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vova2212 [387]
3 years ago
13

THIS IS DUE TODAY!!!! NO SCAMS PLZZ!! IF YOU CANT ANSWER DONT ANSWER!! ONLY CORRECT ANSWERS PLEASE!

English
1 answer:
IRISSAK [1]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

ast favorite subjects in school this year. Then consider your personal opinion of everything about each of those two classes except the material you're learning: the teacher, the textbooks, the classroom, the time of day, the person you sit next to, etc. Write an essay that weighs these factors against one another and that comes to a conclusion about how much these factors influence your strong positive and negative feelings about these two school subjects

Explanation:

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Which of the following statements about outlines are NOT true?
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it's the last one

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4 is correct

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are is the correct subject verb not is

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Read the following excerpt from a narrative about growing up in the Dust Bowl in the 1930s:
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D.

They help the reader feel what it would be like to be trapped inside during a dust devil.

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According to the following excerpt from a narrative about growing up in the Dust Bowl in the 1930s, the narrator describes the feeling of being in a dust storm and how uncomfortable it got. He used sensory details to make his narration.

The effect of the sensory details in this excerpt is they help the reader feel what it would be like to be trapped inside during a dust devil.

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Why it is important for a person to be aware of their own values?
Kipish [7]

Understanding our values is crucial because it guides our decision-making, motivates us to act, and maintains us focused on living the life we desire.

<h3>What role does attention play in life?</h3>

Your level of success in life will rely on how much attention you pay to it. You will succeed in life if you put all of your efforts into achieving your goals. Otherwise, you'll wind up spending time and effort on pointless activities. Focus on what's essential in life and take pictures of it.

<h3>In focus, what does it mean?</h3>

When something is addressed or its aim and nature are obvious, it is in focus. The primary concerns should remain in focus.

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4 0
1 year ago
The US government has the power to transform the lives of young people, yet people under the age of 18 cannot vote. Write an ess
borishaifa [10]

Answer:

In any case, this type of view is just a short jump away from the notion that children do not have the intellectual capacity to make voting voices and we should recall that the same argument motivated the lack of enfranchisement of women and racial minorities (and in some countries racial majorities) for decades and centuries.

The second objection is that children are unduly influenced by others. Perhaps they are influenced by the media. Of course, on that score, it appears that adults are equally susceptible and the fact that children might watch different media may be a good thing for democracy. Perhaps teachers will have an undue influence. That may be worrisome but there are worse outcomes and, in any case, the political diversity of teachers is probably high enough that no single teacher could hold sway over large groups of children.

Certainly there is less risk of that than some celebrity holding sway over large groups of adults. Finally, perhaps parents will have too much influence. Again, wasn't that the reason why women were denied a vote -- on the claim that their husbands would have that influence when, more likely, it was the fear that they wouldn't that caused resistance to change.

The third objection is that very young children can't frame the issues or understand what the candidates are proposing. So if we push things to the limit, it is hard to imagine babies, toddlers or children who cannot read being able to physically vote. But this is no argument to wait until they are 18 (when they can drink as well as vote).  This is an argument to wait until they are 8 or perhaps pass some basic civics test.

Consider the upside of enfranchising children. For starters, there would be engagement on a whole set of issues to do with them and also with families as a result of allowing children to vote. Now some have proposed that perhaps a child's vote can be held by their parents as a proxy until they are of age (see this discussion by Miles Corak on Demeny voting). It is true that this will bring family issues more attention but, of course, children may differ in their views on a number of issues from their parents.

But more importantly, by giving children the vote, they will be engaged early on and more interested in policy issues so as to formulate their own views. Democracy flourishes on engagement as much as it does on who gets to vote. Children may well be more likely to take this right seriously and also to take a longer-term perspective on many issues. That was certainly the case with my own children when I gave them a voice in my own voting.

When it comes down to it, if you are sceptical about all this, when you look into your heart as an adult, aren't you worried that by giving children the vote, that policies will change in a whole set of ways you don't want? That children won't share your views and that politicians will respond to that by acting in ways you don't want them to act. Perhaps you have an image of candy subsidies although you might want to check on that when you look at what happens with sugar in most countries!

And if that is really your objection then what you are saying is that you don't want a group to have the vote precisely because it will give them political power and reduce your own. And that is about as anti-democratic a view as is it possible to have.

8 0
4 years ago
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