Reflective Diary Introduction Reflective practice can be used for different purposes. Some examples: • Helps identify gaps in skills and knowledge and learning needs • Analyse complex and challenging situations • Analyse communication and relationships with colleagues • Examine the way we make decisions. (Bolton‚ 2001) This reflection paper is going to discuss my experience of the PDAF course. The discussions are based on my feeling during the lesson and the feedback
Premium Employment Learning Recruitment
How does Shakespeare convey Macbeth’s relationship with his subjects and contemporary attitudes towards Kingship in Act 3‚ Scene 4? In Jacobean society‚ there was a very rigid idea of what a King should represent and how he should act. Ideas such as Divine Right‚ order‚ stability and health‚ and contemporary beliefs such as Heaven and Hell meant the concept of Kingship was of great interest to the Jacobean people. However‚ important events taking place around the time that the play was written
Premium Macbeth James I of England
In Act 4 Scene 1‚ Iago continues to manipulate Othello’s thoughts by filling his head with distorted lies‚ false ideas‚ and vulgar images of Desdemona naked with Cassio. This eventually drives Othello to insanity and he falls into an epileptic fit. This scene provides us with a broader understanding of the duplicative‚ two-faced nature of Iago‚ as well as reinforcing the significant amount of dominance and ownership he holds over Othello. From the way that Iago cleverly utilizes Iago’s insecurities
Premium Othello Iago Michael Cassio
Macbeth: Act 3 Scene 4 ‘They say‚ blood will have blood’ ‘Lesser than Macbeth but greater‚’ theses are the words which make Macbeth start to think about whether his bestfriend‚ Banqou‚ can be trusted. In one of the first scenes of the play the three witches tell him this after he killed King Duncan. The words start to drive him insane as he starts to believe that Banquo or his son‚ Fleance‚ may take the throne away from him. His sanity leads him to killing Banquo‚ making him so guilty that he breaks
Free Macbeth
By the end of the play‚ although Lady Macbeth tries to sway us other wise the audience is convinced by the characters that in order to be masculine‚ you don’t have to be violent as such but show leadership and loyalty. This message is conveyed in Act 4‚ scene 3 when Ross reports to Macduff the death of his family. Malcolm‚ Duncan’s son‚ suggests to Macduff that he should take to the news in a ‘manly fashion’. “I shall do so;/But I must feel it as a man…” This quote made by Macduff suggests that to
Premium Macbeth Macbeth of Scotland English-language films
Reverend Hale: Development In Arthur Miller’s play “The Crucible”‚ which takes place in Salem‚ is one character‚ Reverend Hale‚ whose attitude to the witch trial immensely changes as he goes through a major personal journey. During the hysteria that plague the town he changes from accuser to defender of the doomed. But is Hale capable of ending the witch trial? In Act 1 arrives Hale in Salem to investigate possible witchcraft with good intention and confidence to fight the devil. Hale is an expert
Premium Salem witch trials The Crucible English-language films
leads them to changing to the expectations set for them‚ leading to questioning themselves‚ one of the main characters that this is found in would be Reverend Hale with the role he played on the executions as well as the attempt to prevent‚ what he once believed was fair from happening‚ the executions of others.
Premium The Crucible Salem witch trials Sociology
Ihan Nur Ali 11FMC Assignment 1 ; Hale ’s letter to Danforth Reverand John Hale 14 Jacobs Road London NW10 9EC Judge Danforth 64 Zoo Lane Witchcraft Street WC7 DEV 09/12/14 Dear Judge Danforth‚ Your Excellency‚ Judge Danforth. You know‚ I have graduated from Harvard College and I am an expert in all things witchcraft and the supernatural. When I first arrived in Salem‚ I was tangled in a web of lies and a sheet of deception. In this trial‚ I believe
Premium The Crucible Salem witch trials
Macbeth Act 4 Scene 1 1) FW: Three times the flea-ridden cat has meowed. SW: Three times the swine flu infected pig has whined. TW: “It’s time‚ it’s time‚” the owl cries. FW: Around the cauldron we go‚ throwing animal intestines inside. We boil the fungus toad in our cauldron and let it’s venom seep through. Boil first in our charmed pot. ALL: Double‚ double‚ toil and trouble‚ fire burn and cauldron bubble. SW: Throw in the fillet of a parasite-ridden fish‚ let it boil and bake
Premium Macbeth
not to realize that his interests lie in defending not only his family but the whole nation of Scotland. As in Ross’ speech in Act IV‚ Scene 2‚ the context of this entire scene has been set in terms of the country as a whole: Macduff explains to Malcolm that "Each new morn . . . new sorrows / Strike heaven on the face‚ that it resounds / As if it felt with Scotland"(4-7). Later‚ Macduff cries out "O Scotland‚ Scotland . . . O nation miserable!" Macbeth’s motivation in murdering Duncan may have been
Premium Sin Macbeth Seven deadly sins