Thursday, August 7, 2014
News Writing 4
Growing
up, his family was diverse. He has a mentally-challenged older brother, a twin
brother, and a younger brother who he says looks like Sylvester Stallone did at
25.
"I
came from a very diverse family,” Dominick Casadonte said, “so I learned how to
interact with a lot of different kinds of people."
Casadonte's
family would go out of their way to try to help each other out. They would
provide each other with intellectual, moral and ethical stimulation.
Casadonte
said he is the interim dean of the graduate school and a professor in the
department of chemistry and biochemistry at Texas Tech.
Casadonte
had a desire to go into education rather than go into industry after finishing
school.
"I
knew that I wanted to go into academics rather than into industry or
international lab," Casadonte said. "So I applied to various schools
and Texas Tech had the most appropriate, for me, mix of teaching and research
and its priorities base."
Gary
Bell, a professor of history at Tech, said Casadonte is one on the best
teachers at the university.
Bell
said Casadonte won the Minnie Stevens Piper award for outstanding teaching in
Texas. He also won many other awards, such as the outstanding teacher in the
honors college and best professor by the president of the university.
"The
man has pretty much done it all," Bell said.
Casadonte
uses different methods to teach his classes. An example is course flipping.
He
said course flipping is when the homework is to watch the lectures that would
normally be done in the classroom. The lectures are prerecorded and the
students watch the lectures and take notes from them. The students then
complete the homework in class.
According
to the Texas Tech Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry website, Casadonte
has principal research interests in the chemical effects of high-intensity
ultrasound, environmental remediation, nanomaterial fabrication, supramolecular
chemistry, design of photoactive metallopolymers, photophysics/photochemistry,
and chemical education.
Casadonte
is known as a professor at Tech, but he is also recognized for his humanitarian
efforts.
He
said he worked for Habitat for Humanity as an adviser and has done other humanitarian
work for the communities he served.
"I
ran a homeless shelter in Urbana-Champaign where I did my post doc for three
and a half years," Casadonte said. "It was a Catholic work group
shelter, and it was for homeless women and families. The house was donated to
us. We routinely had about 20 people living at the house."
He
also said he ran a soup kitchen that fed about 100 people a day with the food
provided by several churches while running the homeless shelter.
When
asked about what inspires him, Casadonte said everything.
"You
should always be inspired by your senses, by what you observe, by what you
think, by what you hate, by what you love," Casadonte said. "So when
I say everything, I truly mean it. Everything is inspirational, if you allow it
to be."
Casadonte
was asked to give advice he would give to his students.
"So
you find something that you have a passion for," Casadonte said,
"that if you didn't do it, you would feel significant loss in your life -
you should explore that as a possibility."
Sidebar:
A
chemistry professor at Texas Tech has many role models he looks up to.
"When
I was a kid Albert Einstein was my role model," said Dominick Casadonte,
chemistry professor and interim dean of the graduate school at Tech.
Casadonte
said he is a devout Christian and considers Christ to be one of his role
models. He also said his teachers, while he was at the conservatory, to be his
role models.
"My
motto's always been, 'try to get involved with people who are better than
yourself because that's how you improve,'" Casadonte said. "So, I've
always tried to look at people who are in the top of their fields in whatever
they're doing."
He
also said the unsung heroes who do random acts of kindness are role models of
his and they do not have to be older people.
Gary
Bell, a history professor at Tech, compared Casadonte to Albert Einstein.
"The
reason I make the comparison is because first of all," Bell said,
"Einstein had a wide-ranging interest."
Bell
also said Einstein and Casadonte were both interested in a lot of different
subjects and both have a good sense of humor.
Author-source page
Author: Jonathan Lin
jonathan.lin@ttu.edu
Sources: Dominick Casadonte
Gary
Bell
Research:
http://www.depts.ttu.edu/chemistry/Faculty/casadonte/
News Writing 3
Growing
up, his family was diverse. He has a mentally-challenged older brother, a twin
brother, and a younger brother who he says looks like Sylvester Stallone did at
25.
"I
came from a very diverse family,” Dominick Casadonte said, “so I learned how to
interact with a lot of different kinds of people."
Casadonte's
family would go out of their way to try to help each other out. They would
provide each other with intellectual, moral and ethical stimulation.
Casadonte
said he is the interim dean of the graduate school and a professor in the
department of chemistry and biochemistry at Texas Tech.
Casadonte
had a desire to go into education rather than go into industry after finishing
school.
"I
knew that I wanted to go into academics rather than into industry or
international lab," Casadonte said. "So I applied to various schools
and Texas Tech had the most appropriate, for me, mix of teaching and research
and its priorities base."
Gary
Bell, a professor of history at Tech, said Casadonte is one on the best
teachers at the university.
