1. The more you practice writing, the better you become. You cannot just simply learn a skill without practicing and working hard on it. So when you finish a particular assignment, you learn a lot of new things, you learn what you could change, and then implement that knowledge into your next assignment.
2. Peer review is of extreme importance because you get someone else's insight into your own assignment. You may be biased when analyzing your own work, but if you get someone to review it for you, you will learn what you should change, work on, and improve so that you can be better in the future.
3. I would definitely suggest that they get someone to review their work because it can be quite useful. I can understand that not everyone is comfortable with other people reading their assignments and rating them, but in the end, it is all for the best - your future assignments will be better!
I believe the answer will be B
The rhetorical device that <span>is used in this excerpt from Mark Twain's "The Danger of Lying in Bed" is anecdote (assuming that your options are allusion, rhetorical question, anecdote, and logic).
There is no allusion to any other text here, so that is not the correct answer. There are also no rhetorical questions - questions that don't need an answer because it is implied. I guess there is logic, but it is not a rhetorical device really. So, I'd choose anecdote, because an anecdote is a short, interesting story from someone's life, as is the case here.</span>