Day 1: Claims: 1.) The schools in America are failing. 2.) If we don’t start working to improving them now‚ they will just continue on in this downward spiral. Grounds: In Alabama 18% of 8th graders are proficient in math‚ 14% in Mississippi‚ 40% in New Jersey‚ 35% in Connecticut‚ 40% in New York‚ 26% in Arizona‚ and 24% in California. These statistics further prove the claim that many schools in America are doing well below average work in teaching and preparing students to get jobs and be
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Melody is your classmate who will be attending the “twc” course next semester. She is all excited about the class‚ “finally‚ I will learn to create a radical invention like the iPod. Only radical inventions are successful and worthy of commercialization. I can then make lots of money along the way and become rich.” Do you agree with this comment? Which part do you agree with and which don’t you? Why and why not? Give examples to support ur ans. First of all‚ the iPod is not a radical innovation
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established case will be Apple’s Iphone.Apple continues to upgrade and improve on the core concept of Iphone and its very own IOS system which gains popularity even after so many years. With Iphone 3 evolving to Iphone 5‚ the system and components barely changes with only slight improvement on camera definition and design. The author has also stated that radical innovation is difficult to adapt by established firms as the usefulness of existing capabilities is destroyed. While it may be true that established
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Industrial-Technological Revolutions: I – Subsistence farming Manufacturing (Division of labor) II – Mass production (Rise of machines) III – Services & information (Artificial intelligence) Industrial Revolution I - 18th – 19th century (1750~1850) - Steam engines Pumps for coal mines - Manufacturing Division of labor Specialization Increase efficiency ‘Cottage industries’ KIV: Trading - Train transport (e.g. Steam train)‚ heavy industries - Rise of the middle classes Political
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Waiting For Mahatma Sriram is a high school graduate who lives with his grandmother in Malgudi‚ the fictional Southern Indian town in which much of Narayan’s fiction takes place. Sriram is attracted to Bharati‚ a girl of his age who is active in Mahatma Gandhi’s Quit India movement‚ and he becomes an activist himself. He then gets involved with anti-British extremists‚ causing much grief to his grandmother. Sriram’s underground activity takes place in the countryside‚ an area alien to him‚ and
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Waiting for the telegram What will we reminisce and regret when we age and become an elder? Will we be lonely and ill? Or will we be happy and appreciate the small things in life? The Short Story ”Waiting for the Telegram” by Alan Bennett is about Violet‚ an elderly resident in a nursing home‚ who due to a stroke has trouble remembering names and words. Throughout the story Violet talks about the present and reminisces about the past‚ and the short story is therefore elucidating how it is to age
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The play Waiting for Godot is basically a play were nothing happens. It’s a play about waiting for this person Godot. The play deals with existentialism and depending on your interpretation it deals with religion‚ god and duality. I feel that the play speaks about the brain versus body and how although they may not work well together they may be happier and better on their own you cannot go without the other‚ they can’t be separated and still function. The basis of the play is that you have these
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passage [ refer to your photocopied text Start- pg 16. Estragon: (Violently.) I’m hungry. / End pg 18. Estragon: Nothing to be done. (He proffers the remains of the carrot to Vladimir.) Like to finish it?] and how it reflects the concerns in Waiting for Godot. Waiting for Godot presents a bleak caricature of the human condition in order to examine more closely the key theme of existentialism. This short passage is symptomatic of the rest of the play‚ effectively condensing its concerns about human existence
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when we least expect it. That’s how it is on this bitch of an earth.” This is a quote from one of the most prominent works of the “Theatre of the Absurd” category‚ Samuel Becketts’ ‘Waiting For Godot’. In Queensland Theatre Company’s version‚ the play is about two characters named Vladimir and Estragon‚ who are waiting expectantly for a man named Godot‚ although he never comes. This play is set in a wide plain of bush‚ with a single dead tree in the middle. It is based around false hope and deceit
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the action of those characters. Waiting for Godot is a prime example of such plays‚ where a character‚ Godot‚ never appears but is the basis of the play. The absence of Godot in Waiting for Godot‚ affects the characters’ actions and the development of the theme‚ that society is characterized by inaction and the ability lacked by individuals to communicate effectively. Godot is an individual that Didi and Gogo are waiting for on a park bench. This act of waiting leads to the conversation between
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