I evaluate a student's request and grant extensions based on the following criteria:
1. Their inclinations. Do they always arrive late or procrastinate?
2. When they inquire. Do they request an extension the day of, the day before, or three days before the event? This shows me whether they are well-organized or just looking for an excuse.
3. Their action plan. Do they want a week's worth of work with no specifics, or do they tell me how many pages they need to complete?
Ones, at least excellent teachers, simply want students to learn. Teachers also have a class of kids that can be swayed by a single decision. Being accommodating with one student may require me to be flexible with all of them. This may have an impact on the overall quality of schooling. Teachers will most likely grant you an extension if you are sincere and committed to studying.
Here's an example of something I'd like to hear:
"Hello, Ms. Naomi," I said. Last week, you assigned us a report, and I've been working on it. I became quite interested in the subject and looked into the perspectives of this and that author. It took longer than I anticipated. I'd like to do a thorough job on the report, so a two-day extension would be OK. I have all of the materials, but I need time to organize them, and I estimate that researching this one other author with a different perspective on the matter will take many hours. I understand that this may cause you inconvenience by delaying your grading schedule, therefore I will do my best to make it as simple as possible for you to grade." - I'd offer this person a week's grace period.
Note: This includes your passion for the assignment, what you’ve been doing until now, detailed reason of why you need the extension, an exact time of extension, and consideration of how this extension would affect me.
I hope this helps you
:)
Answer:
1) i dont have a fav song, i like a lot. one of my fav is, "something good by max + syd"
2) blue
3) dont have one
4) fall
5) playing guitar and making poems [aswell as reading]
6) SUSHI
7) 2 dogs, one cat
8) a chef
9) Friday
10) nightime lol
11) fall months or december
120.
How do I know this?
120/3=60 & 120/5=24
Information that can be transformed into evidence is when it can be used
to support or refute something. Evidence usually means that it supports
or refutes a case or claim by someone. So in order for the information
to be used as evidence it must be useful one way or another.