...Sample Final Exam Essay: Legalize Gay Marriage English—Mr. Fichter (This sample essay is based upon a student-written essay from last year. The student author is anonymous.) Homosexuality is everywhere. You can see it in books, on television, in the media; it is rapidly becoming a social norm. Given this trend of greater acceptance of gay marriage, the issue of whether to legalize same-sex marriage naturally arises. Massachusetts has led the way by legalizing gay marriage. Responding to this example, some states have taken steps towards accepting gay marriage while others are considering laws and constitutional amendments banning gay marriage within state borders. President George Bush has recently proposed a ban on gay marriage in the U.S. Constitution (Hulse). If Americans carefully examine the situation, however, they should all be able to understand the importance of making same-sex marriage legal in the United States. Those opposing same-sex marriage claim that by allowing this act, marriages everywhere will lose their honor and validity (Kurtz). Marriages between a man and a woman would lose their special importance, these opponents argue, if the definition of marriage is expanded to include same-sex couples as well. The test of time has proven this fear pointless. For several years, Germany, Spain, and the Netherlands have allowed gay marriage without any signs of damage to heterosexual couples. Social life in these countries continues unchanged, and...
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... 265-267). In the essay “Should Educators Use Commercial Services to Combat Plagiarism” there are conflicting opinions on the best way to fight plagiarism one is by John Barrie whom thinks that the best way to fight plagiarism is to use software such as turnitin which is supposed to catch any form of plagiarism and allow that person to be punished for plagiarism. Now the other opinion is from Rebecca Moore Howard who thinks that education is the best way to fight plagiarism by teaching all the fundamentals of doing research and writing research papers would give students a better chance at writing, researching, paraphrasing and citing work that has been researched Computimes (Malaysia), (2001) Buying and selling on the Internet. Retrieved from www.lexisnexis.com/hottopics/lnacademic In the article written by Computimes (Malaysia) the article gives the reader insight into how buying and selling on a live auction website is done and what the buyer or seller needs to do to get started in the process of buying and selling on a live auction website it also tell about the different types of live auction websites i.e. eBay, and Christie’s and Sotheby’s. Donker, Peter P. (1996) Buying and selling on the Internet; Electronic retailing emerging as a new channel of marketing and distribution. Sunday Telegram (Massachusetts), Retrieved from www.lexisnexis.com/hottopics/lnacademic In the article written by Peter P. Donker for the Sunday Telegram (Massachusetts) the article tells of...
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...sister, but she died soon after her birth. Roswell and Eugene were very close brothers, but completely different. Eugene took after his mother, hated studying and also hated the dark while Roswell took after their father, loved studying and loved being in the dark. In 1856, the two boys’ mother died when they were five and six. Their father sent them away to live with their cousin, Mary French, in Massachusetts. Eugene wrote his first poem there at the age of nine. Then, at the age of fifteen, Eugene was sent away to a boarding school in Massachusetts. There were only five boys in the school. Eugene loved playing tricks against the master with the other boys. after attending the boarding school, he went on to William’s College in Massachusetts. at the age of nineteen, while he attended the college, his father died so he dropped out eight months later. “Field began college at Williams in 1868, after barely passing the entrance exams; he left...
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...the landless blood of Cain Is burning, burning the unburied grain. Robert Lowell History History has to live with what was here, clutching and close to fumbling all we had-- it is so dull and gruesome how we die, unlike writing, life never finishes. Abel was finished; death is not remote, a flash-in-the-pan electrifies the skeptic, his cows crowding like skulls against high-voltage wire, his baby crying all night like a new machine. As in our Bibles, white-faced, predatory, the beautiful, mist-drunken hunter's moon ascends-- a child could give it a face: two holes, two holes, my eyes, my mouth, between them a skull's no-nose-- O there's a terrifying innocence in my face drenched with the silver salvage of the mornfrost. Robert Lowell Lowell was born in Boston, Massachusetts to a Boston Brahmin family that included poets Amy Lowell and James Russell Lowell. His mother, Charlotte Winslow, was a descendant of William Samuel Johnson, a signer of the United States Constitution, along with Jonathan Edwards, the famed Calvinist theologian, Anne Hutchinson, the Puritan preacher and healer, Robert Livingston the Elder, Thomas Dudley, the second governor of Massachusetts, and Mayflower passengers James Chilton and his daughter Mary Chilton. He received his high school education at St. Mark's School, a prominent prep-school in Southborough, Massachusetts, where he met and was influenced by the poet Richard Eberhart who taught at the school. Then Lowell...
