like they allow for a better way of learning and retaining information as opposed to reading information off of a screen.

The other form of legacy media that had a huge impact on my life was VHS tapes.  Growing up, that’s all I would watch, and I could sit there and watch the same movie again and again if I wanted to.  Every Disney movie and sesame street movie you can think of is somewhere in a basket in my parents’ closet.  There’s still times now when someone will ask, “Have you seen (any classic movie)?” and my mom will respond, “Yeah!!! We have it on VHS!” and then she’ll sadly come to the realization that it really doesn’t matter because we don’t even have a VHS player anymore.

09/12/16 – Legacy Media

Google defines Legacy Media as “traditional means of communication and expression that have existed since before the advent of the new medium of the Internet.” An example of this legacy media that struck me when I understood the concept of legacy media was the book. Following Google’s definition, books are indeed very traditional and date back to ancient times during which books were used as a means of communicating and recording information. Books still serve the same purpose hundreds of years later. However, they have rapidly begun to be replaced because of the growing technology that records the same information that would usually be recorded in books to be recorded on a computer which stores the information for much longer.

Personally, I loved books as a child. I would read for hours at a time and stay up with a flashlight underneath my blanket to avoid getting in trouble. However, as I grew up I would always tell myself that I would read this book that looks really good but I could no longer bring myself to do it because why read the book when I could read it online or find out what happens, online. In high school, I was a part of the IB Program which emphasized research and discovery which forced me to go to research libraries and look up the books and read through them to find the information that I needed for my papers. I was always so surprised by the amount of information that was still stored in the books. However, a lot of the information was in the “electronic library” which made it slightly easier to complete my research from the comfort of my room.  For some topics I didn’t even have to go to the library because all the information I needed was on the internet.

Websites like scholar.google.com and galileo hold a ton of information which made it easier to do research without having to go out looking for the book. If this option didn’t exist, one would definitely have to use books. I actually think that the value of books sort of goes down because so much is online now that no one feels that books are important. I wouldn’t say that books are no longer important or would eventually stop being used. However, I would say that a majority of books and the information that they hold, especially record books might eventually all be transcribed so that IF there comes a time where a book cannot be located, its information is not totally gone.

Blog #3: Legacy Media

One form of (almost) obsolete media that played a large role in my childhood were VHS tapes. I still have an entire basket of VHS tapes of some of my favorite movies, mostly including Disney classics and Christmas movies. I remember them very vividly, including the act of having to rewind the full tape before watching, their cumbersome size, and their poor picture quality. My family even still has a VHS player under our television, although we rarely watch any of our VHS tapes. This form of media was replaced by DVDs, which are now being replaced by movie streaming websites, such as Netflix and Hulu. One common problem with these forms are media are that they can be easily tampered with or broken. However, Netflix and Hulu protect against this common problem, making these a more desirable and protected form of this media. I remember when my brother was much younger, he got into our basket of VHS tapes, and tore the tape out of the cassette.

Despite having a few ruined VHS tapes, my family continues to use them once a year. We watch classic Christmas movies, such as Rudolf the Red Nosed Reindeer, together, as these movies are often hard to find on other forms of media. The VHS tapes also evoke a sense of nostalgia and remind me of previous Christmases spent as a child. Despite VHS tapes slowly becoming obsolete, their impact on the world of media has not. They made movies easily accessible, and made possible the creation of more advanced forms of media, such as DVD’s and movie streaming websites.

Legacy Media 9/11

Media comes and goes, its a trend that is impossible to be broken. Some forms come and go much quicker than others. Some stick for a long time, such as Facebook, as it’s audience has been broadened over the years. The form of legacy media I would like to talk about today is the app known as iFunny. Now while this media is still around today, it is a shell of its former self. Back in the 2000’s iFunny had captured the young person’s mind, including my own. This momentary rise and fall of media is known as Residual Media. The app was a social platform for connecting people to other people through humorous pictures. This app practically invented the meme; a picture with bold writing captioning the image on top. It was particularly popular when the ipod touch was at its peak. This was mainly due to the ipod touch being the first handheld device other than a smart phone to have internet capabilities. Users could pass the time on their own Wifi scrolling through endless comical pictures to cheer them up. The app was popular from kids to young adults all the way to adults. The app had issues with consistency and producing new content. As times changed and the world continued to grow and evolve, iFunny could not keep pace. In the years since its peak, it has been overtaken by media such as Vine, Pinterest, and Reddit. Sooner rather than later, these will be overtaken by new apps and media that have yet to be created.

Legacy Media

Legacy media was very prevalent in my life, and I remember it fondly as a child growing up. My family loves movies, and as a child I remember having a large collection of VHS tapes containing all of the movies I could ever ask for. Although VHS is basically obsolete, we still have an old tv upstairs in our house that contains a VHS player and all of our old tapes. I don’t think we have used the tv in years, making it weird to remember the time when that was all that we watched. My life changed when portable DVD players were invented, and I brought mine a long with me on every car ride, and on every trip with all of my favorite DVDs. Now, the portable DVD player has been replaced with laptops, and DVDs have been replaced with Netflix. Social media changes so fast that sometimes it’s hard to even remember a time when I didn’t possess an iPhone, or when I didn’t have Netflix to watch movies or tv shows on. It is crazy to think about how much can change in fifteen years, and makes me wonder if our current social medias will turn into legacy media in the next fifteen.