Sunday, March 26, 2017

A Different Route

Introduction
  • Today I am going to be talking about Professional Portfolios. You are probably wondering what is a Professional Portfolio, well in this section of the blog I will give you a definition of what a Professional Portfolio is. Professional Portfolio- "Is a tool judiciously and carefully crafted to appropriately showcase the work of a professional while providing evidence of career growth." You might see or hear the term "E-Portfolio" this is an electronic version of a portfolio.


Relevance

  • The reason professionals or individuals seeking a career should create a professional portfolio because it allows the employer to see the work you have created in the past for other companies or for personal reasoning. A professional portfolio allows you the job seeking individual to save the work that you think is suitable to demonstrate, and it allows the employer to see the growth of where you started from. Creating a professional portfolio can make you stick out from the other candidates who are seeking the same position you are applying for. Professional Portfolios help employers define your experience, accomplishments, skills, education, interest, objectives and professional goals. Professional portfolios gives you the future employee the chance to sell yourself without speaking.
  • Most experts claim that resumes will vanish in the next decade or two, and some say that E-Portfolios will replace the resume. Not knowing how true this is I am still going to discuss the advantages an E-Portfolio has. According to experts e-portfolios helps career seeking individuals gain self-awareness and it helps them take control of their experiences. E-Portfolios help people with independent learning, and "e-portfolio platform offers advantages to the digital generation of students by giving them creative opportunities...through interactive displays of performance and engagement." Overall e-portfolios are geared to enhance "self-esteem by providing a mechanism through which they can monitor their personal, academic, and career goals (Okoro, Washington, Cardon).

Here are some examples ↓













Monday, March 6, 2017

Controversy

A Problem Radio Faces 𝍍𝍍

Introduction 

  • For those that are clueless about radio, I would like to clear it up that the radio business is somewhat difficult. Most people aren't happy with the way the radio business produces events or "with its relations to the government." Experts argue that radio difficulties come from the fact "that it has more than one function." We all know that radio serves the public with communicating, recording, reporting news, spreading ideas, and events for the public. As an advertising platform for tons of companies, radio operates to make money from those businesses and for itself. 
  • It would appear that radio comes under the clear meaning, if not the exact words, of the first amendment to the Constitution: "Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press." Yet for physical reasons, radio cannot operate free from some government control. And it is very difficult in practice to draw a clear line between partial control and complete control.

The Problem ↓↓

  • Since the radio industry is such a complex business a few conflicts appear. The problem is that experts and critics feel that radio makes entirely to much money off advertisements. Critics propose the question "should radio be essentially a medium for selling goods?" Experts wonder how the radio industry can be a nonprofit business, but the industry continues to make millions off promotion ads. Experts are confused on how the radio business can call themselves a "service" based industry but continues to make profits from different sources. 
  • In order for radio station to stop making money experts believe that the industry would have to be a dual industry for both a "public-service medium and a private advertising medium," 

The Solution ↓↓

  • According to experts, FM radio is ready to evolve into an extensive commercial development. FM radio should give licenses to 2, 700 "without their broadcasts interfering with one another." FM radio should open the door for six or more new networks as well. This solution will allow more networks to broadcast serving a single community. 
  • Experts say "FM also offers other opportunities for variety." If the FCC approves, specialist believes that radio is ready for non-commercial networks. This would bring together the "endowed and public educational institutions engaged in broadcasting." This solution would also help the radio industry by being funded by taxation rather than advertising. 


Watch Me↓↓