Each School type has it's own unique benefits and challenges;
If you are interested in college schools you can consider these categories:
- Dream schools: which are colleges where your academic credentials fall in the lower end or below.
- Target schools: where your academic credentials fall within the school's average range for the recently class that is accepted.
- Safety schools: where your academic credentials exceed the range for any average first-year student.
Or if you're about Secondary, High School or so, they can be classified in 2 major types:
- Public Schools: which are universal (available to everyone) and they are funded and controlled by the government.
- Private Schools: which are not funded or operated by federal, state or local governments.
Among Public Schools we can include:
Magnet schools, Charter Schools, Urban Schools, Rural Schools
and High Needs Schools.
And among Private Schools we can include
Military schools and Boarding schools.
Answer: B. One's endless hunger
Explanation:
In this poem titled "<em>The Coming of Night"</em>, the poet, Linda Pastan alludes to the end of life and the acceptance of it because a time will come when we will have to stop acting in a certain way and just accept that it is time to leave the world.
She speaks of how humans will lose not only the feeling of being ambitious but the endless hunger to acquire and conquer more as well by relating these to lights and flames that will go out or be extinguished.
Answer:
1. allows the narrator to exaggerate
Explanation:
Authorial reticence is lack of clear conclusion or opinions about an event. It allows the narrator to exaggerate and escape the judgement. The readers does not prefer authorial reticence as there is absence of clear judgement. There author can include fantasies and magics which will end up readers concluding things their own way. It leaves readers in the state of uncertainty and clear conclusion is not given right way.
In the essay Benjamin Franklin wrote in 1784 about Native Americans, titled “Remarks Concerning the Savages of North America”, he stated that the Native Americans were called savages “because their manners differ from ours, which we think the perfection of civility; they think the same of theirs.” The theme of empathy is seen in Franklin’s essay, as he encouraged seeing the other person’s point of view in dealing with the Native Americans. In highlighting the similarity of how Native Americans conduct their public councils to how order is maintained in the British House of Commons, he promoted the value of respect for diversity.