Closely read, critique, and offer revision and editing suggestions for all of th

Closely read, critique, and offer revision and editing suggestions for all of th

Closely read, critique, and offer revision and editing suggestions for all of the drafts. Offer line-by-line suggestions in parentheses, highlights, different text color, italic, or bold typeface, to point out the specific areas that require revision. Add notes to the selections if necessary instead of just highlighting text. Respond to more than editing suggestions; look at story, look at plot, look at character, and discuss how they relate to the story. Do not add comments to the documents, instead write them directly into the text in parentheses, highlights, italic, or bold typeface.
Additionally, write a summation with your assessment of the strong and weak components for each of the submissions you review.
Responses must not devolve to generic praise (e.g.: “great job, Andrew”) but it would be great to add some places where you really liked the work. Again, the purpose of this workshop is for you and your classmates to offer detailed feedback regarding what works/does not work in the original pieces of writing. Use tools from the reading in Stein’s work as you critique.
If neccessary us evidence from “Stein on Writing: A Master Editor Shares His Craft, Techniques, and Strategies” by Sol Stein to assert claims.

Produce an analytical summary of Trinh T. Minh-ha’s Not You/Like You or Edward S

Produce an analytical summary of Trinh T. Minh-ha’s Not You/Like You or Edward S

Produce an analytical summary of Trinh T. Minh-ha’s Not You/Like You or Edward Said’s Orientalism using the following guidelines ( feel free to work in groups with other colleagues from the course):
This is an exercise designed to help make summaries more analytical.  Part of the challenge is to work with a text that is dense, and which forces you to read slowly and very carefully.  Here is what you will do:
1. Read the text once through.
2. Read again, taking careful notes.
3. Using your notes to prompt questions and observations, identify key terms, context, and purpose of this text.  Use passage-based, focused free writing to help dig into the text even more deeply. 
4. Write a summary of the text.  Here are some of the principles of good, analytical summaries:
Take your text as a problem to solve.  What is it about?  What are its key arguments?  What are its examples and conclusions?  Imagine that you are writing for readers who have read the essays (although they won’t have the pages in front of them).  You will need to take time to present and discuss examples from the text.  Your job is to help your readers figure out what the essays say.  You get the chance to take the lead and be the teacher.  You should feel free to acknowledge that you don’t understand certain sections even as you write about them.     
So, how do you write about something that you don’t completely understand?  Here’s a suggestion.  When you have completed your summary, read it over and treat it as a draft.  Ask questions like these:  What have I left out?  What did I ignore or finesse?  Revise by adding discussion of some of the very sections you don’t understand — you can, that is, be cautious and tentative; feel free to admit finding your text hard to read.  You don’t have to master this text.  You do, however, need to see what you can make of it.
Save your work and post to the discussion board.

Please select one of the following prompts for your paper: 1) How is language a

Please select one of the following prompts for your paper:
1) How is language a

Please select one of the following prompts for your paper:
1) How is language a virus? What are some examples?
2) How is language powerful? What are some examples?
3)How has language changed over the past five thousand years? What are some examples?
3 pages double spaced, not including references
need 4 sources in total, these 2 must be used:  
Bolhuis JJ, Tattersall I, Chomsky N, Berwick RC (2014) How Could Language Have Evolved? PLoS Biol 12(8): e1001934. Doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1001934:
https://chomsky.info/20140826/.
Gaventa, Johnathan. Foucault: Power is Everywhere. Online 2003:

Foucault: power is everywhere

Compose a paragraph explaining what informed your definition of “love.” In other

Compose a paragraph explaining what informed your definition of “love.” In other

Compose a paragraph explaining what informed your definition of “love.” In other words, what does “love” mean to you and what, throughout your life, informed that definition? Try to think beyond just romantic or even familial love–what does it mean to love a thing, to love your friends, to love someone who might not know you exist (e.g. celebrities). Your post should be   Minimum: 200 words.

