Assignment 1:
1. What are your general impressions of playing the game? Need Assignment Help?
2. What kinds of stories were elicited? What kinds were not?
3. How did you feel while playing the game?
4. How did you decide what to share?
5. What did you learn about the other players? Were there similarities between your stories? Difference? In content and/or style?
6. What elements (i.e., social, cultural, material) are necessary for the game to progress?
Assignment 2:
A. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: The danger of a single story (19min) (YouTube Video)
1. What is Adichie's profession?
2. What is the takeaway message of the talk?
3. How is her life story weaved into the message?
4. What is the danger of "a single story"?
5. How can we encourage multiplicity of voice in stories?
B. Brené Brown: The power of vulnerability (21min) (YouTube Video)
1. What is Brown's profession?
2. What is the takeaway message of the talk?
3. How is her life story weaved into the message?
4. Why does Brown say we (humans) are here?
5. How do personal narratives and the stories we tell ourselves about ourselves promote empathy and emotional resilience?
6. What are some connections between Adichie's and Brown's messages in their talks?
Assignment 3:
Briefly review the pages where your name appears and create TWO questions you would put on the exam if you were the professor. It should be an OPEN question, such as "Describe the meaning of the phrase ......" or, "What does the term ...... mean?" or, "List three details related to ....."
This activity is designed to create a discussion board review for Midterm 1! Its technique has been called "Cornell Notes," (from Cornell University) which is based on the idea that by creating a question, it prompts the mind to search for an answer. Thus, we practice answering questions and feel more comfortable expressing our answers during an exam.