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Showing posts from September, 2020

Blog post #2: my ten tentative sources and official research topics

 My research topic is on the rhetoric used in pamphlets surrounding Childhood Sexual Abuse (CSA) and how it can be improved to increase awareness and educate the public in order to prevent future, continued, or any CSA. My ten tentative sources: Babatsikos, G. (2010). Parents’ knowledge, attitudes and practices about preventing child sexual abuse: a       literature review. Child Abuse Review, 19 (2), 107-129. doi: 10.1002/car.1102 Blake, R. (2003). Informational and awareness packet on the subject of child sexual abuse. Issues of Child        Abuse Accusations, 13 (2), 2-38. Retrieved from         http://web.b.ebscohost.com.libproxy.dixie.edu/ehost/detail/detail?vid=16&sid=ac4352f6-aa6a-       4526-   8992-49991b12b170%40pdc-v-       sessmgr01&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ%3d%3d#AN=10990881&db=asn Chouliara, Z., Karatzias, T., ...

Blog Post #2: Research Topic and 10 Tentative Sources

My research topic for my literature review will tackle technical communication (written) practices and gendered language in the workplace. The central question is a bit malleable depending on what information I can derive from the available source material, but I'm excited to dig in and see what I can find. I currently have 11 tentative sources: Bardolph, D. (2014). A CRITICAL EVALUATION OF RECENT GENDERED PUBLISHING TRENDS IN AMERICAN ARCHAEOLOGY. American Antiquity, 79(3), 522-540. doi:10.2307/43184920 Calvert, S. (2013). Gendered Narratives of Innovation Through Competition: Lessons From Science and Technology Studies. Journal of Education for Library and Information Science, 54(1), 3-14. Retrieved September 16, 2020, from http://www.jstor.org/stable/43686928 Cech, E., Rubineau, B., Silbey, S., & Seron, C. (2011). Professional Role Confidence and Gendered Persistence in Engineering. American Sociological Review, 76(5), 641-666. doi:10.2307/23019214 Grebelsky-Lichtman, T., ...

Blog Post #1: Topic of Interest

One thing that I've read about recently that interests me a lot is the gap between weight loss surgery and quality of life. Statistically speaking, people that undergo weight loss surgeries have higher rates of suicide, which is obviously counterintuitive as most people that qualify for weight loss surgery get it at the recommendation of medical professionals to lengthen their life. I feel like there's probably a gap here that doesn't acknowledge emotional eating, which if taken away (some surgeries shrink stomachs or put on a gastric belt, etc.) immediately, may have some seriously negative psychological effects. I'm not sure what method or goal I'd have for that subject other than how to tackle the issue of suicide risk for people who have undergone weight loss surgery. As for prof/tech writing and technical communication, I'm still unsure what I could research under that umbrella. The concept of "hedging" and how gendered language affects written co...