Answer:
This is more of a personal experience for everyone.
Though a majority of the people/children would agree that face-to-face is easier.
First of, you could cheat in online learning. It will scrap a whole year of leaning for you, and when you go back to face-to-face, you would be on the same leval and lag behind your friends.
Second, online learning changes a lot of kids behavior, while face-to-face learning makes kids more confident and more likely to speak out. Online does the opposite. It sometimes makes kids more timid and they wouldn't speak up about questions, it's a double-edged sword.
And Third, Parents have work. Your parent could drop you off at school and do whatever they like for 6 hours, then come back. But if your at home, they will have to take care of you.
And lastly, Fourth, Sleeping. Online school usually messes up your sleep schedule. Sleep late, Wake up late. While it might seem nice, it's not. Especially for long-term reasons. When you go back to face-to-face, you will have to wake up earlier and you'd find yourself tired of school.
There is more reasons, but I can't list them all here.
Anyways it usually depends on the student.
Answer + explanation:
Setting has a big impact on the feel of a story because it influences the tone and mood of the narrative. In gothic literature:
- stories are often set in run-down castles and buildings with secret rooms that have something spooky about them (many stories are already linked to castles and old houses, so rumours of them being haunted, for example, carry over)
- ruined buildings may be seen as sinister or pleasingly melancholy
- crypts, dungeons, and catacombs are spooky and associated with death and being forgotten, and
- lighting, especially dim, failing light, is very important since it fits in with the (usual) darkness of the story.
- The environment can be used to mirror the story or emphasize the bad things that are happening (in Frankenstein, for example, the various storms that take place throughout the story make the mood heavier and reflect how the main character, Victor Frankenstein, feels).
- Depending on all sorts of visual imagery and description, the story's atmosphere can continually suggest horror and dread, constantly foreshadowing something horrible and making the reader on edge.
Answer:
The question is asking for which poem you should use different voices to read them.
Explanation:
<u>Not if you need to use a different voice for each poem, because you do. It's asking for which singular poem uses more than one voice to read.</u>