Zakaria and Richard Rodriguez’s use of rhetoric and tone, it becomes evident that, while both employ their own techniques, Zakaria’s utilization is more effective due to his use of evidence and appeals to reason. Rodriguez often relies heavily on personal anecdotes and emotional appeals, limiting his arguments. His use of rhetoric connects with people of similar upbringing; he intends his work to relate to other Spanish-speaking Americans. Through a detailed analysis of their respective works and…
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Lived experiences of second-generation Hispanic/Latino Americans in the United States and cultural identity and identity formation. Understanding the experiences of second-generation youth and their identities in the United States is crucial, given the diverse cultural backgrounds of children born to immigrant parents. This research topic gains significance due to the substantial population of Hispanics/Latinos in the United States. Second-generation Americans navigate the complexities of balancing…
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The South is arguably the most religious area in the United States. Growing up in the South, church is more of a weekly reunion as opposed to a religious gathering. Church is a dwelling where the elders would gather afterward and tell the local football coaches what they were doing wrong, or where members could catch up on the gossip in the community. Brown’s Chapel United Methodist Church is my church, and taught me about the temptations in life and my savior, Jesus Christ. From church camp to bible…
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56%. This is the amount of child slaves accounted for by 1860. This was made possible because, the Transatlantic Slave Trade depended on the constant importation of native Africans to replenish the population. In contrast in the United States slave population quickly began to sustain itself through natural reproduction. The child slaves were viewed by their masters and society as valuable assets with a monetary value of their own and an investment for the future. It would seem obvious that such assets…
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The issue of hunger in the United States remains a constant and increasing issue that affects millions of individuals and families across the nation. After reading "Growing Up Empty" by Loretta Schwartz-Nobel, my understanding of the complexities and systemic nature of this issue has deepened significantly. I will explore Schwartz-Nobel's main arguments regarding the causes and consequences of hunger in America, the experiences of those affected, and the broader implications. Additionally, I will…
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Growing up, I always wondered where my father would gain energy to head to work from 4pm to 3am in the morning every day, except Saturdays. Saturdays were my favorite days because I’d be able to see my dad and spend valuable time with him and my family, together. I also wondered why was it that my family or six had to endure living in a one-bedroom apartment when my dad is the living example of the idea of meritocracy highly valued in the U.S. Beginning college two years ago, I have begun to understand…
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daily. At the age of 14 she immigrated with her family to Washington State and graduated from high school there. What would the major theorists of adult learning say about her? Pavlov and Skinner might say that she will learn by being rewarded for correct responses to questions posed by the instructors. Their view focused on behavior. To look at Ariana as a learner from a cognitivist view, Merriam, Cafferella, & Baumgartner state that in this framework the “emphasis is on what learners know versus…
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More youth are being separated from their families and are being sent to foster homes. As more youth enter the foster care system they are also staying longer periods of time. Therefore, something is not working as efficiently as it should be in the foster care system. Children and youth are being sent to foster homes because the types of relationships that they encounter at home with their families are no longer healthy relationships. There are multiple factors that may increase the risk for child…
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revolutionary as e-mail and text messages are today.” Today’s generation may not be quite aware of the long journey Americans have traveled from the Postal Age up to what we now call the Information Age. As an examination of the rise of the American postal system in the middle decades of the 19th century, David M Henkin’s, The Postal Age offers up a fascinating blend of intellectual and thematic history. In his book, Henkin highlights new practices and new expectations as ordinary Americans swiftly turned…
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of the United States for granted. But the expansion of thirteen colonies into a continental empire in less than a century was the result of a great deal of luck; ceaseless labor; brutal, racially based warfare against Indians and Mexicans; and an extremely potent ideology known as Manifest Destiny that cast western expansion as natural and predetermined.1 Starting in the late 1830s, American politicians asserted, and many citizens believed, that God had divinely ordained the United States to grow…
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