Why Did He or She Do It? For your research paper, I want you to think about a pe

Why Did He or She Do It?
For your research paper, I want you to think about a pe

Why Did He or She Do It?
For your research paper, I want you to think about a person who has been in the news who is not famous or infamous (so no big-time criminals here), but someone who garnered some brief public attention – and news coverage – because he or she did something that society doesn’t particularly approve of. (It doesn’t necessarily mean the person is in the wrong, but there was some resistance as a result of her or his actions.) In other words, this person ran into some challenges, some conflicts. What’s more, because this individual generated enough attention, and subsequently some investigation into his/her background, you get a sense of this person’s history.

so basically this will be my final.  Writing From Your Inner Voice: Rhetoric– A

so basically this will be my final. 
Writing From Your Inner Voice: Rhetoric– A

so basically this will be my final. 
Writing From Your Inner Voice: Rhetoric– At least two quotes from two of the essays from education.
6 sources from the library data base. You need to use a variety of of sources from the library data base. You will need to use quotes from these sources or paraphrase from them. From my college library I’ll send the link
I’ll copy and paste the essay that was done a month ago on this subject please try and improve it.
Ruiz, Nathan
Professor Surenyan
English 101
6/18/24
Jonathan Kozol has been an activist fighting for the rights of oppressed children in American education systems for more than fifty years and has given a voice to these systemized abuses. Reviewing Kozol’s observations based on his career as a teacher and social activist, the author learned about impoverished and racist schooling and teaching institutions. That being said, I completely concur with Jonathan Kozol in his assertion that education in America has not progressed much in the aspect of equality, especially with the differences in funding and resources, which are categorized by race and economic status and the outcomes that have emerged from the set schools.
There are various causes and effects of educational inequity among the population. Still, one of the greatest is the disproportional and rather meager funding that schools currently receive from the state, which greatly depends on the property and tax capacities of the school jurisdictions. As Kozol bluntly states, “We still, after all these years, we still are running an “apartheid” education system in which funding for schools and resources for schools are savagely unequal” (The Brainwaves Video Anthology 0:46-1:04). Schools in well-off white suburban neighborhood receive a lot of property taxes. They are, therefore, able to attract the right teachers, have clean classrooms and facilities, and provide the right environment, curriculum, and co-curricular activities. At the same time, schools in concentrated low-income, urban areas, those with high populations of black and Latino students, suffer from crumbling buildings, outdated curricula, and limited resources. This creates two tiers of schools that Kozol refers to as “a bitterly unequal system—separate and unequal.”
In addition to the issue of funding disparity, public schools in America have been observed to have more racial and socioeconomic segregation in the recent past. Again, the idea was never effectively fulfilled throughout the Civil Rights movement and subsequent school desegregation of the 1950s-1960s. Kozol laments that “our public schools, by and large, are more segregated racially today than they were back in 1968, the year that Dr. King was taken from us” (The Brainwaves Video Anthology 2:22-2:32). Schools today often reflect the de facto segregation of neighborhoods, with students of color disproportionately concentrated in high-poverty urban schools, while white and Asian students are overrepresented in more advantaged suburban schools. Research has consistently shown that integration benefits all students, yet most American children attend schools segregated by race and class.
These disparities in school funding and student bodies align with troubling gaps in educational achievement and attainment. Children from low-income schools and other people of color prove to have lower mean standardized tests compared to their wealthier and white counterparts. They also get lower levels of completion for high school, college entrance, and postsecondary education. As William Serrata, President of El Paso Community College, warns, “If you look at from the depths of the Great Recession in 2008 until pre-pandemic, we saw about 12 million new jobs that were created in the nation. And of those 12 million new jobs, about 99 percent went to individuals with degrees and certificates. Only about 80,000 jobs nationally went to individuals with a high school diploma or less… My fears are that the pandemic will wipe those gains out” (Brookings Institution 10:08-10:36). If education is the great equalizer, disparities in access to quality schooling entrench societal stratification.
The entrenched inequalities in America’s education system can be further illuminated by examining the problematic premises underlying some attempts at reform. For example, the No Child Left Behind Act was fundamentally about maintaining social control and producing a compliant populace, not truly equipping all children for success (Teachings in Education). John Taylor Gatto argues that “school is expected to accelerate natural selection by tagging the unfit so clearly that’s what all those little humiliations from first grade on that’s what all the posted list of ranked grades are about so clearly that the unfit will drop from the reproduction sweepstakes” (44connected 5:09-5:31). By this logic, an overemphasis on standardized testing and sorting students serves to reinforce, rather than remedy, educational inequities along the lines of race and class.
The inequalities in America’s education system documented by Jonathan Kozol decades ago remain very much evident today. A child’s Zip code and family background still predict the funding schools get, enrolment of students and eventually their educational performances and life chances. It has become more important than ever to ensure that education delivers on its potential as a means to overcome structural marginalization at a time when income inequality is on the rise. Finally, it is the responsibility of the policymakers and the public to address the discrepancies in education through proportional and fair funding systems for schools, integration of schools and students, and giving due support to the needful and deserving learners. As Kozol argues, until we create a system of “equitable” education, “we will be an incomplete democracy” (The Brainwaves Video Anthology 1:48-1:53). America’s children deserve no less than the fair opportunity for high-quality education, regardless of race or class.
Works Cited
Brookings Institution. “How the COVID-19 Pandemic Has Impacted Higher Education.” YouTube, 17 Mar. 2021, www.youtube.com/watch?v=wh2TCLoEzkk. Accessed 18 June 2024.
Teachings in Education. “No Child Left Behind: Explained & Summarized.” YouTube, 19 Sept. 2016, www.youtube.com/watch?v=0–2nhsDorg. Accessed 18 June 2024.
The Brainwaves Video Anthology. “Jonathan Kozol – Savage Inequalities.” YouTube, 23 Dec. 2015, www.youtube.com/watch?v=f6wCsAXmjdI. Accessed 18 June 2024.
44connected. “John Taylor Gatto – the Purpose of Schooling.” YouTube, 30 Mar. 2012, www.youtube.com/watch?v=eeEWPbTad_Q. Accessed 18 June 2024.

