Alisa Foster Public Feed
Alisa Foster- Capstone
Alisa Foster Capstone-
The island- Alisa Foster qtr. 3 project
I have created this work to show how beautiful a simple drawing can be with a little texture and shading added to it. I made a simple island with water and trees because that was something I knew how to draw so I just perfected it. I think my work communicates that you can see a lot of beauty in color. I used different colors to make certain parts of the drawing pop out like the tree. My current work relates to my previous because all my work has a lot of color in it that represents my colorful personality. My work is like contemporary art because many artists such as Claude Lorrain who specializes in making paintings similar to mine. First, I thought of a drawing to draw, then I drew it, then I colored. It was very simple. My work reflects the world we live in by painting a picture of serene calmness of an island. People want to relax and go to an island similar to mine. I learned how to make different textures by using different shading and how hard I pressed my pencil by making it darker or lighter.
How Malaria affects the Life Expectancy rate of a country.
Alisa Foster
Statistics Research Paper
“The higher the cases of malaria are in a country, the lower the life expectancy rate is.”
Malaria is an old time virus/disease that has been around for many many decades. It mainly comes from mosquitoes. It is derived from the Italian word for “bad air”. It was originally thought swamp fumes in Rome were the cause of malaria. They thought this was true because there were regular occurrence there of outbreaks. What malaria really is, is a life-threatening blood disease caused by parasites transmitted to humans through the bite of the Anopheles mosquito. Once an infected mosquito bites a human and transmits the parasites, those parasites multiply in the host's liver before infecting and destroying red blood cells. (Medical News Today. MediLexicon International, n.d. Web. 23 Jan. 2017.)
The malaria virus has killed many people all over the world. Worldwide, there were an estimated 198 million cases of malaria in 2013 and 584,000 death. Malaria incidence rates are estimated to have fallen by 30% globally between 2000 and 2013 while estimated mortality rates fell by 47%. The cause of this decrease is because vaccinations came into play. A vaccination is a product that produces immunity from a disease and can be administered through needle injections, by mouth, or by aerosol. Vaccinations are very helpful for many different types and kinds of diseases. During the 20th century, malaria was eradicated from many temperate areas, including the whole of the EU. As a result, the disease is now essentially limited to tropical countries. With global climate change, the potential for the reappearance of malaria in countries where it was previously eradicated exists but is relatively small. Anopheles mosquitoes are in fact still present in those areas, including in Europe. ("Malaria." Malaria. N.p., n.d. Web. 23 Jan. 2017.)
The number of cases of malaria affects life expectancy in a couple countries before 2006. This is due to the number of people dying from this nasty disease. The number of deaths can cause life expectancy to decrease because not enough people are surviving.
Black Beauty
ART ARTIFACTS
Girl Garbage
SLA SCRAPBOOK
2) What did you learn while completing this project?
I learned how to use Stupeflix video maker better and how to take great pictures
3) What was the hardest part about completing this project?
The hardest part of this project was uploading each picture one by one. It took longgggggg
4) What was the most fun/exciting part?
The most fun part was taking the pictures of the students.
5) If you were to do this project over again, what would you do differently?
I would have added more pictures and made it more interesting.
SER VS ESTAR -ALISA
Viajar powerpoint- ALISA
BROADCAST -ALISA
VIAJAR PROJECT- ALISA
SPANISH BOOK - ALISA
MIS AMIGOS, MI FAMILIA - ALISA
Poem Project- ALISA
Eulogy
Quarter 2 Project Statement
Alisa, Brian, Savion, and Jason
Interview
Abstract
In this interview, Michael Kalman remembers his life as a young adult back in the 1950s-1960’. He speaks about how he was affected by the racial conflicts during that time period. He talks about his wife and how she was racial affected by others. He speaks about the struggles of the late 1900’s because of inequality.
Research:
Housing Segregation is the practice of denying African American or other minority groups equal access to housing through the process of misinformation, denial of reality and financing services, and racial steering. Roughly 40 percent of black students attend schools that are more than 90 percent minority, up from 34 percent 20 years ago. The existence of isolated and racially segregated housing has preserved racial mistrust, furthering ignorant stereotypes that inhibit our society from attaining true racial equality.
Sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Housing_Segregation
http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2014/03/26/26rothstein_ep.h33.html
http://dev.law.fsu.edu/journals/landuse/Vol141/seit.htm
Transcript:
AF: Thursday, May 22, 2014 I am interviewing, state your name
MK: Michael Kalman
AF: hello, how are you today?
MK: I am just fine, and how are you?
AF: I’m good, thank you!
AF: When were you born?
MK: August 8th 1944
AF: And Where?
MK: Pennsylvania
AF:what race are you and how did your race play a role in the civil rights?
MK:I am caucasian and my race was split on the civil rights issue because a lot of caucasians were bigoted and some were more enlightened and not bigoted.
AF: okay, what are the main points you remember about the civil rights?
MK: the obstruction that minorities encountered, education, government, and housing along with bigotry they faced every day and certainly the protests that happened in the 1960’s. Those are what are stuck in my memory.
AF: Have you had any experiences with discrimination?
MK: as a matter of fact i think I have, because when i was married to a woman who was hispanic and black, we were going to buy a house, so we went to the realtor and he was going to take us to see some homes. ANd we did. But he took us to the junkiest side of South-west Philadelphia I ever seen, the most dilapidated homes. The only reason why he did that was because he seen my wife.
AF: How did that make you feel?
MK: That made me feel angry a little bit and decided to go find some other relator.
AF: Okay, and where did you go to school?
MK: High school?
AF: Yeah
MK: In Uniontown, PA.
AF: What was it called?
MK: St. John’s high school
AF: Was it a segregated school?
MK: No, we had a few black students
AF: Who were some famous people during the civil rights movement?
MK: Certainly Martin Luther King and Malcolm X, but there were many others
AF: What did you hear about MLK him?
MK: That he was a minister down South, he was a leader of the civil rights movement and he did a lot.
AF:How did you feel when Martin Luther King Jr was assassinated?
MK: I was stunned, but in a way not surprised because he lived a dangerous life.
AF:Growing up during segregation, can you recall an early incident when you recognized a difference of treatment on account of color?
MK: Basically when i was young housing was segregated
AF:Have your parents been affected by civil rights?
MK: I don’t believe so
AF: How did you feel when you heard that the nation would soon become equal?
MK: I thought it was about time, I think it was long over do, but I do not think it is done being fully equal
AF:Looking back on the way you lived back in the day compared to now, how do you feel the world has changed.
MK: That’s a pretty broad question, we’re more integrated as a society thats better. Everybody’s connected.
AF: Anything else you remember about civil rights?
MK: What back in the day?
AF: Yeah
MK:Let’s see families all work very hard back then, young people had a hard time finding jobs back then, and I think that’s it.
AF: Okay, well. That concludes our interview thank you for your time
MK: No thank you it was a pleasure
MK: And your a great granddaughter by the way.
AF: Thank you your a great Grandfather
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B6Lv5k30w-pnNXF1a19lZFJQTXM/edit?usp=sharing