...Module 1: Children with Mothers - at - Work Lesson 1: Loving My Mother (Love) Objectives: The students are expected to: 1. Identify the things that their mother is doing 2. Participate in the given activity 3. Show appreciation in the things that their mother can do. Materials: Pictures of community helpers, Human Bingo sheet, and pen, and journal notebook Mood Setting - Name the Picture Procedure 1. Show the picture of some community helpers and ask the participants to name them: a. doctor f. house helper b. nurse g. policewoman c. teacher h. soldier d. dressmaker i. firefighter e. chef j. flight attendant 2. Invite the students to give a short description of the main responsibility that each community helper is doing. a. doctor – cures the sick b. nurse – assists the doctor in healing the sick c. teacher – teaches children to learn things in school d. dressmaker – creates clothes e. chef – cooks food f. house helper– employed to do household work g. policewoman – empowered to enforce the law, protect property and reduce civil disorder h. soldier – defends the country against bad people i. firefighter – fights fire j. flight attendant – assists persons in an airplane Processing 1. What can you say about the gender shown in the pictures? 2. Are women good enough to attend to those kinds of responsibilities? 3. What are their advantage as a woman in their chosen field? Activity – Human Bingo Procedure...
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...Name : Vigiline B. Apoli Title : “Mothers - at - Work and Stay - at - Home Mothers on Children’s Attitude towards Family and Learning: Basis for the Development of SOME (Strengthening Oneself through Mother’s Enduring) Love Program” Degree : Master of Education Specialization : Guidance and Counseling Key Concepts : Mother - at – Work, Stay - at - Home Mother, Children’s Attitude, Family, Learning, and SOME Love Program” Adviser : Peter Howard R. Obias, Ph.D. Statement of the Problem The purpose of the study was to find out the impact of mothers- at-work and stay-at-home mothers with their children’s attitudes towards family and learning. It also looked for a program that would help in further strengthening the love of their children towards their mother. Specifically, the study sought to answer the following: 1.Determine the profile of the respondents with regards to: a. mother – at - work b. stay – at - home 2.Determine the scores of attitudes of the respondents in terms of: a. family b. learning 3.Find the significant difference between the profile and attitudes of the respondents. 4.Develop a proposed program to be used as intervention based on the results of the study. METHODOLOGY Research Design This study used a descriptive survey method that utilized an attitude scale to determine the impact...
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...be really tired. My mother has a gaze that is loving and caring but it also carries the weight of the world. Her gaze says “Hello child I am here to help?” Her stride is long and prideful. She walks with her head held high and never looks at the ground as she walks. When she walks, she walks with purpose, meaning she has a little pep in her step. She walks as if her shoes were on fire. My mother hates being late, she says that “tardiness means you don’t care”. The way that she dresses is always full of elegance, style, and beauty. She is so neat that you would think she never sits in her clothes: not a fold, or wrinkle of any kind. My mother’s persona leaves everyone with no doubt that the life behind her shoulders has seen so many tragedies and events that one cannot begin to imagine, not even in their wildest dreams. The inside of my mother’s house is a reflection of what you see when you look at her: cleanliness and honor. The old style furniture but with a modern twist, a baby grandfather clock she received after helping the uneducated youth and adults for over 20 years, awards and pictures of her children and grandchildren. When walking around her house you never have to wonder who she is. The pictures and awards tell her entire story. My mother answers the questions in a very clear manner without unnecessary clichés. The question of simply “who are you?” and gave birth to an answer I did not expect “I am a mother, a nurse, an educator, a grandmother, a wife, an aunt, a...
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...Nothing can come close to the love that a mother feels for her children. Most women are inherently excellent mothers. Women carry their young before they are born and then continue to nurture them throughout their childhood and even into adulthood. Mothers make sure that their children are safe and happy throughout their childhood. It is the unconditional love that a mother feels that drives these feelings. It is hard to describe the feeling that a mother has towards her children. In fact, most people do not understand unless they become a mother themselves. Raising children comes with its own share of frustrations, from the needy new born baby that requires regular care to the sullen teenager, a mother's job is anything but easy. A famous saying states that "God could not be everywhere and so he invented mothers", these words are a great inspiration to mothers across the world. When all is well, a mother puts her children before anything else, including their own comfort and happiness. Mothers give an awful lot of support to their children, whether it involves very visible support or simple background encouragement. Not only do mothers support their children, but they also often hold the whole family structure together. This role is not always plain sailing. A mother can also be upset or hurt. Remember that a mother often takes the fallout for the toddler tantrums and the teenage angst. Despite this, mothers, generally, will love their children no matter what they do. ...
