STUDENT MOBILITY AND ITS EFFECTS ON STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT: A Preliminary Study Prepared for the Leaders Roundtable June‚ 1999 For additional copies of this report contact: Maxine Thompson The Leaders Roundtable 221 NW 2nd Avenue Portland‚ OR 97209 (503) 552-5638 fax (503) 224-9037 mthompson@leadersroundtable.org (report may be freely copied) Written by: Karry Gillespie‚ Center for Community Research Robert B. Everhart‚ Graduate School of Education‚ Portland State University with
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Good Parents‚ Good Children Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and Mary Shelley’s Frakenstein are two classic pieces of literature that are worth studying. This essay will discuss the ideas and concepts of parenting in both books. While some characteristics are shared between the two‚ there are also differences. The specific topics to be discussed are what makes a good parent‚ what parents owe their children‚ and what children owe their parents. The general approach will be to identify examples of
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Jane Austen published her seminal novel Pride and Prejudice during a period of time where ideas on social class and the role of women in society were beginning to shift. In her novel‚ Austen uses two of the main dynamic characters‚ Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth Bennett‚ to portray these shifting ideas. Through the changes that Darcy and Elizabeth experience throughout the narrative‚ Austen questions the prevailing attitudes of the time on responsibility‚ class‚ and basic human emotion‚ conveying to the
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Jane Austen‚ Kate Chopin‚ and Gertrude Stein are female writers whose works represent the will‚ power‚ and self-determination to succeed in a society developed for by men and for the men. In the novel Pride and Prejudice‚ Jane Austen touches the topic of female virtue‚ gender discrimination‚ and social inequality. Moreover‚ as Cunningham et al. p. 892 indicated in Culture and Values‚ she was against the discriminatory education for women. From her part‚ Kate Chopin novel‚ The Awakening‚ was considered
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life is pride. People will go against their wants‚ desires‚ and even die for what they are prideful about. Pride can encourage a person to do something so small that has very minimal effect on anything or something so large that the world is changed as a result. Prejudice is one of many things that challenge the idea of pride. Prejudice is prejudgment that is not based on reasons or actual experiences. In simple terms‚ prejudice is judging a book by its cover. A person can feel prejudice towards
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The Effect of Pride and Prejudice on Darcy and Elizabeth’s Relationship The Effect of Pride and Prejudice on Darcy and Elizabeth’s Relationship The novel ’Pride and Prejudice’ was written in 1796. It was written by a writer who’s name was Jane Austin. The book was first published in 1813‚ and has consistently been Jane’s most popular novel. The original version of the novel was written in 1796‚ and was called ’First Impressions’. In the story there is a family called ’The Bennett’s’
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wealthy man of the higher class in order to ensure the life of the higher class and preserve or improve their own families status.. Through Jane Austen’s portrayal of the actions of certain characters in the setting of the regency period in Pride and Prejudice‚ she highlights how women of the era accepted restrictions and repercussions that were thrust upon them without fighting back. The set of rules that highlights these restriction resides
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Despite the vast change in context‚ purpose and audience‚ both Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice (1813) and Fay Weldon’s Letters to Alice (1984) address universal and timeless issues within society in order to challenge perspectives and understandings of them. Each explore the values and attitudes ascribed to marriage and women‚ and through an intertextual reading of both Austen and Weldon‚ a contextualisation of both constructs grows. The exploration of the construction of values regarding marriage
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Connections enrich understanding in the pairs of texts set for study. To what extent is this made evident in the texts you have studied? (Pride and Prejudice and Letters to Alice) Through exploring the connections between Jane Austen’s canonical Pride and Prejudice and Fay Weldon’s Letters to Alice on First Reading Jane Austen readers gain a better understanding of the ways the values explored in the former are reshaped to contextually fit the latter. Although Austen and Weldon voice their
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present in Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen‚ in the form of the posh and petty‚ Caroline Bingley. In the novel‚ Caroline Bingley is described to the audience‚ along with her married sister‚ Mrs Hurst‚ as “fine women‚ with an air of decided fashion” (Austen 12)‚ wherein the word “fine” suggests “pure‚ perfect; of the best or very high quality” in terms of appearance and demeanour (OED). Despite this “fine” appearance‚ she is also proud and narcissistic‚ which can be attributed to both her social status
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