Sunday, September 27, 2009
Reflection #5
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Reflection #4
Sunday, September 13, 2009
Reflection #3
I think the purpose we go to the college is being taught and getting some kind of knowledge, not being indoctrinated with some kind of believing. We come to the college, and then we get the knowledge. We use the knowledge to think about the world which we are living in; then we find out the believing that we want to be in. So, for me, the teachers should not indoctrinate the ideas they have to us; they can tell, but not to make us to believe those points of views. What we need from the teachers are the ways of studying, the senses of knowing something, the direction of finding out our believing. As being college students, we don’t really need the teachers to tell us what to do and how to do for everything. You may believe what the teacher tells you when you were in the high school, but as a college student, I think we have to learn about doubting things. We are in the age that we have to think more about things than to accept things. That said, in a classroom, the teacher should know what to teach the student is the best, and the students should clear about their needs and choose the parts which are good for them.
Sunday, September 6, 2009
Reflection #2
Sunday, August 30, 2009
Reflaction 1
After I have read the essay “Why Flag-burning Should Not Be Permitted”, I agree with Luke Saginaw has said: “Yes, it is only a piece of cloth, and it may even been manufactured in China, but it is something that people have literally died for, literally died for.”
As I have said, the flag of a country is a sign of this country, and people really have literally died for it—not a piece of cloth, but the country that it stands for.
The flag of a country, for my own opinion, is just like the picture of a person. When someone does burn your picture, it does not take the respect to you, and it does not only sorry for a piece of paper.