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...A Mother's Love essay Nothing can come close to the love that a mother feels for her children. Most women are inherently excellent mothers. Women carry their young before they are born and then continue to nurture them throughout their childhood and even into adulthood. Mothers make sure that their children are safe and happy throughout their childhood. It is the unconditional love that a mother feels that drives these feelings. It is hard to describe the feeling that a mother has towards her children. In fact, most people do not understand unless they become a mother themselves. Raising children comes with its own share of frustrations, from the needy new born baby that requires regular care to the sullen teenager, a mother's job is anything but easy. A famous saying states that "God could not be everywhere and so he invented mothers", these words are a great inspiration to mothers across the world. When all is well, a mother puts her children before anything else, including their own comfort and happiness. Mothers give an awful lot of support to their children, whether it involves very visible support or simple background encouragement. Not only do mothers support their children, but they also often hold the whole family structure together. This role is not always plain sailing. A mother can also be upset or hurt. Remember that a mother often takes the fallout for the toddler tantrums and the teenage angst. Despite this, mothers, generally, will love their children no matter...
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...* A man loves his sweetheart the most, his wife the best, but his mother the longest. – By Irish Proverb * A man's work is from sun to sun, but a mother's work is never done. – Anonymous * A mom's hug lasts long after she lets go. – Anonymous * A mother had a slender, small body, but a large heart a heart so large that everybody's grief and everybody's joy found welcome in it, and hospitable accommodation. – By Mark Twain * A mother is a mother still, The holiest thing alive. – By Samuel Taylor Coleridge * A mother is a person who seeing there are only four pieces of pie for five people, promptly announces she never did care for pie.- By Tenneva Jordan * A mother is not a person to lean on, but a person to make leaning unnecessary.- By Dorothy Canfield Fisher * A mother is one to whom you hurry when you are troubled. – By Emily Dickinson * A mother is the truest friend we have, when trials, heavy and sudden, fall upon us; when adversity takes the place of prosperity; when friends who rejoice with us in our sunshine, desert us when troubles thicken around us, still will she cling to us, and endeavor by her kind precepts and counsels to dissipate the clouds of darkness, and cause peace to return to our hearts. – By Washington Irving * A mother understands what a child does not say. – Jewish proverb * A mother's heart is a patchwork of love. – Anonymous * A mother's love is patient and forgiving when all others are forsaking...
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...reflex) in Mother’s Day this coming May. Canon uses market segmentation to apply which is the process of identifying groups of people with certain shared characteristics within a broad product market and aggregating these groups into larger market segments according to their mutual interest in the product’s utility. From these segments, Canon can select target markets with two major segments which are demographic segmentation and psychographic segmentation. By using demographic segmentation are categories under sex, age, ethnic background, income, occupation, martial or family status and education. The targeted children mostly aged in seven years old to twelve years old and parent’s ages in thirty years old up to forty five years old. With the reasonable price that can be affordable for middle income families which is Canon EOS 100D DSLR camera. Canon targeted individuals and families especially mothers or theirs children using photography to illustrate and capture their important family moments before and during Mother’s Day this coming May. In addition, psychographic segmentation is categories under emotions, cultural values, attitudes, personality, lifestyle and behavior. Canon also aimed that this DSLR camera will suits the needs and wants for their targeted audience. With the specialty of Canon EOS 100D DSLR camera which has a very light weight. These make it easy for their mother’s children to carry around and capture family images of their mother’s every single...
