Among other issues, each of the articles in this module considers how we might respond to the ways that social environments and norms constrain us. About a boy finding that school culture does not value his preferred ways of behaving, David Brooks imagines,In Kindergarten, he’d wonder why he just couldn’t be good. By junior high, he’d lose interest in trying and his grades would plummet.
Then he’d rebel. If the official school culture was über-nurturing, he’d be über-crude. If it valued cooperation and sensitivity, he’d devote his mental energies to violent video games and aggressive music.
In his book’s prologue, “Prelude: The Barbershop,” Vershawn Ashanti Young describes his ambivalence about trying (and failing) to fit in as a “homeboy” and discusses the academic and economic success he eventually chose to pursue. Because of his choices, he reflects, “I didn’t have to fight to get out of the ghetto. I was kicked out.”
And finally, Audre Lorde suggests that people may try at all costs to accommodate socially imposed constraints, writing, “What are the tyrannies you swallow day by day and attempt to make your own, until you will sicken and die of them, still in silence?” Lorde, however, also suggests an alternative to either suffering silently to fit in or rebelling—she encourages listeners and readers to speak out and use language and action to change the social conditions of our lives.
After you have considered Lorde’s question above and the alternative she subsequently proposes, write a speech, a letter (to an individual or organization privately or openly—that is, addressed to an individual but public), or a public service announcement that proposes meaningful change in your community related to the issues raised in these readings. Decide on an audience to address—your classmates; parents; younger (or older) students; coaches; administrators; teachers; church, city, or community officials—and compose an argument both describing a particular “tyrann[y]” or challenge and proposing changes that may improve the lives of those who endure it. Like Butler, Tannen, Brooks, Young, and Lorde, you may use your own or others’ personal experiences (including those of the five authors in this module), hypothetical situations, and reflections to make your case.

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: Yup your right this article shows that this is best 

Related Questions

Read the excerpt from "The Most Dangerous Game." "Life is for the strong, to be lived by the strong, and, if needs be, taken by the strong. The weak of the world were put here to give the strong pleasure. I am strong. Why should I not use my gift? If I wish to hunt, why should I not? I hunt the babble of the earth—sailors from tramp ships—lascars, blacks, Chinese, whites, mongrels—a thoroughbred horse or hound is worth more than a score of them." What does this piece of dialogue reveal about Zaroff’s character? He feels he is entitled to practice his cruel sport.He would never hunt another member of the upper class.He is getting bored with the idea of hunting people.He believes that Rainsford feels the same way he does.
Samuel Johnson wrote periodical essays in only one newspaper. a. True b. False
4 points why discrimination and racism cause problems in a multi-ethnic society.:)
Definition of conflict
the author claims in the excerpt that antislavery rhetoric in the late eighteenth century was based on

Which interrogative pronoun best completes the sentence? How is the pronoun used?


__________ dirty dishes are still soaking in the sink?

A.
Whom; direct object

B.
Whose; possessive

C.
Who's; subject (in a contraction with a verb)

D.
Whom; object of a preposition

Answers

whose possessive
caz its asking which persons dirty dishes are left in the sink 
so it would be possessive whose

What mood does the author create in this sentence from "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty"? "Pick it up, brother!" snapped a cop as the light changed, and Mitty hastily pulled on his gloves and lurched ahead. A. impatience B. anger C. doubt D. disappointment

Answers

I believe the answer is A: Impatience
The reasoning behind this is a few key descriptive words.
"Snapped," "hastily," and "lurched." These all tend to signify that someone is in a hurry, especially the "hastily" and "lurched."
"Snapped" could signify anger, as stated in choice B, but since the other two descriptive words don't coincide with anger, the logical choice would be A: Impatience.

Which conjunction best connects the direct objects in the sentence? Wash the grapes __________ not the oranges before eating them.

a. or
b. but
c. and

Answers

Was the grapes "but" not the oranges before eating them.

Which best describes the climax of the Odyssey?A.
Odysseus enters his house disguised as a beggar.
B.
Odysseus reveals his true identity and takes his place as the master of his house.
C.
Odysseus kisses the ground as his journey home comes to an end.
D.
Odysseus sees Telemachus for the first time in 20 years.

Answers

The sentence which best describes the climax of the Odyssey is:

D. Odysseus sees Telemachus for the first time in 20 years.

This scene evokes sense of emotional attachment taking into consideration the number of years for the characters to see each other for the first time. 

A severely ill person would likely have which of the following nitrogen balances?A. positive
B. zero
C. negative
D. inactive

Answers

Answer:

a negative nitrogen balance

Explanation:

The thing is that a seriously ill person loses weight; He begins to suffer from depression and insomnia. In addition, the body of the lying patient gradually increases the concentration of glucose; Also there is a violation of calcium and nitrogen balance.

Will have a negative nitrogen balance

When covering a presidential candidate, on which of the following areas are the media most likely to focus?A.
the candidate’s personal life
B.
the candidate’s voting record while serving in previous positions in government
C.
the candidate’s position on the issues important to the election
D.
the candidate’s qualifications for holding office

Answers

The media would most likely focus on the candidate's position on the issues important to the election. The answer is Letter C. The people or the citizens would be more interested in what the presidential candidate can do about the issues that the people are concerned about and the role of the media is to keep the people informed.

Answer:

c

Explanation:

i took the test