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...Comparative Essay Ginsberg, Hughes and Thoreau Confidence and self-reliance are qualities that are admired and desired by many people. Confidence is defined as a feeling or consciousness of one's powers or of reliance on one's circumstances, and a faith or belief that one will act in a right, proper, or effective way. Self-reliance is defined as the ability to care for one's self. Because people aspire to be confident and self-reliant, these qualities are common themes in literature. This essay compares three quotes, taken from three very different pieces of literature about American values, in which confidence and self-reliance are illustrated. “I refuse to give up my obsession. America, stop pushing. I know what I’m doing.” – Allen Ginsberg, “America.” Allen Ginsberg’s “America” presents a sharp criticism of American culture by someone who has almost completely rejected its values. The poem’s speaker addresses America directly, as if he were giving a lecture or a sermon to the nation itself instead of to the American people. The nation’s aggressive anticommunist foreign policy and its culture of materialism and conformity are the targets of the speaker’s criticism. This poem was written in 1956 and was one of the first widely read literary statements of political unrest in the post-World War II America. Themes from the recent wars are prominent such as the nuclear bomb or Asian foreign policy, but the poem also depicts national racial unrest...
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...and, instead of handing in a blue book and getting a grade from a professor a few weeks later, clicking the “send” button when you are done and receiving a grade back instantly, your essay scored by a software program. And then, instead of being done with that exam, imagine that the system would immediately let you rewrite the test to try to improve your grade. EdX, the nonprofit enterprise founded by Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to offer courses on the Internet, has just introduced such a system and will make its automated software available free on the Web to any institution that wants to use it. The software uses artificial intelligence to grade student essays and short written answers, freeing professors for other tasks. The new service will bring the educational consortium into a growing conflict over the role of automation in education. Although automated grading systems for multiple-choice and true-false tests are now widespread, the use of artificial intelligence technology to grade essay answers has not yet received widespread endorsement by educators and has many critics. Anant Agarwal, an electrical engineer who is president of EdX, predicted that the instant-grading software would be a useful pedagogical tool, enabling students to take tests and write essays over and over and improve the quality of their answers. He said the technology would offer distinct advantages over the traditional classroom system, where students often wait days or...
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...DUALITY OF WOMEN’S SEXUALITY IN SEVENTEENTH AND EIGHTEENTH CENTURY PURITAN MASSACHUSETTS Liesl Schnuck November 1, 2011 Due to the strength of their belief in and fear of God, colonial Massachusetts’s society regulated women’s sexuality through a paradoxical relationship: women as saints and women as sinners. Introduction In the religion-obsessed society of colonial Massachusetts, Puritan beliefs dominated contemporary views on sexuality, especially with regard to women. Although Puritan ministers understood human nature’s inability to avoid sexual relations, they adamantly professed that sex must not interfere with religion. In order to create stability within their society, ministers and lawmakers turned towards the women to implement and describe sexual regulation. Women’s social function was not only complex, but also difficult to define. As historian N.E.H. Hull notes, “theirs was a special place, not altogether enviable—for in this land of saints and sinners, they were viewed as both saintlier and more sinful than men.” Not only did society expect and desire women to act morally, but society also feared women for their supposed tendencies to act corruptly. Carol F. Karlsen accurately differentiates between these two identities by naming these women either “handmaidens of the devil” or “handmaidens of the Lord.” This distinction demonstrates the binary opposition of women’s place in society that existed in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. By identifying...
