<u>Explanation:</u>
Remember, Self-reflection involves an honest evaluation of oneself. Thus, consider this self-reflective example of a student who performed poorly mathematics.
1. What did I do well? (Be specific.); I attended all the maths classes.
2. What did I miss, and why?: I failed to study the course material well and didn't pay full attention in class, because I felt overconfident about passing the course.
3. What should I have done differently?: I needed to give the course material my full attention, and I would have asked my friends who knew the course material well for assistance.
4. If I faced the same test again, would I do better now? Why?
: Yes, because I now know what I did wrong.
Answer:
Create safe, public-friendly waste disposal options and advertise them. Create laws that impose stiff fines for the perpetrators and advertise these stiff fines. Use Illegal Dumping Cameras to catch the perpetrators in the act. Use Social Media to ask the public to identify the perpetrators.
Answer:
Cindrellla
I guess you think you know this story.
You don't. The real one's much more gory.
The phoney one, the one you know,
Was cooked up years and years ago,
IT is Actually A,"It shares the detail that the war lasted four years".
The answer is D: The search for self.
Although this is not an exclusively literary modernist theme, it sure was one of the main themes that Virginia Woolf, one of the most notable modernist writers, developed. Throughout this novel, and specifically in the excerpt cited, Mrs. Dalloway, as well as many other female and male characters, continually expose their train of thoughts (“stream of consciousness” as it usually is called in literary studies) as the struggle to identify their personal subjectivity, showing a constant struggle and an intermittent quest for one´s own self.