Loneliness is a major theme in the novel.

Loneliness is a major theme in the novel. Loneliness is an inevitable fact of life that not even the strongest can avoid, it can affect anyone at one point in their live and it can also result the change of the way a person thinks and behaves. The person may become bitter and suffer from the lack of friendships that he needs to be able to happily live his life. The fact that a person is lonely can proceed from several places within an individual. The novel Of Mice and Men written by John Steibeck illustrates how lonesome accurse through out several characters in the book. Loneliness alters Crooks, Candy and Curley's wife in numerous ways of life. Throughout the novel those three characters experience a sense of loneliness that is somewhat different from one another but at the end they are all trying to over come that obstacle. Crooks is one of the characters that feels tremendously lonely throughout the novel because he is the only black man on the ranch and during those times black people were treated very poorly. Crook is suffering from discrimination that is based on his race; many people on the ranch are prejudice against him. He's isolated from everyone and just because he is black he is not allowed in the bunkhouse. When Lennie goes to his room, Crooks tells him that because he isn't wanted in the bunkhouse with the others, nobody is welcomed in his room, "I ain't

  • Word count: 1555
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: General Studies
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Special Education - The Inclusion Debate

Special Education: The Inclusion Debate - Youth in Adult Education Programs Research indicates that there is an increasing trend of youth below 18 years of age entering education programs that have been designed for adults. (Smith 2002, p. 1). This trend has given rise to the question on whether it is healthy phenomena to include youth in these adult programs and if this will lead to positive inclusive learning. However, this trend is visible in federally funded programs for basic and literacy adult education and therefore it is putting tremendous pressures on these programs as they had been initially designed primarily to serve an adult population (Hayes 2000). In this essay, we will review some of these trends and analyse the factors that are responsible for this increase in the youth enrolment, and thus review how such programs are responding to this new challenge. The recent trends Most of the evidence showing youth under 18 years of age enrolling in education programs funded by federal government is subjective in nature. It is difficult to document this trend because of the haphazard way in which statistics relating to the age of participants have been collected under different state policies. (Hayes 2000). However research indicates that the year 2000 was the first most recent year to record the number of enrolled students between 16-18 years of age in a separate

  • Word count: 2463
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: General Studies
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Letter of Apeal format

00 Hung Thai , Phu My Hung Dist. X, Ho Chi Minh City, Viet Nam Ms. Blenkiron 234 A Vo Truong Toan St., An Phu Ward, District XX, HoChiMinh City, Vietnam Dear Ms. Blenkiron: My name is Hai Van Le, and I have been a student here at ISHCMC for 9 years, and I am writing to you to appeal for a raise in awareness about discrimination in our middle school section. Throughout my years at ISHCMC, I have witnessed several cases of students discriminating against one another due to stereotypes from race and sex to personality. One thing I have experience almost on a daily basis is how groups of people of the same country and race all associate with each other, and hardly ever with ones outside of their circle - unless they have been asked to do so in class. I have heard my peers talk badly about people who might be homosexual, and I felt very unfair to those who were talked about in that manner. In every school (and ISHCMC is no exception), students frequently judge one's appearance and stereotype each other. From there on, it leads to all the social circles and the ones who are left out remain alone. I am aware of the fact that prejudices are unavoidable as they are formed unconsciously in everybody's minds, but I feel that our school should be more aware of this problem. I know that students are encouraged to work together with people who we don't know so well, people from

  • Word count: 468
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: General Studies
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Qantas Employment Relations dispute 2008

QANTAS EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS CASE STUDY Executive Summary Qantas is one of Australia's largest employers, employing around 37,000 people, 90% of which are based in Australia. Employment relations are concerned with how employers and employees interact in the workplace and the way in which this relationship can be effectively managed. Firms like Qantas, with effective employment relations practices manage change more effectively enhancing their ability to gain a sustainable competitive advantage. Qantas has employed a number of strategies to minimise the likelihood of industrial conflict and improve the effectiveness of its employment relations. This process however was not successful, resulting in industrial action by the engineer workers in 2008. SWOT Analysis Strengths Globally recognised brand name and logo. Excellent reputation. Trusted aircraft carrier with excellent safety records/security. Weaknesses Higher labour and operating costs. Ongoing industrial disputes between Qantas management, employees and unions. Opportunities Continually evolving aircraft technology. Potential to merge with other international airlines. Threats Threat of competition in domestic and international market. Further increases in fuel costs. Increases in government regulation. Depreciation of the Australian dollar. Weakening economic conditions/recession.

  • Word count: 832
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: General Studies
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The Road

Am Sidhu Professor Belmont English 160 April 19 2010 Jimmy and the Boy: One Life Full of Neglect, the Other Full of Love A1) Right from the start of the book, pigoons were a part of Jimmy's day-to-day life. He had always been around them especially when he had gone to his dad's work. Jimmy thought of the pigoons as his friends and when Jimmy would go to work with his father he would make sure that he had visited the pigoons at least once. Most of the times he visited the pigoons he would sit with them in their pen, soon after he would start feeling sorry for them because they were all cooped up with not much room to move around. So he would poke them, not to try and hurt them but trying to get them to run around, so they would get some form of exercise. "He never saw it coming. He had no clue (276)." I think Jimmy is referring to the pigoons because he thought that they loved him and thought of them as his friends. He never thought that the pigoons would turn on him; well he was wrong because they never really liked him. After his run in with the pigoons he had lost all trust in them, "They have something in mind, all right. He turns, heads back towards the gatehouse, quickens his pace. They're far enough away so he can run if he has to. He looks over his shoulder: they're trotting now. He speeds up, breaks into a jog (267)." Jimmy knew that the pigoons were out to

  • Word count: 1946
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: General Studies
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Is it always best to tell the truth?

