Implications for ELs In the article “Differentiated Instruction for English Language Learners” which was written by Karen Ford the author discusses how teachers can best support English Language Learners (ELL) through differentiated instruction. The author explains that differentiated instruction is an approach to teaching in which teachers and/or educators teach all students the same material just in different ways. “The goal of differentiated instruction is to create learning opportunities that
2150 09 October 2024 Constitution Essay The English Bill of Rights 1689, Articles of Confederation 1777, and the Constitution of Pennsylvania 1776, are all extremely important documents that represent monumental limits of government power. The English Bill of Rights not only protected individual rights, but it also created a more reliable government that limited the king's power, strengthened the Parliament, and promoted regular elections. The Articles of Confederation emphasized how important it
There is always that one person who is constantly copying off of someone’s homework or asking for their homework for the reason that they are too lazy to complete it themselves. What they are performing is plagiarism and it is not tolerable. Plagiarism is when someone copies or uses another person’s work without giving credit to them. Plagiarizing work is similar to people lifting weights and conditioning, but not eating clean. Countless people plagiarize since they forget to finish their work or
On November 13th, 1969, Spiro Agnew, who was the Vice President at the time, gave the speech, Television News Coverage, about how news producers are becoming too powerful (Bibliography.com.) To successfully inform his audience, he uses many rhetorical strategies to keep everyone engaged and attentive. Agnew delivered an exceptional speech by using multiple techniques such as analogies, anaphoras, parallelism, and rhetorical questions to justify this problem to his audience. To help his audience
Joan Didion’s “Los Angeles Notebook” is an essay that highlights the deeply mechanistic view of human behavior by using images that are both enticing, yet horrifying at the same time. Her audience is broader than the people of Los Angles, who she discusses in articulate detail. Being that her audience is generally aimed at people who are concerned about humanity and the way people operate together in certain scenarios. There is an eerie sense to this piece, as the subject is the hot winds known
it’s about Juli and the newspaper article on the sycamore tree being cut down. “Granddad, you don’t understand that girl is a royal pain. She’s a show-off, she’s a know-it-all, and she is pushy beyond belief... She’s been stalking me since the second grade!... When I looked up, he was sitting there holding out the newspaper to me. ‘Read this’ he said. ‘Without prejudice...’ I shoved the newspaper in
The history of Greek tragedy shows common themes of fate versus the choices people make, also known as free will. They also show dramatic irony. The reason most Greek tragedies exemplify these themes is due to their beliefs in the Gods of that era such as Apollo, Hermes, and Athena, etc. who would often give prophecies on the fates of people. Particularly, in Oedipus the King, there was a prophecy from Apollo that in the end was revealed to have come true. The presence of whether fate or free will
Impacts on Teenagers 3.1 Harm Caused by Teenage Magazines Most teenage girls read magazines more mature than their age, these magazines contain advertisements and articles about relationships and sex. Previous studies have shown that magazine pictures affected them. The American Academy of Pediatrics had distributed a questionnaire to about 550 girls aged from eleven to eighteen. Nearly half of the girls responded
INTRODUCTION Horse racing is an equestrian performance sport, involving two or more race horeses with jockeys (primarily as a profession) racing on the same distance for competition. The end is to identify which of horses is the fastest over a set course or distance. The rulse are prety much the same like in thebeging of racing. HISTORY Already in ancient times were horse racing with riders or carts popular spectacle, extended all over the world: Roman, United Kingdom and Greece as well as in
Miller’s use of rhetorical strategies is used to describe the audience's viewpoint during real-life time events through the fictionalized story of the Salem in which it demonstrates witch trials in Massachusetts Bay Colony during the 1692-3 in which were the same situation. The Crucible, written by Arthur Miller, was written during the late 40s and the early 50s illustrates the effects of paranoia during the “Red Scare”. Paranoia can make people alter their future outcomes with their actions when
Prior to the Constitution the Articles of Confederation had been the law of the land since the Revolutionary War. They proved weak and inefficient and a new governing document was needed. The drafters of the Constitution studied past texts of philosophy and government in order to create their ideal government. Although, the creators of the Constitution were influenced by many previous documents the most influential documents were the Articles of Confederation, the English Bill of Rights, and the Magna
The English Bill of Rights derived from Great Britain, and was passed by Parliament in 1689; due to James II’s unjustifiable actions to “subvert and extirpate the Protestant religion and the laws and liberties of this kingdom”, the English Bill of Rights was established to declare rights to citizens of Great Britain, and allow William and Mary to reign (“Bill of Rights 1689”). Correspondingly, the English Bill of Rights is in enact today just like the U
with the English tyranny and the more current issues with the articles of confederation, our country’s ruling became a heavily debated topic. The main fear of the anti-federalists was that the national government would have too much control preventing the people from expressing their rights. The federalists saw the faults in the Articles of Confederation and knew there had to be more of a national control. During a meeting of which the twelve states discussed how to improve the Articles and entirely
The United States had a problem: the country was only about a decade old and the Articles of Confederation, created in 1781 to provide a basis for government, were not working. The country needed a new solution. That solution that the Founding Fathers came up with was the Constitution of the United States, which with the addition of the Bill of Rights, has been the basis of government since it was written in 1787. Since its writing, the Constitution has influenced the development of similar works
David E. Vandercoy’s 1994 article, “The History of the Second Amendment,” appeared originally as 28 Val. L. Rev. 1007-1039 in Valparaiso University Law Review. Long overlooked, the Second Amendment has become the entity of some study and much discussion. The United States is the first country of its kind because of strong minded men and women who fought against all odds David E. Vandercoy (1994) addresses the history of the Second Amendment and attempt to define its original intent; not suggesting
with independent powers and responsibilities. The usual consists of division into an executive, a legislature, and a judiciary.” The founding fathers wrote about the Separation of powers in the Constitution. The website seventhcoalition.org says, “ Article I,
to discussing each section I will outline the successes and failures of the Articles of Confederation. After fighting a war with an overly restrictive and powerful federal government in the English monarchy America wanted the complete opposite from its own federal government. In this desperate attempt to not create another England the States underestimated the need for a strong centralized federal government. The Articles of Confederation was first adopted
The Articles of Confederation, first adopted in 1781, represented the former colonist’s first attempt to establish a new government after the Revolutionary War. Some of the problems Americans faced after the Revolutionary War were problems with governmental debt that remained when the war was over. Soon Americans started to find disadvantages to the Articles of Confederation, which they considered changes that could possibly improve the economic strengths of the nation, allowing the composition of
Adopted in 1777, the Articles of Confederation was the first government of the United States. By 1787 the weaknesses of the government under the Articles had become clear. A convention was held in Philadelphia during the summer of 1787. While originally planned merely to revise the Articles of Confederation, the convention eventually adopted an entirely new plan: the Constitution. Delegates worked to settle differences over representation and slavery. Incorporating ideas from English law, the Enlightenment
I am going to write about how the Articles of confederation was revised, American democracy was made. I am also going to talk about the founding fathers who made it possible. There were two ideas that influenced the constitution. The first idea was weakened by Articles and confederation. The congress couldn’t collect any taxes, they couldn’t amend the rules, there were 13 Independent nations, there wasn’t any Judicial system, no executives, and there was only one house of the legislative. To solve