Friday, October 5, 2007

In Search of… Something - 300 Word response

In Search of… Something is mainly about how consumerism is invading education and what people think of education in America. I thought it was an interesting because he gave a further understanding of what education is really for. For example, in the sixth and seventh paragraph he tells a story of his life and he tells the outcome, “I wanted an education to get something, not to discover something.” I also liked how he showed how the sales man with an expensive suite is more likely to attract the audience’s attention than a bum on the street doing the same commercial. Actually the audience would listen if they put the bum in fancy attire according to paragraph one, “Put that bum in a Mercedes-Benz and a double-breasted suit and society is all ears.”

He gives the information needed to inform the audience of the situation and he gives many examples that everyone can relate to. Like he makes a simile by saying, “Education is sold like a prescription drug. The symptom is: unhappiness in current lifestyle. The cure: high doses of a college education. The concept of obtaining a degree is the new and improved security blanket.” That relates to most everyone because almost everyone has bought a prescription drug, like antibiotics. He then goes off telling his story about how he learned what is really important in getting an education, which I liked. He uses a story that is very understandable and most audiences can comprehend. He also uses the comparison, “Education is not a genie that grants all wishes, dreams, and desires.” This helps re-catch the reader’s attention so they pay attention to the context of the next paragraph; which is very useful in a paper that needs to have the audience’s full attention. I picked this essay because it relates to my theme and it is very comprehendible to most audiences. Last of all, its missing a call to action.

3 comments:

Karen said...

Hey there! Yeah, I loved all of those cool examples too. I blogged on this one too. I thought it was interesting that you said it was missing a call to action. What would you add to make it a call to action?

Jean Jones said...

I was thinking that it could have sayed something like "Now you must go to school to learn and not just to get an 'education'" or something of the sort.

Phoenix said...

I liked this essay too. I thought this essay was a great example of how much Americans are concerned with the message bearer rather than the message itself. You look respectable then hey, you must BE respectable. What an awful assumption! Isn’t it? By the way, yes, that was approximately the point I was trying to make in my blog. Did you know you can post other people’s addresses on your blog, too?