Answer:
Students gain confidence best describes the author's POV in passage 1.
Explanation:
The author was talking about how music can greatly impact students so it leads to the students gaining confidence by listening to music.
Answer:
Summary: Scout is a tomboy who prefers the company of boys and generally solves her differences with her fists. She tries to make sense of a world that demands that she act like a lady, a brother who criticizes her for acting like a girl, and a father who accepts her just as she is. Scout hates school, gaining her most valuable education on her own street and from her father.Not quite midway through the story, Scout and Jem discover that their father is going to represent a black man named Tom Robinson, who is accused of raping and beating a white woman. Suddenly, Scout and Jem have to tolerate a barrage of racial slurs and insults because of Atticus' role in the trial. During this time, Scout has a very difficult time restraining from physically fighting with other children, a tendency that gets her in trouble with her Aunt Alexandra and Uncle Jack. Even Jem, the older and more levelheaded of the two, loses his temper a time or two. After responding to a neighbor's (Mrs. Dubose) verbal attack by destroying her plants, Jem is sentenced to read to her every day after school for one month. Ultimately, Scout and Jem learn a powerful lesson about bravery from this woman. As the trial draws nearer, Aunt Alexandra comes to live with them under the guise of providing a feminine influence for Scout.
(As a Southern Gothic and Bildungsroman novel, the primary themes of To Kill a Mockingbird involve racial injustice and the destruction of innocence. Scholars have noted that Lee also addresses issues of class, courage, compassion, and gender roles in the American Deep South.)
Positive qualities and actions are associated with him in these lines, such as "cleaned them of evil" and "saved it from violence". These qualities and actions indicate a heroic nature.
Answer:
Athena's pride appears in just a few renditions of the narrative, and Arachne is doomed by hubris.
Hubris, the sin of excessive, self-centered hubris, lies at the heart of these sorts of myths, and most people continue to adhere to their contemporary, black-and-white, highly Judeo-Christian morality.
When dealing with Greek mythology, present morality becomes irrelevant.
My moral issue was whether to swallow my pride and embrace my father's family, or to maintain a distance from my father, knowing that this may impact and alter our family. I am completely aware of the ramifications of every decision I make prior to making it. When I was younger, I was always getting into problems for making rash judgments. As a result of what has occurred before, my mother has always taught me how a single deed may result in a great deal of confusion and disaster. As a result, I must discipline myself and determine whether it is the correct thing to do before making a choice.