People undertake missions all the time, but why do they do that? In The Song of Wandering Angus, Angus sees the girl of his dreams but the she vanishes, he destined to find her. In The Call of the Klondike, Stanley wanted to find gold and get rich, he goes on a dangerous stamped. In The Other Side of the Sky, Farah wanted to get to freedom, even with her prosthetic leg. As you can see people undertake mission by having faith and courage which gives them hope and strength.…
The novel Forgotten Fire, by Adam Bagdasarian is about a 12-year-old boy named Vahan Kenderian. His father is a successful lawyer who believes that Vahan needs to build a better character. This book takes place during the Armenian genocide. When Vahan is separated from the rest of his family, he has to rely on the kindness of others in order to survive.…
* Chief Tom Evers – Mr. Dees’ former student in Calculus, investigator of Katie Mackey’s case…
“The Hot Zone” by Richard Preston, tells of the many incidents and cases of Ebola that broke out during our world from the 1960’s to 1990’s. It starts in Kitum Cave of Kenya, Africa, with the case of Charles Monet, who dies of an unknown disease that is later discovered to be Ebola. The book then tells of many other cases before Monet’s death. Several years after Monet’s death, a scientist named Nancy Jaax discovers a new strand of Ebola after examining tissue from monkeys who were dying in a of an “unknown” virus. The army is then alerted of this outbreak, and every monkey in the facility is euthanized, dissected, and has blood drawn for further study.…
In the book Fire In The Ashes by Jonathan Kozol , who is a famous journalist and writer, he explores the poverty and the life of several kids from New York. There are two kids named Eric and Christopher. Eric who is black and Christopher who is white. Both kids lived in the Martinique Hotel and both kids entered the hotel because one of their parents had died. Christopher barely has any friends. Unlike Christopher, Eric, has a few friends and they influence him in negative ways. While Eric and Christopher did not enter the shelters at the same exact age or had the same gender parent die in common, they both end up committing…
The complexity of William Carlos Williams’, The Red Wheel Barrow, can be disregarded as simple at first if read as a sentence but once it is broken down into stanzas a few words make it stand out. The specifics of color brings the reader closer to what is going on in the picture Mr. Williams is attempting to paint. It broadens the reader’s ability to relate to the scene. It leaves you wondering what depends so much upon the red wheel barrow.…
The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson is a book containing the stories of three people: Ida Mae Gladney, George Swanson Starling, and Robert Pershing Foster. The stories take place in the South, during the period of The Great Migration. Between the years of 1915 and 1970, the Jim Crow laws took into effect. These stories, and others like them, tell about the lives of the African Americans growing up during this period of time. One person’s life that was conveyed is George Swanson Starling.…
DIRECTIONS: As you read A World Lit Only by Fire (AWLOBF), you are to keep a journal of questions you have about the content of the reading, historical figures, definitions of words that are unfamiliar to you, and personal reactions you have to the reading. You may find it best to read & note take by the sections below.…
In Fires in the Mind, by Kathleen Cushman, a majority of her words were on mastery and motivation of youth. Kathleen spent a great deal of her time questioning children about different aspects of deliberate practice, mastery in/out of school, and what it means to be a master. In her journey to find answers, she found that many kids already practice deliberate practice outside of school in extracurricular activities (sports, crafts, hobbies, etc.) and wanted to see if the same applied to inside school as well. She discovered, through the kid’s words, that they felt they couldn’t practice the same because it was boring, or irrelevant to them. With that in mind, it provoked many ideas on how to build the class to be engaged and motivate them…
Historically, the Anishinaabe were given certain rights to hunt and fish in northern parts of Wisconsin. Native people used the supply of fish as a way to nourish themselves and their families (p.280). The Anishinaabe people were known for harvesting and making use of everything on their land for food, clothing, and shelter (p. 232). In 1854, the Treaty of LaPointe was created, keeping Indigenous people from using their land to hunt and fish freely. As a result of this, the Anishinaabe people were left amongst the poorest people in North America (p.233).…
The Sun Also Rises is a book by Ernest Hemingway. It’s fiction although it takes place during 1924-1926 seven years after World War 1 and the characters in this story were actually real people who were Hemingway's friends (although after the book was released, they were not friends anymore!). The book revolves around Jake Barnes, a veteran who fought in World War I, and the entire story is told from his perspective, we do not get the chance to see what the other characters are actually thinking, only what Jake presumes they are thinking. Since Hemingway was too young to enlist in the United States military he participated in the war as an ambulance driver in Italy. He was seriously wounded by mortar fire and as a result had severe shrapnel wounds to both of his legs. While he was in the hospital he started forming various relationships with the nurses and soldiers.…
The novel, A World Lit Only by Fire by William Manchester delves into the history of Europe’s dark ages through the early Renaissance. Three key figures constantly referred to within the novel include Erasmus, Martin Luther, and Ferdinand Magellan. All three men are responsible for Europe’s entrance into a modern era of reformation, knowledge, and discovery, and are widely considered to responsible for the development of the humanist philosophy. When Manchester begins weaving his historical tale of the middle ages, he details how the dark ages witnessed very few inventive ideas and was dominated by the Catholic Church and its papacy. As each of the three men are introduced and their accomplishments explained, the story takes a turn and leads towards a modernized era. Erasmus, Martin Luther, and Ferdinand Magellan all share a devotion to their religion which connects to their exploits, however, their overall contributions seem to somewhat differ.…
The text is a short story by Zora Neale Hurston describing a little girl filled with joy and is constantly doing things that she wants without letting the color of her skin hold her back from living her childhood days to the fullest. The short story was first published December of 1924 in an issue of Opportunity. The reader would most likely be someone who reads issues published from Opportunity or someone who was looking for articles, poems, and short stories related to African-American studies and literary pieces related to the Harlem Renaissance. The author is a prizewinner for her short story Drenched in Light. Hurston made her debut in the Harlem Renaissance with that same prize winning short story. Hurston was raised in Eatonville, which…
What were the major developments in the evolution of mass media during the 20th century?…
Chemical kinetics is the study of reaction rates. A reaction rate is the speed of the change in either reactants or products over a period of time. General kinetic rate equation is:…