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*I think it does not matter when to contribute to Rhea. I choose to do it at the end of the semester because I can think of what I have done for one semester. I can picture myself better. It is a good creation where students can help each other without knowing each other. Also, because a lot of users are Purdue students, information posted on the Rhea is interesting to me. Every time I post something on the Rhea, I do understand anybody can read it. I personally do not pay much attention to the audience. I think Rhea, as an open source, should encourage students to say what they want to say but not being offensive or against the law. But maybe I should point out it is only my personal opinion and not always right.--[[User:pan11|pan11]]
 
*I think it does not matter when to contribute to Rhea. I choose to do it at the end of the semester because I can think of what I have done for one semester. I can picture myself better. It is a good creation where students can help each other without knowing each other. Also, because a lot of users are Purdue students, information posted on the Rhea is interesting to me. Every time I post something on the Rhea, I do understand anybody can read it. I personally do not pay much attention to the audience. I think Rhea, as an open source, should encourage students to say what they want to say but not being offensive or against the law. But maybe I should point out it is only my personal opinion and not always right.--[[User:pan11|pan11]]
  
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* I feel that people who read these pages are:
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1) The professor
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<br>2) People who are confused about the homework and are looking for help
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<br>3) The top 5-10% of the class
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<br>Based on this, just like in class, I still feel a little hesistant to ask questions, that in my opinion, are dumb.  I am more likely to crawl the internet looking for a webpage such as Wikipedia that has the information I'm looking for.  What I like about it is the pages that some of the students made for topics that related to ECE 438 that we weren't covering in class (i.e. more advanced image processing, mp3 encoding).  I do feel that the homework collaboration has promise, but as it is now, it's easier just to go to office hours.  Maybe if someone set up some sort of forum-like or chat box, it would be more user-friendly.
 
**Write an answer here. --sign your name/nickname
 
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** Write another answer here. --sign your name/nickname
 
** Write another answer here. --sign your name/nickname

Revision as of 09:03, 14 December 2009


When contributing to Rhea, how do you picture your audience? How does this affect your posting?

  • I think that probably 90% of the users of Rhea are Purdue students. The few that come across Rhea are probably just Google-searching a potential candidate (be it for graduate school, a job, etc.) and that person happened to post on Rhea with their full name. I find it very unlikely an employer will scope out Rhea for "insightful posts" and then contact a student, because doing so would require the employer to search Purdue's directory for usernames (assuming the Rhea user even signed his/her username). In short (or perhaps rather long in my case), I don't "hold my tongue" when posting on Rhea, because I think by and large only your classmates will really view the material. --rscheidt
  • I post whatever I feel is appropriate for the topic I am posting under. I doubt many people actually read what you write anyways. I did stumble onto Spring 09s 438 rhea page while studying for 438 exam 2. That was interesting. --weim
  • I think it does not matter when to contribute to Rhea. I choose to do it at the end of the semester because I can think of what I have done for one semester. I can picture myself better. It is a good creation where students can help each other without knowing each other. Also, because a lot of users are Purdue students, information posted on the Rhea is interesting to me. Every time I post something on the Rhea, I do understand anybody can read it. I personally do not pay much attention to the audience. I think Rhea, as an open source, should encourage students to say what they want to say but not being offensive or against the law. But maybe I should point out it is only my personal opinion and not always right.--pan11
  • I feel that people who read these pages are:

1) The professor
2) People who are confused about the homework and are looking for help
3) The top 5-10% of the class
Based on this, just like in class, I still feel a little hesistant to ask questions, that in my opinion, are dumb. I am more likely to crawl the internet looking for a webpage such as Wikipedia that has the information I'm looking for. What I like about it is the pages that some of the students made for topics that related to ECE 438 that we weren't covering in class (i.e. more advanced image processing, mp3 encoding). I do feel that the homework collaboration has promise, but as it is now, it's easier just to go to office hours. Maybe if someone set up some sort of forum-like or chat box, it would be more user-friendly.

    • Write an answer here. --sign your name/nickname
    • Write another answer here. --sign your name/nickname
  • Share your thoughts here. --sign your name/nickname
    • Write an answer here. --sign your name/nickname
      • Write an answer to this answer here. --sign your name/nickname
    • Write another answer here. --sign your name/nickname
If you're wondering "How do I sign my name?"
Here is how a signature looks: --Norlow 15:59, 23 September 2008 (UTC)

If you look above the editing window (when in editing mode), there is a (user) name and timestamp. If you want to sign whatever, just press the second button from the right Button sig MA375Fall2008walther.png --- it says "your signature with timestamp".


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