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...Topic and Reasoning Cynthia Belen Com/172 January 25, 2011 Michael Cunningham Topic and Reasoning Topic: The power of a mothers love. Reasoning: We all know that all mothers are needed and important in a child’s life. I believe that a mother’s love is very powerful in a child’s life. A mother’s love for her children is one of the strongest forces in this world. Who said being a mother would be easy? When I became a mother, there were a lot of things I did not know, but as my daughter grew so did i. My idea is to tell my story of a single mom, who struggle and made some poor choices in my life and also how I overcame it all. I want my readers to know and understand the power of a mother’s love, and how it can have an effect on a child’s life. The story I would be telling is from experience, not something I heard but something I have experience myself. My mother was never there for me the way I needed her to be. I did not feel my mother’s love. My mother was an addict; she was always in the streets, leaving me and my sister and brother to fend for ourselves. Don’t get me wrong I love my mother. I just did not like the things she was doing and how she was doing things. I told myself I was not going to be like my mom, and it seem like all the things I hated in my mother I began doing with my daughter. My aunt took her from me when she was two years old. She is now five and I just recently started getting myself together and right so I can get her back. When I lost her...
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...for love at all. She has seen her mother go through four previous marriages and is headed on to the fifth. She never knew her father and the only thing he left behind for her was an old song. The cynic in her is challenged when she meets Dexter, a boy who forces her to change her perspectives on love and life itself. With the family example she has had when it comes to love, the role of social networks is key in the progression of Remy’s past relationships and Remy and Dexter’s current relationship. When Remy meets Dexter, she is at a crossroads in her life. She has just graduated high school and is about to head to Stanford University in the fall. Her mother is about to get married to her fifth husband and Remy is praying that this one will last. Dexter has come to town with his band that moves around every so often and is determined to capture Remy’s heart. Once he has, Remy is decided that their relationship will only be temporary and that she will leave for Stanford in the fall with no strings attached. When it came to love, Remy did not believe in it due to the examples that had been set by her mother. Dexter, in his own unspoken way, begins to break the cold exterior of her heart and even when they were broken up, she realizes she has begun to love him. Even after her mother’s fifth marriage fails but not by her mother’s doing, Remy realizes that her perspective was all wrong. Love is not the same for everyone and that when one takes a chance when it comes to love, it can...
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...Jing-mei has a constant feeling that she couldn’t live up to her mother’s expectations. This quote by June illustrates how much she feels that she can’t live up to her mother’s expectations, “Why don’t you like me the way I am? I’m not a genius! I can’t play the piano. And even if I could, I wouldn’t go on TV even if you paid me a million dollars!” (136). This constant feeling causes her to have a distaste towards her mother and her methods. But after numerous incidents, June realizes how much her mother truly loved her. This quote by Suyuan is when she gives her daughter the green jade, which June takes care of ever so carefully, “This is young jade. It is a very light color now, but if you wear it every day it will become more green” (208-209). When Suyuan says this statement, she is implying that the green jade is Jing-mei, although she isn’t perfect or very well knowledgeable, over a period of time, she will grow wiser and she will become a more successful person. This is the moment in which Jing-mei first realizes her mother’s love for her, and this can also be...
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...Addie Bundren’s love holds great power in William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying, as it is essential to her sons’ sense of self. Withholding affection from Darl, her second oldest son, negatively impacts his self-worth to the point of existential crisis. Conversely, Addie loves Jewel, her middle son, which leaves him a man of action, certain in his state of being. Jewel receives love from his mother, resulting in his self-assurance. The product of Addie’s affair with the local minister, Jewel is the apple of her eye. Cora Tull, the Bundren’s moralizing neighbor, recognizes Addie’s favoritism towards her illegitimate son— “Jewel, the one she labored so to bear and coddled and petted so” (21). Moreover, from Addie’s posthumous monologue, she reveals...
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...the flowers are blooming and the children are playing, The fathers are gathered together talking about crops and harvest with their wives close by their side. In “The Rocking Horse Winner” the mother is married into money that soon diminished. There is never enough money to satisfy the debt in the household. Surely these things are possible. Her son Paul longed to have her love at any cost. Once his mother told him his father wasn’t lucky, he set out on a quest to win her love through luck. The lack of love, affection and attention can happen in a household stressed by debt. The symbol used in both stories is a human sacrifice. In “The Lottery” the entire town desires to sacrifice a human life in hopes to be blessed with an abundance of crops. In “The Rocking Horse Winner” sacrifice is the sons own life. His needed to gain his mother’s love through luck. He rides his rocking horse daily in hopes to acquire a winning name. Unfortunately, he has a fatal fall, acquiring a blow to the head that leaves him unconscious and ultimately dead. He sacrificed his sanity and his life to gain his mother’s love. The expectations in both stories are the opposite of what actually occurs. The reader is lead to believe that there will be a great monetary winning at the end of each story. In “The...
