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Blog Assignment #3: Jessica Aceti

A time I wasn’t quite prepared for a challenge was when I was offered a job as an electrician. I do not consider myself to be a blue-collar worker, but I thought why not give it a shot? This was about 2 years out of high school and I needed to find a career path. It seemed like a good skill to acquire and I figured I would learn a lot, which I did.

At first, I was not the fastest admittedly which was kind of a given. This experience was new and unfamiliar to my lifestyle, so I had to adapt pretty quickly. Another thing I was nervous about was getting shocked. You may think to yourself, “Then why would you become an electrician?” well my answer, is money and not having a clear direction in life. After a few months, I found out that this was not the right career path for me. It was not the right environment. Personally, I tend to thrive in environments where people genuinely want each other to succeed and grow. Also, I found out it was something I disliked. Obviously, not everything is fun, but when you are putting yourself in risky situations, it made me reevaluate my career path.

By saying yes to things, it can help show you what you truly want in life. It will tell you what you gravitate towards, and what you repel from. This is something I am trying to incorporate into my life more recently. Taking more risks while I am still young and able to. I have usually had a hard time getting out of my comfort zone, but I can see the positives of doing so. 

Another time that rings out to me currently is attending Seattle Central. I have never really gone into a major city for a commute, which felt a little daunting at first. I am starting to get the feeling of settling into this busy environment. This high-strung feeling environment will be annoying in the moment, but I believe that I will come out on the other side a better person after it is all said and done.

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Blog Assignment #2: Joe Hallock

October 19th, 2022

Finding a work focus to land on for me right now seems, pretty ambiguous to me currently, but if I had to make a guess, I would say I might fall into a low information density tile. I believe this to be the case because I noticed that my work seems to gravitate more toward simplicity rather than making things with a ton of information to process. It is satisfying visually to me when things are not all over the place in terms of art style and a ton to process.

Things with “High Information Density” seem to be a lot more that goes into it and a longer overall process. Hopping into new design projects more often feels way more exciting and fulfilling. Designing for a more broad audience would be nice because more people could understand your work, but working in a niche and a specific audience feels more freeing to work for. It definitely feels like there are pros and cons that I will have to weigh with my focus on design as a job.

The furthest tile away from me would have to be High Information Density + Specific Audience. The examples that were given, “Research Portal and Medical Illustration” sounds supermundane and lacks the excitement of the design process in my eyes. I imagine this quartile does pay better than the rest though just because it is so complicated.

Before arriving at Seattle Central College, I was never even giving web development a chance and assumed I would hate it. Obviously, we have not been at school for too long, but I am enjoying it more than I thought I would, so it is all about trying many different niches in the design world as possible and seeing what sticks.

All in all, finding my strengths and weaknesses in Design is one of my goals that I want to figure out through trial and error.