Rough draft ideas5/17/2023 ![]() The best part of the essay process is easing the parents’ and students’ stress level and making it a fun experience for everyone. To date, I have worked with hundreds of students in San Diego County and thousands across the country. I have been editing essays for the past 10 years and I thoroughly enjoy working with students and helping them portray themselves in the best possible light for a college admission officer. I taught high school English at Marian Catholic High School (currently Mater Dei) for six years.Īfter starting a family, I decided that I needed a job with more flexibility, so I began editing essays for seniors in high school who were applying to college. After arriving in San Diego, I received my Masters in Curriculum and Instruction from San Diego State. ![]() I am originally from Milford, CT, and I moved to San Diego after graduating from Boston College where I majored in English and minored in secondary education. Step 1: Make sure that the essay topic is focused and specific. With fellow Working Group Iberian Studies, we co-sponsored a two-part event called Fact & Fiction in Iberian Photojournalism, in the University Hall Museum, which comprised a film-viewing of The Mexican Suitcase and a symposium with Sebastiaan Faber (Oberlin College) and Richard Fletcher (OSU) on photojournalism from Robert Capa to Cristina de Middel.My name is Meghean Gormley and I live in San Diego with my husband, four children, and my dog Lucy. Revising a rough draft clarifies your ideas for others. We also co-sponsored an Artist Talk by Stackhouse at Film/Video Theater in the Wexner Center for the Arts (04/02/14) with OSU AAAS and Art Depts., the Living Culture Initiativeand theUndergraduate Painting & Drawing Club. Our third event Christopher Stackhouse: A Lecture between Writing & Drawing (04/03/14) was held in the Knight House, where artist, poet, critic and teacher Christopher Stackhouse discussed his poetry and drawing projects over coffee and bagels. Our second event Frank Santoro: From Grid to Spread (03/17/14), organized in coordination with the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and held in their Eisner Seminar Room, brought Pittsburgh-based cartoonist Frank Santoro to deliver a lecture about his recent book Pompeii, focusing on the role of composition and layout in this modern tale of art, love and rivalry set during the destruction of the ancient Roman city of Pompeii in 79CE as well as an intimate workshop on his compositional methods. Our first event Constellations: Mapping Space (02/21/14) brought together an eclectic range of speakers in 262 Hopkins Hall whose research or creative work all involved the idea of mapping the night sky: Richard Fletcher (OSU Classics), Karl Whittington (OSU Art History), David Weinberg (OSU Astronomy), Aspen Mays (OSU Art/Photography) and special guest, Jeanne Liotta (UC Boulder, Film) skyping in. mapping, composition, lectures, narratives). ![]() Astronomy, Art History, Classics, Comics, Poetry, Drawing, Photography, Film) in terms of different methods (e.g. ![]() ![]() Each of the events explored the visualization of ideas in a variety of academic disciplines and artistic fields (e.g. Through a series of talks, workshops and projects this pilot working group will aim to create a space for dialogue between Arts and Humanities disciplines by combining creativity and research, drawing and writing in a truly interdisciplinary laboratory of ideas.įor our pilot Humanities Institute Rough Draft we organized three events and co-sponsored two others during Spring Semester 2014. Filmography Rough Draft Studios Most projects produced by Rough Draft Studios are animated overseas by Rough Draft Korea. drawing, mapping and diagramming) in research and teaching in the Humanities and beyond. Rough Draft Studios is known for its blending of 2-D with computer animation, or non-photorealistic rendering which it first used on The Maxx and further utilized with Futurama and The Simpsons Movie. Rough Draft explores the theory and practice of the visualization of ideas (e.g. ![]()
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