Bell
said Casadonte won the Minnie Stevens Piper award for outstanding teaching in
Texas. He also won many other awards, such as the outstanding teacher in the
honors college and best professor by the president of the university.
"The
man has pretty much done it all," Bell said.
Casadonte
uses different methods to teach his classes. An example is course flipping.
He
said course flipping is when the homework is to watch the lectures that would
normally be done in the classroom. The lectures are prerecorded and the
students watch the lectures and take notes from them. The students then
complete the homework in class.
According
to the Texas Tech Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry website, Casadonte
has principal research interests in the chemical effects of high-intensity
ultrasound, environmental remediation, nanomaterial fabrication, supramolecular
chemistry, design of photoactive metallopolymers, photophysics/photochemistry,
and chemical education.
Casadonte
is known as a professor at Tech, but he is also recognized for his humanitarian
efforts.
He
said he worked for Habitat for Humanity as an adviser and has done other humanitarian
work for the communities he served.
"I
ran a homeless shelter in Urbana-Champaign where I did my post doc for three
and a half years," Casadonte said. "It was a Catholic work group
shelter, and it was for homeless women and families. The house was donated to
us. We routinely had about 20 people living at the house."
He
also said he ran a soup kitchen that fed about 100 people a day with the food
provided by several churches while running the homeless shelter.
When
asked about what inspires him, Casadonte said everything.
"You
should always be inspired by your senses, by what you observe, by what you
think, by what you hate, by what you love," Casadonte said. "So when
I say everything, I truly mean it. Everything is inspirational, if you allow it
to be."
Casadonte
was asked to give advice he would give to his students.
"So
you find something that you have a passion for," Casadonte said,
"that if you didn't do it, you would feel significant loss in your life -
you should explore that as a possibility."
Sidebar:
A
chemistry professor at Texas Tech has many role models he looks up to.
"When
I was a kid Albert Einstein was my role model," said Dominick Casadonte,
chemistry professor and interim dean of the graduate school at Tech.
Casadonte
said he is a devout Christian and considers Christ to be one of his role
models. He also said his teachers, while he was at the conservatory, to be his
role models.
"My
motto's always been, 'try to get involved with people who are better than
yourself because that's how you improve,'" Casadonte said. "So, I've
always tried to look at people who are in the top of their fields in whatever
they're doing."
He
also said the unsung heroes who do random acts of kindness are role models of
his and they do not have to be older people.
Gary
Bell, a history professor at Tech, compared Casadonte to Albert Einstein.
"The
reason I make the comparison is because first of all," Bell said,
"Einstein had a wide-ranging interest."
Bell
also said Einstein and Casadonte were both interested in a lot of different
subjects and both have a good sense of humor.
Author-source page
Author: Jonathan Lin
jonathan.lin@ttu.edu
Sources: Dominick Casadonte
Gary
Bell
Research:
http://www.depts.ttu.edu/chemistry/Faculty/casadonte/
News Writing 2
Growing
up, his family was diverse. He has a mentally-challenged older brother, a twin
brother, and a younger brother who he says looks like Sylvester Stallone did at
25.
"I
came from a very diverse family,” Dominick Casadonte said, “so I learned how to
interact with a lot of different kinds of people."
Casadonte's
family would go out of their way to try to help each other out. They would
provide each other with intellectual, moral and ethical stimulation.
Casadonte
said he is the interim dean of the graduate school and a professor in the
department of chemistry and biochemistry at Texas Tech.
Casadonte
had a desire to go into education rather than go into industry after finishing
school.
"I
knew that I wanted to go into academics rather than into industry or
international lab," Casadonte said. "So I applied to various schools
and Texas Tech had the most appropriate, for me, mix of teaching and research
and its priorities base."
Gary
Bell, a professor of history at Tech, said Casadonte is one on the best
teachers at the university.
Bell
said Casadonte won the Minnie Stevens Piper award for outstanding teaching in
Texas. He also won many other awards, such as the outstanding teacher in the
honors college and best professor by the president of the university.
"The
man has pretty much done it all," Bell said.
Casadonte
uses different methods to teach his classes. An example is course flipping.
He
said course flipping is when the homework is to watch the lectures that would
normally be done in the classroom. The lectures are prerecorded and the
students watch the lectures and take notes from them. The students then
complete the homework in class.
According
to the Texas Tech Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry website, Casadonte
has principal research interests in the chemical effects of high-intensity
ultrasound, environmental remediation, nanomaterial fabrication, supramolecular
chemistry, design of photoactive metallopolymers, photophysics/photochemistry,
and chemical education.
Casadonte
is known as a professor at Tech, but he is also recognized for his humanitarian
efforts.
He
said he worked for Habitat for Humanity as an adviser and has done other humanitarian
work for the communities he served.
