Monday, May 12, 2014

How to "Post"


1) Find the appropriate blog post.  For example, for tonight's homework, you need to find the post "Chapter 1 Homework Assignment."

2) Click on "0 comments" (or however many comments there are) at the bottom of this post.

3) Either create a new comment or click "reply" to a comment someone else already made on my original post.

4) To ensure you don't accidentally lose any work, write your paragraph in a word doc and then copy and paste into the blog.  SAVE YOUR WORK!

5) In the drop down menu next to "comment as" select "google account."  (You can select "aim" and then enter your aol email username and password too).  Also twitter, flickr and supposively yahoo accounts work, but I haven't tested these out.

6) Click "publish."

7) It will take you to a new screen that will prompt you for your gmail username and password.  Either enter one that you have already, OR enter the information from the dummy account I just set up.

username: bhssongofsolomon@gmail.com
password: ihatesats

If you enter your own username and password, don't worry; you're not giving away any access to your email.  The blog just needs some kind of legitimate (or semi-legitimate) way to recognize you online to allow you to publish.

1 comment:

  1. The relationship between Macon Dead III aka Milkman and the rest of his family is undoubtedly a twisted one. His nickname comes from the fact that he is still breastfeeding at and age where he had to “pull the thin, faintly sweet milk from her flesh without hurting her with his teeth” (13). Most children do not develop a combination of teeth strong enough to hurt their mothers and the consciousness to know how to control them until they are well beyond a normal age to breast feed. It was not, however, Milkman’s fault that he was still continuing this, as he was only beginning to figure out that it was abnormal. When he was seen breastfeeding by Freddie, Freddie gives him a penetrating look “confirming for him what he had begun to suspect – that these afternoons were strange and wrong” (14). This again shows us that he was old enough to harbor suspicions and read the social cues from Freddie’s glance. The social ties in the rest of the family are so weak and strange, that Ruth cherishes her time with her son, and eventually it gets out of hand to a point where he is too old for it to be acceptable. -Sophie Poole

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