Is it always best to tell the truth? Truth can be simply defined as a fact about something. The fact that Earth revolves around the Sun is a truth. The fact that every man or woman alive or dead has or had come from the womb of a mother is a truth. The fact that your best friend who wants to become a professional footballer is not just good enough is also a truth. We are all surrounded by truths but even more so by lies. For instance, the government gives us false promises and wins our votes. It is rightly said that the world is run by liars. We all have been told that if you always tell the truth, we may never face difficulties that would otherwise bother us. We have been told that a lie leads to a thousand more lies and making up for such lies can be the most difficult of tasks. However, would you tell your best friend who is not just good enough to be a pro and whose only ambition in life is to be one that he should stop trying to fulfill his dream? Will you be responsible if your best friend commits suicide reacting to you, the only one that had ever supported or believed (or at least pretended to believe) him/her. If you think you'll be responsible, do you not then believe that even a lie can be more fruitful and humane than a truth? So, is it always best to tell the truth? The answer also of course depends upon the situation you are facing. If the situation is like

  • Word count: 670
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: General Studies
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Advantages and Disadvantages of the Rise in Corporations

Advantages and Disadvantages of the Rise in Corporations Today we know that corporations, for good or bad, are major influences on our lives. They have essentially become a part of our lifestyle. These multi-national companies based around the world started through the industrial revolution, which was a period in history when people found new and efficient ways of producing goods, manufacturing services and creating new methods of transportation. This lead to exploitation of these corporations such as: child labour, low wages, poor working conditions and long working hours. Nike and Gap have been criticized for their workers in their worldwide sweatshops. The Global Exchange found workers hunch over sewing machines, kept awake by forced intoxicating drugs on 72-hour shifts. Child laborers worked in sub-standard health conditions, receiving pay far below minimum wage in factories that distribute to mainstream clothing retailers. Poor and desperate people work behind the closed doors of sweatshops where verbal, physical and sexual abuse is common. As a result of this, trade unions formed. Their purpose was to protect and improve people's pay and conditions of employment. They also campaigned for laws and policies which will benefit working people. Trade unions exist because an individual worker has very little power to influence decisions that are made about his or

  • Word count: 433
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: General Studies
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Globalization vs. Culture: The Loss Of Identity

Globalization vs. Culture: The Loss Of Identity JANUARY 29, 2007 – 3:26 PM | A good friend of mine and I were chatting earlier today when the subject turned to how so many countries and people are losing their identity. This is a true problem that I’ve been seeing all over the world, and the main reason behind it is unfortunately Globalization. I’m no anti-globalization activist or anything, in fact, I’m totally for globalization, economically and industrially speaking, but we can’t neglect the negative effects it has on culture and society. In this globalized world, cities are becoming clones of each other, and people are converging into fake stereotypes; gone are the unique cities that carry so much history and culture in every corner, lost are the enriching cultural differences and specificities that make a society uniquely what it is; London looks like Paris which looks like Madrid; Restaurants serving this or that country’s traditional food are drowned out by the huge fast food chains, beautiful traditional clothing is lost between the new bulk-made looks created by the big brands, people look alike, eat alike and dress alike whether they’re in New York, New Delhi or Cairo. We’re losing one of the things that count the most: our identity, the uniqueness in us, that which makes us special and allows us to stand out from the crowd. Again, I’m all

  • Word count: 2797
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: General Studies
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Show how Edwin Morgan's 'In the Snack Bar' gives an insight into a less pleasant side to life through its use of interesting language

In the Snack Bar "In the Snack Bar," by Edwin Morgan, is a poem which, through interesting use of language, gives the reader a degree of insight into the less pleasant side of life. This darker side to life is depicted through the character of a disabled, blind and hunchbacked old man. The reader is introduced to the old man firstly from the detached perspective of a spectator who is watching him struggle to his feet from a distance. However, as the poem progresses, Morgan leads the reader to empathise with the man's plight by illustrating - in great detail - his relentless struggle of endurance through life, despite finding the most simple, basic human functions an unspeakable effort. Through clever use of language the poet reveals the painstaking difficulties that the man has to negotiate because of his deformity and disabilities before going on to make a wider comment about humanity at large. The first stanza introduces the old man to the reader from the perspective of an outsider watching him in the snack bar. We are told that "A cup capsizes along the formica.../A few heads turn in the crowded evening snack-bar/An old man is trying to get to his feet," giving us the impression that the speaker's head is also one of those which has turned at the disturbance and who is now staring at the old man struggle. The speaker relates the difficulties that the man

  • Word count: 1077
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: General Studies
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Can the world sustain our increasing dependency over electricity?

Can the world sustain our increasing dependency over electricity? Word Count: 675 Electricity is the means through which all the equipments we use operate. Though there are many sources of energy, almost all the equipments in use today need them to be converted to electrical energy before use. Electricity allows modern appliances and more convenience in our life. It has made life easier and quicker for us. Our current lifestyle is totally dependent on electricity so much so that our life would literally go to waste had there been no electricity. However, our increasing dependency over electricity has led us to such a condition that the world cannot sustain our demands. From the moment we wake up to the moment we sleep, whatever we do is directly related to electricity. A morning shower needs electricity to heat the water and without hot water, shower in the winter morning is almost impossible, well at least we have made it impossible for ourselves. How did the people take a morning shower in the winter before electricity was not discovered? It gives us a chill even thinking about it. Similarly, our night life would be completely devastated if there were no electricity. A shutdown of electricity due to technical problems for even an hour would make us feel the shutdown was for more than a day. Also, our dependency over electricity is increasing exponentially each

  • Word count: 798
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: General Studies
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