As Jem grows up, he begins to face many challenges and learns to take responsibility. Throughout the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, Jem ages from ten to thirteen. He goes through the same issues as adults in the Maycomb community do and in time he begins to understand the lesson that is to be learned. Jem begins to follow Atticus’ footsteps and his courage becomes stronger. He grows moodier and confusing as the story becomes darker.…
As we gets older, we grow up without noticing the changing of our mind and social skills because we learn more about the world and how life actually is. When we are a child, we still think that the world is a peaceful and fun place, but when we grow up we notice that it is actually a cruel and difficult world. We can see in To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee, that Jem, Scout, and Dill mature throughout the book. They also grow up and discover a lot of good and bad things about Maycomb.…
Jem is Scout's older, brother, nearly 10 years old at the start of the novel and nearly 13 at the end, just entering puberty.…
In the book “To Kill a Mockingbird” there are many lessons and themes. One of the best themes is how Scout and Jem mature. They start to see that the world around them isn’t all sweet and kind. The see that there is bad in the world and that sometimes the guy who did the right thing is wrong. That is a theme of the story, how Scout and Jem change from a child’s perspective and go to an adult perspective.…
Throughout the book, To Kill a Mockingbird, Scout demonstrates maturity in a number of examples. There were two main experiences where Scout could see herself come of age. Not only that, but she reflects on those occurrences and ask the question, why?…
occurred in her life in Maycomb, Alabama. Throughout the book, Scout goes through a path…
Have you ever thought, why is my teacher so adamant about me reading To Kill a Mockingbird? What if I told you it is filled to the brim with life lessons and morals that allow us to reflect deeply upon it? Firstly, life lessons are more important than you think and they matter for a few specific reasons. Secondly, if you look at the main protagonist, Atticus he was always kind and demonstrated numerous life lessons. Lastly, one of the main topics is racism and it has a lot of teaching value. With all of these prominent ideas that schools love to promote, how could they not choose this book?…
Maturity is not measured by age. It’s an attitude built by experience. In Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird characters such as Jem and Scout is seen maturing throughout the book because the way they think and feel about someone/something changes as they experience more of the real world. At the beginning of the book, Scout, the narrator, has trouble getting along with people and acted upon the prejudice that existed among her. This was until her father, Atticus Finch, teaches Scout to climb into people’s skin and walk around in it, which allows her to view different perspectives, which helped her get along with people. Near the end of the book, Scout walks Boo home, and when she stands on his porch she learns his point of view and how he…
Many changes take place in To Kill a Mockingbird. Changes in times, thinking, people, and changes in the world. In the novel, Harper Lee uses Jem and Scout Finch to show many changes. Jem and Scout are pretty young in the novel. When the novel begins, Jem is about ten years old and Scout is about 8. The novel is being told by Scout when she is much older.…
We all need to grow up someday to continue life. To Kill a Mockingbird shows coming of age experiences as an enormous part of this novel. It shows how things cause situations and feelings, how young adults face the reality of first-hand conflicts, and how these situations affect them. Scout and Jem undergo conditions to help them mature in the book. The encounters help them bloom throughout the novel with noticing the components and point of views involved in the situation.…
Can you remember a time when you realized growing up had a lot of of ups and downs? In To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, a young boy named Jem discovers this through his own unique experiences. At the beginning of the novel, Jem is innocent and naive while he is obsessing over his scary and mysterious neighbor, Boo Radley. As time goes on, Jem grows up enough to realize that Boo isn’t so scary and mysterious, and that other assumptions that he made similar to that one, such as those about Tom Robinson’s trial and growing up alongside his little sister, Scout, were also untrue. Throughout the story, he is growing up and experiencing many bumps along the way. We learn through Jem that growing up had both advantages and disadvantages.…
Jem, in To Kill a Mockingbird represents maturity. Jem looked at scout and told her "I think I’m beginning to understand why Boo Radley’s stayed shut up in the house all this time… it’s because he wants to stay inside” (Lee 193). Boo Radley has always stayed shut away in his house, and the town and the kids noticed it. He’s showing maturity because he finally understands why Boo Radley is wanting to stay in his house and not come outside. Scout had been worrying a lot about Jem lately and Scout thought to herself “he was inconsistent, and moody.…
Growing up should be fun but learning about the cruel realities of your society can be difficult. In the novel, To Kill A Mockingbird, by harper lee, as scout grows up she sees the changes in her society, but those that affect her the most are community, parenting, role of women, and courage. Scout learns more and more about the world as she grows up and she starts to see the war between the blacks and the whites. Scout hears a lot of rumours about Boo Radley but never sees him. She knows how her society is bad from the day Tom Robinson’s trial and from all the rumours that were made of Boo Radley.…
In Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, Scout is an example of a character whose coming-of-age process involves gaining a different perspective. Because Scout only has a father, she “wondered at the world of women” and has never had a woman’s influence until Aunt Alexandra comes and stays at her house (192). People like Aunt Alexandra force Scout to become lady-like when her neighbors come to her house which makes her explore a new world she has never experienced. Another strategy Scout learns to gain a different perspective of a situation is when Atticus tells her when she is a child that “you never really know a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them” (374). Scout…
Childhood, to adulthood, a large step for everyone. It is a stage that everybody must go through and experience. Dill Harris a seven year old boy, Scout Finch a six year old girl, and Jem Finch a 10 year old boy are all young characters in the novel To Kill a Mocking Bird by Harper Lee that show a large step of maturing and coming of age through all of their adventures and experiences from the beginning of the novel to the end. These three kids go through experiences that affect them for the rest if their lives and impacts the way look at life.…