Enter at your own risk

My experience in New Century College has so far been a very pleasant one!  When I look back on NCLC 110 and NCLC 130 I see the major differences and a few similarities between the two.  In the course of NCLC 110 I was required to do a lot more writing.  All of this writing was always a big reflection on whatever it was that I read or whatever film I watched and even the art exhibit that I visited.  Everything was always a thought back to what I had seen or what I experienced and I always found it quite easy.  As for NCLC 130, it has definitely been a more direct form of critical thinking and analyzing everything that I read and ever film that I watched or every art exhibit I visited as well.

Looking back on my "Well Shucks!"  paper, I see how it is a direct story of my first grade that I had received in New Century college.  I know that this type of writing was very easy to me because I wasn't happy with my first grade I received.  
One of my favorite parts of this writing that I feel really expressed my reflection in this piece of writing is:
"Finally at 11:59 Professor Cambridge began to pass back our reflection papers.  The excitement that had once filled my body started to gradually decrease as I read through and through the comments that he left.  The first part was great, but the excitement finally came to a big booming stop once I read at the very bottom of his advice, hanging about all alone, a little blue C.  I felt the anger build up and I knew that I had to get out of the classroom, quick!  I wasn't mad that my professor had given me a C, I was mad because I knew that I was a better writer than that."
Another great example of a reflection paper in NCLC 110 was my "Art Gallery" writing.  This was a reflection on the exhibit Recognize! at the National Portrait Gallery.  This writing was a great chance for me to express my feelings on all of the contemporary hip-hop artwork that I had seen.  It wasn't an ordinary art gallery because it consisted of grafitti and giant portraits of hip-hop icons.  It was amazing and my reflection on that was one of the best I've done.
"My favorite part of the entire Recognize! gallery was the installation art and the poem by Nikki Giovanni that was written on the wall.  The installation art looked like a bunch of miscellaneous objects.  Each object was completely different from the other; they were positioned together so perfectly that it was like this artist found and puzzle and put it together so gracefully."

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