30 minutes : I will introduce flash cards with letters to Shabbit and will ask him which ones he knows. I will put the known cards aside. I will tell him a few other letters he doesn’t know. I will take together the taught new letters and the letters he told me he knew, I will reverse them and ask him to pick one and to tell me its name and its sound and to try to tell me a word that begins with this sound.
30 minutes : I will ask Shabbit to play with different applications I’ve downloaded from the App store :
Shabbit told me he really enjoys playing with smart phones so I hope he will enjoy these learning games too.
30 minutes : we will play an oral game. I will say in my head the letters of the alphabet. At some point Shabit will stop
Have you ever wondered how demons try and lead us away from God and begin to sin? In the Screwtape Letters C.S Lewis shows us how a demon named Screwtape guides his nephew Wormwood on how to make sure their “patient” stays away from Christianity. The Screwtape Letters is an Epistolary novel that was written during World War II. In this novel God is considered “The Enemy” and Satan is “Our Father.” The main characters in this novel are Wormwood, Screwtape, and the patient. Screwtape is a demon who writes his nephew Wormwood from hell. Screwtape teaches his nephew the different steps of keeping his “patient” away from God. Humans are called patients by demons because they are trying to lead humans away from God. In this novel we don’t really
Overall, I am a devoted and well-rounded student, making me a perfect candidate for National Honor Society. Not only do I posses the four tenets, character, scholarship, leadership and service, but I am also constantly working harder and striving to be better in all four regions. National Honor Society will help me reach my goal in becoming a better student and person. In addition, being a member of National Honor Society will allow me to be an example for other students, just like the members had been for me. In conclusion, I should be a member of National Honor Society because I demonstrate excellence in all four tenets of National Honor Society.
My name is Taylor Howell and I attend Sanford High school in Hockessin, Delaware. I have just recently read one of your top novels Foul Trouble. Foul Trouble was such a suspenseful book but yet a life lesson teaching novel that I would encourage any teenager to read. Foul Trouble was about a star basketball player named Terrell Jamerson. He is one of the best in the nation for high school basketball with his teammate and best friend Danny Wilcox who is also shining with him but feels not appreciated. They try to get through the popularity and the gates of being caught with narcotics this could make Terrell and Danny not eligible to be recruited by colleges and change their lives for the worst. However, Danny is caught in the shadows of Terrell and it makes Danny feel as though he is not as important as Terrell on the court. I was looking for a book that would teach life lessons and also have a very vigorous climax and foul trouble was the perfect match. I would never have thought that Foul Trouble would have that powerful of an effect on me as it did and how that one false step could change your whole career.
Martin Luther King Jr. is a well-known icon of the civil rights movement. Throughout his time leading the movement, he wrote two of some of his best works, “Letter from Birmingham Jail” and “I Have a Dream,” which was a speech he presented on August 28, 1963 in Washington D.C. The letter on the other hand addressed his wrongful jailing in Birmingham, Alabama and also the treatment of African Americans. His speech is one of the most important speeches in America and he is mainly identified by it alone. These two works contain Logos and Pathos that add life and understanding to his writing, and overall changes the way readers and listeners alike think about the civil rights movement as a whole.
Dr. King uses different argument tools to persuade and move his audience, including the use of logos and pathos. These tools are used to convince the audience of a certain point of view as well as stir the audience’s emotions. Dr. King is a very powerful speaker and uses many tools to further defend his argument. While Dr. King uses both of these tools, I believe that he uses more of one tool than that of another. These tools are also similar in adding meaning to the words, but different in the way they add this meaning.
The letters to Birmingham puts in my in the mind of the letters sent church in Corinth by Paul. Just as word reach Paul in that same manner so did it with Dr. King which in both instance they both stopped to take a moment and address the situation at hand. ( 1 Corinthians, KJV) In each letter the meaning behind them was to bring awareness and understanding to the people around them. Letters to Corinth was written because the people in the community had fallen in serious moral dilemma. ( https://www.biblegateway.com/ ) This is where I feel these two come together the letter are here to give a platform the writers in orer for them to bring salvation.
The Screwtape Letters is an inverted approach to Christianity that parallels the ideals in Ignatian spirituality. In a discussion of hell as a means of business, an Uncle, Screwtape, writes letters of psychological insight for his nephew, Wormwood, to coax his subject into turning towards Hell. Though C.S. Lewis writes from the perspective of demons, this organically highlights the truths of Christianity. Screwtape pushes Wormwood to have the patient discover evil in every dimension of his life as the patient begins to become a follower of Christianity. To note, the Christian God is labeled as the “Enemy” whereas the Devil is labeled as “Our Father Below”. In order to turn the subject away
Martin Luther King Jr. was one of the highest regarded civil rights activists in the mid-1900s. His two texts, “I Have a Dream” and “Letter From Birmingham Jail”, were greatly influential on the fight for African American rights. The way that King was able to persuade his audience, and preserve his their attention, was through using logos and pathos. Logos use a clear line of reasoning supported by evidence, and pathos use charged language in order to prod at the listener’s emotions. In his two pieces mentioned above, King uses these appeals in different areas and to different extremes.
It is unfortunate that we will be unable to meet on April 8th. Will you be in the states on April 5th and if so could we possibly meet on April 5th instead of April 8th? If no, April 8th is fine by me, and I will take the NJ transit train from Newark to Princeton.Kind regards,
I've been accepted into the graduate program Human Service-Social Service (Liberty University). However, I'm in need of fifteen-thousand and two-hundred twenty-five dollars. The funds will be for college tuitions and textbooks.
I am writing this letter not to make you feel sorry for me and other lower class Jews, but to make you aware of the current conditions we are living in. I am not writing this letter as an expert on Jewish issues but am writing to you as someone who has some experience in dealing with the problems we as Jewish people face. In general, I want to discuss how something needs to change in society in order for lower class Jews to succeed and one possible solution to these issues we face is the adaption of Theodor Herzl’s Jewish
Be it Charades, Monopoly, or Scrabble; there is no game they won’t try in over the weekends with their friends.
To begin with, I asked him why he would want to use technology in learning. He eagerly answered, “it’s fun.” He later stated that he loves to play games and learn at the same time and that using technology was more exciting, interesting and more vivid than learning using books, expo-boards, and paper.
I chose this slogan because all of these things describe and illustrate Africa perfectly. The first letter, A, has the word Axum. Axum was a very important kingdom in East Africa. They took over the Kush Kingdom and had a civil war about religions that led to the kingdom eventually becoming Christian. The next letter, F, is desertification. This is an important piece of the Sahara Desert. The desert used to be a savanna until desertification where the fertile land became dry. This led to many other things like drought and migration. The next letter, R, is probably the most important because it is trade. Trade is a huge part of African history. They traded things like gold, ivory, salt, and animal hides. Each kingdom had trade but Ghana, called
Video games can be used as instructional tools as well. They have positive elements and add value; they create a micro world of their own. The players act based on natural tendencies towards learning. Therefore, learning occurs while playing (Rosas et al., 2003).