"I
ran a homeless shelter in Urbana-Champaign where I did my post doc for three
and a half years," Casadonte said. "It was a Catholic work group
shelter, and it was for homeless women and families. The house was donated to
us. We routinely had about 20 people living at the house."
He
also said he ran a soup kitchen that fed about 100 people a day with the food
provided by several churches while running the homeless shelter.
When
asked about what inspires him, Casadonte said everything.
"You
should always be inspired by your senses, by what you observe, by what you
think, by what you hate, by what you love," Casadonte said. "So when
I say everything, I truly mean it. Everything is inspirational, if you allow it
to be."
Casadonte
was asked to give advice he would give to his students.
"So
you find something that you have a passion for," Casadonte said,
"that if you didn't do it, you would feel significant loss in your life -
you should explore that as a possibility."
Sidebar:
A
chemistry professor at Texas Tech has many role models he looks up to.
"When
I was a kid Albert Einstein was my role model," said Dominick Casadonte,
chemistry professor and interim dean of the graduate school at Tech.
Casadonte
said he is a devout Christian and considers Christ to be one of his role
models. He also said his teachers, while he was at the conservatory, to be his
role models.
"My
motto's always been, 'try to get involved with people who are better than
yourself because that's how you improve,'" Casadonte said. "So, I've
always tried to look at people who are in the top of their fields in whatever
they're doing."
He
also said the unsung heroes who do random acts of kindness are role models of
his and they do not have to be older people.
Gary
Bell, a history professor at Tech, compared Casadonte to Albert Einstein.
"The
reason I make the comparison is because first of all," Bell said,
"Einstein had a wide-ranging interest."
Bell
also said Einstein and Casadonte were both interested in a lot of different
subjects and both have a good sense of humor.
Author-source page
Author: Jonathan Lin
jonathan.lin@ttu.edu
Sources: Dominick Casadonte
Gary
Bell
Research:
http://www.depts.ttu.edu/chemistry/Faculty/casadonte/
News Writing 1
Players get a call from a very mysterious
person and says they need to go and kill this person and they automatically
assume they are a contract killer.
Students and some faculty do not believe
that playing violent video games causes a person to become violent.
“It’s pretty simplistic to just say
exposure to violence causes you to be violent,” Texas Tech professor Jimmie Reeves
said as he sat back in his chair.
Reeves said it is not clear what the impact
of video games was on the shooter in Sandy Hook, Conn.
According to the Entertainment Software
Association, the top selling game by units sold in 2011 is "Call of Duty:
Modern Warfare 3."
Reeves said the overall statistics of youth
violence have gone down, and the decline of youth violence occurred at the same
time as the invention of the most violent video games.
“How do you explain that and blame Sandy
Hook on video games?” Reeves said.
Bobby Rodriguez, a junior business
administration major from El Paso, Texas, plays video games on a daily basis
and was asked what impact violent video games have on him. He said he does not
feel different when he plays them.
“I think if you’re violent they might make
you escalate,” Rodriquez said, “but they’re not going to make you into
something that you aren’t.”
According to the Entertainment Software
Association, 91 percent of parents pay attention to the content of the games
their children play.
Robin Haislett is a doctoral student at Tech
who does research on video games.
“In a lot of cases, there are messages that are
embedded even far under the guise of it being a hyper-violent game,” Haislett
said.
Haislett said there is a game called “Hotline
Miami” that has embedded messages. The player takes control of a contract
killer and has to kill a person, like a mob boss.
Haislett continued and said once they complete
the mission, they have to walk back through the level and everything that the
player killed is still there.
“Even if it hyper-violent like that, it isn’t
necessarily about the violence, it’s more about how you react to it,” Haislett
said.
Haislett finished off with a statement on the
general impact of video games.
“Games are not meant to replace life in any way
or try to make you a different person,” Haislett said, “but it’s a way for you
to explore something without having to walk out into society and have this big
social stigma over you."
Service
Journalism
2012
Sales, Demographic, and Usage Data:
·
The
average U.S. household owns at least one dedicated game console, PC, or
smartphone.
·
90
percent of the time parents are present when games are purchased or rented.
·
85
percent of parents are aware of the Entertainment System Rating Board rating
system.
·
98 percent
of parents feel the Entertainment Software Rating Board rating system is either
very or somewhat helpful in choosing games for their children.
Source: Entertainment Software Association:
Essential Facts About The Computer and Video Game Industry
Author-source
page
Author: Jonathan Lin
jonathan.lin@ttu.edu
Sources: Jimmie Reeves
jimmie.reeves@ttu.edu
Bobby
Rodriguez
bobby.rodriguez@ttu.edu
Robin
Haislett
robin.haislett@ttu.edu
Miguel
Velasquez
miguel.velasquez@ttu.edu
Rashad
Chowdhury
rashad.chowdhury@ttu.edu
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