Due to my near experience in a food desert, I figured this would be an interesting topic, both as a presenter and listener. I did encounter some setbacks, however, as most of the stuff being researched was repetitive. This made me take prolonged time on my project, which turned out to be about 40 hours, give or take. Thanks to AP testing the past couple of weeks, what was expected to be normal class ended up becoming a work-on-fire-project. Food deserts have reduced and I had planned to find recent photos of maps, unfortunately, they were not capable of saving on the computer, thus leaving me with data from nearly 10 years ago. I feared there wouldn't be updated data or articles, but turns out food deserts remained in the public eye thanks to Mayor Rahm Emanuel and Michelle Obama's efforts. As the name suggests, there shouldn't be much confusion to the crowd and help to reduce these deserts would be beneficial to everyone over the world to make this a better place. A C would possibly be my highest expected score because the constant use of the vocabulary, my writing could've also been less repetitive sounding. Since I spend most of my days in the computer, I feel like a I have mastered the way of researching. The historical context was difficult to find information online due to just pertaining to America and food deserts, along with data. Excluded were other countries and only a certain amount of cities were mentioned. This statement can not be stressed enough: start as soon as possible on your project. If you don't, you'll put yourself in a position to fail.