Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Know Your Audience Blog Post


27 June 2012
Know Your Audience Blog Post
When I was in High School I knew my audience. I had grown up with the same people for years, we were primarily from the same location, and held many of the same beliefs. When I begin the adventure that is College, the first difference that I noticed is that it was so much more diverse. Reflecting much more of what I had experienced in life, moving from job to job and place to place, college is a melting pot of culture and diversity. An online class adds yet another element to the situation because you never meet face to face with the people who you rely on as your peers. The questions that we asked each other are but a glimpse into the lives of the classmates that we will never meet. When I was reading and answering the questions posted in the discussion board, I found myself reaching deep within to give the most honest and meaningful answer that I could. Anything but an explanation of the truth would provide my classmates with a distorted view of who I am as a person and a student. The questions that we gave each other to respond compiled a vast amount of personal information in a very short amount of time. They ranged in emotion from “What would you do with a day to live?” to “What is your favorite movie?” I am not going to lie, I teared up as I wrote the response to the last day to live question.
There was a common bond between most of the people in the class who responded to the questions in the discussion, closeness and love of their families. Nearly every question led back to the same place, family! I have found that this is the most powerful motivator in most of our lives, and what we would most like to do is to spend our time with our families. Though there are many different interpretations of the meaning of the immediate family, the comfort that we find in these relationships is unparalleled. We enjoyed all four seasons, and watched many different movies; but the days would not be as bright, nor the movies so enjoyable without those that we share them with. So, though we come from different places, have many different faiths, are seeking very different careers and goals; the family dynamic remains the same, our comfort and our support.
Knowing a little more about the audience that I am writing to this semester allows me to be more open in sharing my own personal experiences. Though we do not have faces to put with the names, we have something much greater, a deeper knowledge of the inner goals and characteristics that make us all unique.

1 comment:

  1. I think too that it is hard to give an accurate answer to our discussion board questions without distorting the person who we actually are. Lets face it though we don't have to worry about running into alot of these people with whom even if we did would not usually recognize us and remember our writtings.

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