AP English 3 9 December 2013 The Human Cost of an Illiterate Society Comprehension 1. Illiteracy is a danger to the democratic society because the number of eligible voters that are illiterate is by far enough to sway a vote. This could lead to the electing a president that is not as politically fit as another candidate. 2. Kozol states that‚ “The answers to these questions represent a reasonable test of our belief in the democracy to which we have been asked in a public school to swear allegiance
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Letters to a Young Teacher by Jonathan Kozol‚ I believe was a good book overall for all readers with just a few small points that I thought needed improvement. When reading this book‚ I thought Kozol made very strong points about education and being a student going into the teaching field‚ I believe all young teachers should read this book. Although it was written in letter form to an elementary teacher‚ the issues and discussions that take place throughout the book apply to all levels of education
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Millions of individuals are discriminated against based on features beyond their control‚ including race‚ gender‚ religion‚ and socioeconomic status. In Jonathan Kozol’s Savage Inequalities‚ the writer illustrates the extreme poverty in St. Louis‚ describing: ...Sewage‚ which is :flowing from collapsed pipes and dysfunctional pumping stations‚ has also flooded basements all over the city...a blackened lot
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In the article Still Separate‚ Still Unequal by Jonathan Kozol‚ the segregation is explained and examples are given to demonstrate that the segregation is relapsing all around our country. Kozol argues that segregation is still a big issue in our education system‚ and limits for accomplishment are being set by school districts‚ which is making the achievement gap between white and black students. A greater part of schools in urban schools have predominantly black and Hispanic populations. Kozol’s
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Jonathan Kozol‚ in his essay Still Separate‚ Still Unequal‚ is proposing that many Americans that live far from major cities are under the impression that racial isolation in urban public schools has steadily diminished in more recent years. But truth be told‚ according to Kozol thousands of schools around the country that had been integrated either voluntarily or by forced o to f law have since been rapidly resegregating. According to statistics‚ Kozol found that between 85 to 95 percent of students
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photograph. Wendy Kozol‚ on the other hand‚ used several pictures to better explain her ideas in The Kind of People Who Make Good Americans. The author’s claim that the magazine‚ Life‚ helped to construct an imagined community of a middle-class at a time of economic turmoil‚ political friction and social change following World War II was further enhanced by the use of the visual portrayals from the magazine. Family portraits are often used to show a happy moment in a families life. Kozol uses family
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Jonathan Swift’s Ideal Society Gulliver’s Travels‚ written by Jonathan Swift‚ is a literary satire written in the 1700’s. Swift separates the story into four parts where he critiques different parts of society and its abuse of wealth and power. In part four the main character‚ Gulliver‚ takes a voyage to the country of the Houyhnhnms where he finds a creature that he believes lives peacefully and without any flaws. It is during this voyage that Swift lays out what he believes to be his “ideal
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12/14/13 Letters to Young Teacher Letters to a Young Teacher by Jonathan Kozol is one of the most influential‚ beneficial books I have ever read! As I read Mr. Kozol’s letters to Francesca‚ a first year teacher‚ I felt as if he was writing to me. Kozol described a battle raging on between politicians and teachers. Politicians are in charge of setting educational policy that gets implemented in classrooms across America. The problem‚ Kozol explains‚ is that these politicians have not spent one day actually
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Kozal has given poverty a voice by telling its readers that society had a role in darkening the children’s lives such as Eric’s and Silvio’s (301). Kozal has also given poverty a voice by telling its readers that it is unfair and dumb to put a mother and her children into homes where crime is around in every block (302). Angelo for instance‚ grew up at a time when crime was getting worst. Benjamin‚ also a kid who suffered watching siblings die because narcotics. These kids did not deserve to be put
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Amazing Grace‚ by Jonathan Kozol‚ is about the author’s interviews with‚ and thoughts about‚ some of the poorest people who live in the poorest sections of New York. The facts stated in Amazing Grace startled me with the prevalence and desperation of the poverty situation in areas like the South Bronx and Mott Haven. These are areas where there are hundreds of thousands of people living in broken‚ crowded‚ and rundown apartment buildings‚ “That‚” says Kozol‚ “most people would not even kennel their
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