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...that are accompanied by love. Bradstreet makes her writing personable for the reader by reminding them of their mother’s love to show that a mother’s love is like no other. Though the poem embodies a mother’s love for her child, mothers’ fears reveal a dark side that takes away the comforting feeling of love and places attention on death. By using words like “irrevocable”, Bradstreet emphasizes the inevitability of death to her child, while giving the audience a sense of just how grave a mother’s fears are, as they are even thinking of how the child will cope with death. The mother-child relationship can be viewed as a symbol of its own; one that represents a one-of-a-kind love, yet also many worries. The poem characterizes mothers as valuable individuals that place their trust and legacy in the hands of their children, hoping they will prosper. In “My Dear and Loving Husband,” Anne Bradstreet displays her love for her husband. Considering the time period, in which women did not have the rights they do in contemporary society, to be able to say “If ever man were loved by wife, then thee,” and that her husband’s love cannot be repaid, comes to show that the contemporary perception love has existed before. Bradstreet characterized her husband as a caring man, whom unlike convention, does not appear to flaunt his superiority and degrade his wife. Her husband’s characterization reaffirms that even though times were different, a man could unconditionally love his wife in the way society...
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...Jackson, the two authors illustrate symbols and themes throughout their stories in which one common idea is present: perhaps winning is not always positive. “The Rocking-Horse Winner,” by D.H. Lawrence is a fictional story about a woman’s obsession for money and the lack of love and affection she shows to her family. Her son Paul hopes to change his mother’s mind-set in order to gain her love by becoming lucky. Paul discovers a way to become lucky from a rocking horse that he receives as a Christmas present. He perceives that this horse has magical powers, which empowers him to predict the winner of horse races. Paul becomes more and more obsessed with becoming lucky to appease his mother but eventually loses his life. “The Lottery,” by Shirley Jackson, is a short story of an annual tradition in which a small New England town randomly draws one person’s name to be the winner of the lottery. This lucky person will neither win money nor a special prize; instead are stoned to death by the rest of the community. This story gives a different meaning to the event called a lottery. D.H. Lawrence proves many points by using the following themes: obsession for money, trying to win a mother’s love and affection, gaining no affection after achieving such luck, and death. "The Rocking-Horse Winner," starts off on a great note by mentioning "There was a woman who was beautiful, who started with all the advantages,” (235) and turns for the worst by adding "yet she had no luck...
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...A. . “The Hurt Man” is a short story written by Wendell Berry and published in 2003. It describes a childhood memory of a man named Mat Feltner back in the late 1880’s. Its themes are childhood, growing up, becoming part of the world and living with sorrow and love. At first glance, one would think that the title refers to the hurt man that the mother lets into their house – and that is probably true. But I believe that it also refers to the change in Mat, how his innocent, unknowing heart suddenly learns of pain through his mother’s care of the man. Mat was living in a turbulent time and place, where it wasn’t unusual to have disputes settles out of court. It was a harsh world, which Mat’s deceased older siblings hadn’t been able to overcome. There were (line 37) “uncountable ways for a boy to get hurt, or worse”. Mat’s mother was a strong woman, which wasn’t unusual in her time and place. She loved her son, but didn’t smother him, even though she had already lost 3 children – she knew that the hardships of life couldn’t be ignored, they had to be faced, so she let grow up like everyone else, although she was sensibly careful on Saturdays, since the town became a dangerous place then. In the text “Men of the West. Life on the American Frontier” the author, Cathy Luchetti, describes how men were shocked at women’s capability, when they moved to the “wild west”, since they had always thought that they were childlike and stupid. Nancy Feltner was a perfect example of how women...
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