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alexandr402 [8]
3 years ago
8

Read the poem and answer the question.

English
1 answer:
Andreyy893 years ago
4 0
Jdjdbd skisaisuau wwjwiaushe should’ve did
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The _____ we are reading today is a newspaper article about gangs. Tomorrow's will be a short story by O. Henry.
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What would be a vexillologist be an expert of ?
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4 years ago
Underline the verb in each sentence. On the blank, write the tense of the verb.
exis [7]

Answer:

1. The film house <u>has</u> not <u>developed</u> the pictures yet.

2. Fred<u> </u><u>will have left </u>before Erin's arrival.

3. Florence <u>has been</u> a very gracious hostess.

4. Andi <u>had lost </u>her transfer by the end of the bus ride.

5. By tonight, I <u>will have finished</u> my assignment.

6. Before the discovery of the buried chest, joe <u>had</u> not <u>believed </u>in buried treasure.

7. We <u>have worked</u><u> </u>over an hour on one math problem.

8. Until his college years, Carl <u>had </u>not <u>decided</u> on his career.

9. The snow plows <u>had cleared</u> our street before the really heavy snow.

10. <u>Have</u> the Ortons <u>found</u> their dog yet?

Explanation:

1. Has is the auxiliary verb in the sentence while developed is a past participle. The combination is a present perfect tense.

2. "Will have left" is a future perfect tense.

3. "Has been" is the present perfect tense.

4. "Had lost" is a past perfect tense.

5. "Will have finished" is a future perfect tense.

6. "Had not believed" is the past perfect tense.

7. "Have worked" is a present perfect tense.

8. "Had not decided" is a past perfect tense.

9. "Had cleared" is a past perfect tense.

10. "Have the Ortons found" is a present perfect tense.

7 0
3 years ago
writing an article for publication in school magazing explaining three reasons why standard of learning falling in your school​
erica [24]

Answer:

<em>When those of us of a certain age lament the loss of public education's good old days, we forget—or perhaps never knew—that when we were in school, there were large numbers of youngsters who dropped out and went to work. We didn't think of them as dropouts. They had no trouble finding jobs: there was plenty of work for semiskilled, even unskilled, workers. Today, however, as those jobs have been exported to other countries and as the U.S. knowledge economy produces proportionally less employment for those who lack a sound education, students who leave school without skills have meager prospects. Unlike in the past, today we have to educate virtually everyone for higher education or for the modern workplace. And because the demands we place on our school system are greater than in the past, the challenge of improving public education is more acute than ever before, too. </em>

<em> </em>

<em> </em>

<em>Urban schools, in particular, seem trapped in a spiral of poor educational performance. They have 24 percent of all U.S. public school students, 35 percent of all students who are poor, and 43 percent of minority students. A massive survey of urban education released last year by the respected publication, Education Week, concluded that "most fourth-graders who live in U.S. cities can't read and understand a simple children's book, and most eighth-graders can't use arithmetic to solve a practical problem." Slightly more than half of big-city students are unable to complete high school in the customary four years, and many of those who do eventually graduate are ill prepared for either higher education or the workplace. </em>

<em> </em>

<em> </em>

<em>Public Agenda, a nonpartisan research organization, recently surveyed 450 employers in New York City for the New York City Partnership and Chamber of Commerce and found massive dissatisfaction with the poor preparation of students. Fully 86 percent of the bosses reported their belief that a city high school diploma is "no guarantee that the typical student has learned the basics." Only 7 percent believe that students coming from the city's public schools have the skills they need to succeed in the world of work. Employers especially fretted over students' lack of the most basic skills, citing their poor grammar, spelling, and math, their inability to write clearly or speak English well, and their poor work habits, including disorganization and lateness. Most employers think that the school system does a poor job of managing its resources, and nearly 90 percent agree that the system suffers from "too much bureaucracy." Some 95 percent believe that the system needs fundamental change, and one-third go so far as to say that it needs to be "completely rebuilt." Employers stand ready to help the schools; but in return they want higher standards, reduced bureaucracy, and accountability from them. </em>

<em> </em>

<em> </em>

<em> </em>

<em>The glaring need for remedial education on college campuses is another sign that students are graduating from high school with weak skills. At some branches of the City University of New York, as is notorious, a majority of first-year students fail to pass all three placement tests in reading, writing, and mathematics. But this is not just a New York City problem or even just a big-city problem. Nationally, about 30 percent of all first-time freshmen have to take a remedial course in basic academic skills. </em>

<em> </em>

<em> </em>

<em>Clearly, some students—recent immigrants or adults who have been out of school for several years and have returned—will need extra help to participate in higher education. But it is also clear that many young people are completing high school without getting a high school education. For everyone involved, it would be far better to g </em>

<em> </em>

<em> </em>

<em> </em>

<em>Given the ever more crucial need for a strong public school system, along with the mounting evidence of the education system's failure to respond, the clamor to change education to make it more effective for all students is intensifying. The changes needed—and some of them already are starting to happen—are of two kinds, and they complement and reinforce each other.</em>

Explanation:

6 0
3 years ago
ANSWER FAST PLZ!!!!!!!!!!!
Strike441 [17]

Answer:

A. how technology is supposed to function in a specific environment.

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