Education is shown as an essential factor of morality, sympathy, and harmony.
<h3>How is education shown as a theme in the book?</h3>
- The book shows that the education presented at school is very important for the academic growth of children, however, it is not enough.
- This is because school education is indifferent to social factors and the importance of empathy, sympathy, and social harmony.
This is because school education is indifferent to social factors and the importance of empathy, sympathy, and social harmony.
The book shows how an effective adult must have a strong academic education, but a strong social education, which is presented through conviviality and empathy between people.
You didn't show the chapters to which this question refers. This prevents me from being able to write a specific answer, but I hope the information above can help you.
More information about "To kill a mockingbird" at the link:
brainly.com/question/11985806
The best startegy to use is to group words that have important features in common (option B), as this way you can associate the meaning with other words that may be easier to memorize and then remember them all more easily.
For example, if you are trying to understand the meaning of: shocked, dismayed, astonished. You can draw a circle and put them all inside the circle; they are all synonyms, so if you know the meaning of 'shocked' which is quite common, then you know the meaning of the other two words (dismayed and astonished).
Option A is too mechanical and time-consuming. Option C is somehow useful, but there is no meaning associated with the words. Option D seems like a good idea, but is time-consuming and lengthy; it will only work if it is detailed with examples, synonyms, antonyms or any category that might be useful for remembering.
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