The book I chose for this essay is Number The Stars- Lois Lowry. Select one book

The book I chose for this essay is Number The Stars- Lois Lowry. Select one book

The book I chose for this essay is Number The Stars- Lois Lowry. Select one book that you read this semester and in about 500-750 words analyze its portrayal of gender roles. How does this work challenge or conform to traditional gender roles seen in children’s literature?  Consider the impact of this portrayal on the book’s audience, both at the time of its publication and today.  Being sure to cite, use specific quotations and summaries from the book you select and the textbook to support your ideas.  Specific details from the textbook are required in this analysis.  At least three quotations from the textbook must be correctly and appropriately integrated.  This essay must use correct MLA 9 in-text and Works Cited citations. 

Choose three of the genres defined in Module Notes area: Narrative Essays Links

Choose three of the genres defined in Module Notes area:
Narrative Essays Links

Choose three of the genres defined in Module Notes area:
Narrative Essays Links to an external site.
Expository Essays Links to an external site.
Lab Reports Links to an external site.
Literature Reviews Links to an external site. (Scroll to the bottom of the page and click on “Sample Literature Review” to download.)
Case Studies Links to an external site.
Business Reports Links to an external site. (Scroll down the page and download the business plans by clicking on the orange “download” buttons.)
Care Plans Links to an external site. (Scroll to the last page of the document for a sample care plan.)
Complete the Genre Analysis Worksheet Download Genre Analysis Worksheet on each of the three genres you have chosen. When you complete the worksheet, write a short introduction (no more than a few paragraphs) to include with your submission. Be sure to include the introduction in the same file as your worksheet. The introduction should be placed at the top of the worksheet.
In your introduction, answer the following questions:
Why did you choose the three genres you chose?
What did you learn from analyzing these different genres?
How can you carry this information forward into different genres and different writing assignments in college and beyond?
Be sure to check your work and correct any spelling or grammatical errors before you upload it.