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    of “The Breakfast Club” The features of Generation-Xers were efficiently showed in this movie. For most Generation-Xers they were lack of sense of safety and social identity‚ they were dissatisfied with the government because a lack of trust in leadership‚ which caused their misleading personality trait. When they watch The Breakfast Club they have to have the same sense of this movie. In the United States only a small part of people had taken drug in 1980s but over half of Breakfast Clubber

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    The Breakfast Club – Movie Review “They only met once‚ but it changed their lives forever.” The Breakfast Club is a film written‚ produced and directed by John Hughes that was released in 1985 about High School stereotyping and Self Discovery in which a handful of common stereotypical unhappy high school students that are given an in school suspension at their local school “Sherman High” (Which is based in Chicago) from 8am in the morning until 4pm in the afternoon on a Saturday for them

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    Erik Erikson’s Psychosocial Theory highlights one stage that is relevant and demonstrated in the 1985 movie‚ The Breakfast Club. Identity vs. Role Diffusion‚ or also known as‚ Stage 5‚ is the foundation for the characters and plot of this movie. To begin with‚ the plot of the movie deals with a group of adolescents dealing with stereotypes and finding their identities. At the beginning of the movie‚ the teens are in “fragile” and “detrimental-like” stages. They do not really know who they are‚

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    PSY 455 Adolescent Psychology Bryn Carriker April 19‚ 2016 The Breakfast Club Character Analysis The Breakfast Club shows many different conflicts that occur during adolescence and is a great resource when learning about how an adolescent thinks‚ how one forms his or her identity‚ what influences an adolescent‚ and so much more. It also emphasizes on all the conflicts and crisis an adolescent is dealing with and what peer groups or cliques an adolescent may fit in with. Much information can be

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    The movie Breakfast club by John Hughes‚ is a remarkable movie about five high school students from completely different social groups. They all have to go through a Saturday detention under Mr Richard Vernon the principal. The different social group includes “The rebel” John‚ “The princess” Claire‚ “The basket case” Allison‚ “The brainy” Brian and “The jock” Andrew. They are completely different people with different lifestyles and at the start of the movie they don’t get along but as they each

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    The movie The Breakfast Club is about five students in spending their day in saturday detention. All of these characters have completely different personalities from one another‚ which makes the movie more interesting than it already is. The character that I will be doing my character analysis on is named John Bender. John Bender is the troublemaker of the group‚ and‚ in my opinion‚ the funniest. John is introduced into the movie at the same time as the other characters. Some of the first impressions

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    A look at the inside and the outside. In the movie‚ the breakfast club five completely different‚ even though they all have struggled at home. A high school student is like an onion the layers reveal more there are some which the students keep hidden amongst them. For example‚ the criminal has an abusive household‚ which is how he became a rebel. Home can be where the danger is and how the trouble can begin. Creating anger and rage within eventually it will come out thus all the bad behavior. For

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    The character I picked from The Breakfast Club is Allison Reynolds. This character relates to me by how she is quiet and doesn’t speak much when she isn’t comfortable with the people around her‚ eventually she will become comfortable and show her true self. She is also like me by the way how she lies a lot‚ and how she does admit to lying later on. I lie sometimes‚ just not as much‚ plus my lies aren’t as bad as Allison’s. I can visualize myself‚ and some of my friends in Allison.I can visualize

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    one being out of their control‚ a person’s background‚ and the other being who a person chooses to be‚ what choices they make. The first and most prominent factor of one’s identity during adolescence is the background of the individual. In The Breakfast Club‚ John Bender is seen as a delinquent‚ “a criminal.” Although many of his choices are not exemplary‚ he did not select his abusive father and broken household. Bender is still in high school‚ a teenager‚ and his background is very influencing

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    interpersonal communication

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    Oral communication A model of communication refers to the conceptual model used to explain the human communication process. The first major model for communication came in 1949 by Claude Elwood Shannon and Warren Weaver for Bell Laboratories[1] Following the basic concept‚ communication is the process of sending and receiving messages or transferring information from one part (sender) to another (receiver). Shannon and Weaver Model The new model was designed to mirror the functioning of radio

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