2011年11月27日 星期日

Journal 15: Anticipating Your Parents' Objections

Dear Mom and Dad
I'm so thankful to what you have taught me. You always give someone a hand even a stranger. When you see someone who looks needing help and begging, you always give him money. Sometimes I know that they are not what they look and stop you giving money. I know you will not be happy to hear that but these "poor-guys" may be fake. Trough watching news, I know that some people pretend to be pity to get sympathy and get financial aids. In fact, there are more poor people needing help. I really understand that helping people who need is a good thing and I want to help people who "really" need our help. Maybe we can donate to some charity foundation like Tzu-chi or Red Cross Association to make our money more efficient.

Sincerely
Evelyne

Summarize/Paraphrase Practice

Goodwin Jenifer (2011, Nov. 25). Four common meds sends thousands of seniors to hospital. USA TODAY. Retrieved Nov. 27, 2011, from http://yourlife.usatoday.com

Some common medicines in our daily life seems to occur adverse drug reactions. Goodwin (2011) reports that four types of medicines - two for diabetes and two blood-thinning agents- result to two-thirds of drug-related emergency hospitalizations (par. 2). According to the study cases identifying 65 and older, nearly 48 percent of the hospitalizations occurred among adults 80 and up and also nearly 66 percents were of unintentional overdoses (par. 6). The four medicines are cited in different percentage to emergency hospitalizations (par. 7) and different side effects (par.8). Prior research has also found that older adults are nearly seven times more likely than younger people to have an adverse drug event that requires hospitalization (par. 12). Patients and doctors should word together and discuss whether the drug is necessary to prevent serious problems in the future.

2011年11月24日 星期四

Analyzing an argument

Poloti, D. (2001, November 24). Argentina’s Big Mac Attack. New York Times. Retrieved November 27, 2011, from

http://latitude.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/24/argentinas-big-mac-attack/


In this article Poloti claims that the curious low price of McDonald's most famous burger means how Argentina government pressures businesses to keep certain prices frozen and manipulates economic statistics in its interest (par. 6). The government tried to influence the Economic Big Mac Index ti hide the truth of world's highest inflation rates (par. 8). Also, the Economist found that the gap between its average annual rate of burger inflation and its official rate is far bigger than in any other country(par.9). Poloti thinks that price-fixing or data-cooking should not be a way to the long term economic problem which has eroded the peso’s competitiveness (par. 11). According to the data the author used, it is a very strong evidence to persuade readers.

2011年11月2日 星期三

Research Day

Allen, A. (2007). Vaccine: The Controversial Story of Medicine's Greatest Lifesaver. New York: W.W. Norton.

Arthur, Allen wrote this book which including the history of vaccine and development. Not only the effect but also the defeat of vaccine. I choose this book because it also introduce some experiments about that if vaccine would cause autism. I think that I could get some information about the relationship between my article.