In “Top 10 Skills Children Learn from the Arts” Valerie Strauss first discusses why teaching arts promote important life skills in children. Strauss explains why teachers need to be trained in arts, not only the normal science, math, engineering, and technology. She then begins to list skills that children learn from studying the arts. The list Strauss uses is one from the author Lisa Phillips, in her book called “The Artistic Edge: 7 Skills Children Need to Succeed in an Increasingly Right World
Bailey Diamond In the article “Catharine Beecher and Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Architects of Female Power” by author Valerie Gill, Ms. Gill attempts to bridge the gap between what appears to be two powerful women of their time with two totally different opinions of the American woman and the type of life they should lead. The author points out the obvious differences of opinions in the writings of the two women, who are related by the way, and the different era in which they write. Catharine Beecher
What diagnosis has been given to the individual? The client, Valerie, has been diagnosed with Paranoid Schizophrenia. Background: Paranoid Schizophrenia can come on quick suddenly and disrupt a person’s normal daily functions. People suffering from paranoid schizophrenia prominently experience delusions and hallucinations. Some individuals can be predisposed to schizophrenia due to cortical atrophy hypothesis or the dopamine hypothesis. Cortical atrophy hypothesis believes that the patient’s
shooting. Valerie Leftman's boyfriend Nick was the shooter, she had no idea that he was going to shoot up the school but she was implicated in the crime because she made a hate list of everything her and Nick both hated. Nick had taken his victims off of the list. Valerie was wounded trying to stop him and then Nick took his own life. After the summer Valerie had to come back for her senior year and face the guilt and move on with her life. The most relatable character in the novel is Valerie. “The
named Valerie. She lived with her mom, dad, and younger brother Frankie. Valerie also had a boyfriend named Nick, and they had typical high school problems. Nick was bullied because of how poor he was, and Valerie was also bullied because she dressed goth and was different than the other girls. The bullies called her, “Sister Death.” Out of anger Nick and Valerie therapeutically created a “Hate List” which was a list of names of people who made them angry, jealous, and scared. Little did Valerie know
surrounding bullying, school shootings, and recovering after trauma. It tells the stogy of Valerie, a high school girl who is horribly bullied at school, and her boyfriend Nick who experiences similar abuse. Together they compile a list of things, and people, who they hate. Taking Valerie by complete surprise, Nick opens fires in their school, killing many of those on the list. Brown focuses her novel on Valerie and her struggling mental state. It portrays Valerie’s journey from psychological deterioration
I spoke with Ms. Valerie on July 31, 2017, at 6:58 p.m over the phone. Ms. Valerie stated that the client Bryce Linder verbalized that an advocate Leslie McKeown slapped him in the face. Then later she stated that the advocate Catina Hampton slapped him on the left side of his face during a group session, held at the HCAP office Located at 4120 Directors Row Suite D. Ms. Valerie stated that Bryce informed her that Catina verbalized to the client, “I have to slap you because you were being disrespectful
story of girl named Valerie that made a terrible mistake. Valerie lives with her dysfunctional family; her judgy mother, cheating father and lost brother, Frankie. In school, Valerie also has it hard because she gets bullied and made fun. That comes to an end when her boyfriend, Nick, decides, to shoot up the school and kill the people on the now infamous “Hate List” they compiled together, including himself. The majority of the events in the book revolve around how Valerie struggles to get her
liberating journey of heroine, Valerie. Adolescents today, similar to Valerie have a yearning for independence. They desire the freedom to do as they please and make their own choices. The film displays this obsession through the protagonist Valerie. Hardwicke is able to connect with today’s modern audience through the portrayal of Valerie as a heroine who escapes her father’s restrictions and embarks on her life of freedom, with her werewolf lover, Peter. Valerie inspires adolescents with her
Valerie continued to go through the ecstasy filled spams of her orgasm until she felt her body reach its limit. Moments before Zander released his seed into her body, Valerie erupted, spraying her own sexual juices into the carpet. “Fuck,” Valerie moaned as her brother let out that all familiar cry of pleasure and filled her body with his warm seed. The feeling of her brother’s warm seed erupting into her womb filled Valerie with a sense of bliss as her body continued to spasm around the thick meat