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...| Health Law Essay | Health Law A Regulated Enterprise | Introduction to Health Law and PolicyProfessor Voss | By Kimberly Causey | 1/11/2015 | Health Law A Regulated Enterprise The great Statesman Sir Winston Churchhill clearly stated, “If you have ten thousand regulations you destroy all respect for the Law”. When Law Regulators at all tiers interpret various components of the law, the interpretation can convey an unruly mixture of complexities. Likewise, Health Law can be encountered in various aspects on both the State and Federal levels. Thus creating a mixture of regulations by all levels of government. For example, the obvious is the overlapping of police power between the state laws and the preemptive decisions made by which the federal law prevails. Overall, applicable laws have continuously exemplified complexity, specifically in Health Law. Yet, Regulators continue to redefine the laws that are created both on State and Federal levels. For this purpose, I will identify present a mixture of fundamental differences that are encountered at any tier level. Regulations can frequently change in producing guidance about compliance of expected outcomes. What is reasonable and practical at times can produce countless interactions and inconsistency among regulators. For instance, Hall and Showalter both mention their concerns for quality, autonomy, access and cost which will be discussed. Hall presents a great article on “What is Health Law?” He further...
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...Esmael Ameida 10/21/13 introductory writing ESSAY " MY Significant moment of my life " November 28, 2006 was the most significant moment of my life because i had to move from my home country Cabo Verde to USA, to live with my mother witch i had two years i didnt see and also for the best of my life. Live in usa was always a dream to me . Novenber 28,2006 i arrived in Boston Massachusetts in logan airport around 9 pm its was dark and could out side, i didnt had any jacket with me i was so could but my mother was there waiting for me wth a black and warm jacket ,i was os happy to see my mother again after two years i was so emotinal that time i see my mother i emediatily run to her i give her a very tight hug, my mother was still looking so beautiful and wth that big smilly on her face to see me again hes only son, my mother was so happy,i remenber she huged me from boston logan airport till Brockton. soon we get home i see my uncle wtich i had 8 years i didnt see. i remenber i was so tired i want to take rest so bad but i was so happy to see my mother that i couldint sleep n i stay uo till around 2am but my mother had to go to sleep because she had to go thw work at 6 am . Its was so hard for me to get used to usa because i didnt know how to speak englesh ,write englesh ,i didnt had friends every thing was so hard for me, for the frist to weeks i dint want to saty in usa no more because i was...
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...Study guide for test #1 – February 4, 2016 Part I – Identifications: John Winthrop: Governor of Massachusetts Bay that was elected 12 times. Envisioned the city on the Hill. Roger Williams: Williams was banished from Massachusetts Bay for agitating ideas like the separation of church and state. Moved North to the area now known as Providence, Road Island and established the Protestant Church. Eliza Lucas Pinckney: Was in Charge of 3 South Carolina plantations by the age of 16. Imported indigo to her plantation, which became a very important cash crop. John Smith: Leader of Jamestown Colony in Virginia. First explorer to map the Chesapeake Bay part of the first settlement to the New World. Helped save colony from devastation. Anne Hutchinson: Was a Puritan spiritual adviser and an important participant in the Antinomian Controversy that shook the Massachusetts Bay Colony. She helped create a theological schism that threatened to destroy the Puritans' religious experiment in New England. She was eventually tried and convicted, then banished from the colony with many of her supporters. John Rolfe: Was married to Pocahontas and moved to England with her. Most notably established the tobacco industry in the colonies and was killed by Indians upon re-arrival in the new world. Pocahontas: Was a Virginia Indian notable for her association with the colonial settlement at Jamestown, Virginia. Daughter of Powhatan and married to John Rolfe. John Calvin: Influential Frenchman...
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...He became an activist and received the title of founder and general secretary for the Niagara Movement in 1905. The purpose of the Niagara Movement was to strike change in legal ways, like with economics, religion, health, and laws. They constantly met and were going strong until 1908, when a race riot had taken place, killing eight blacks. This outrageous act made Dubois and his fellow leaders angry and motivated them to developing the National Association for the Advancement of Colored (NAACP). The purpose of the NAACP was similar to that of the Niagara Movement, but they ensured to do everything non-violently. By taking action, they had began to expose corrupt laws by going to court and winning the cases they presented to the court. For example, in Louisville, Kentucky, whites were trying to make blacks live in specific areas of the city, but the Supreme Court overruled and denied that request because it went against the fourteenth amendment. Another example is the case they won against the fact that people disapproved of blacks participating in a jury. People put on trial have the right to plead their cases to people of their kind and if they were to deny blacks the right to participate in the jury, that would be an unfair trial. DuBois and the NAACP went extensive limits to help blacks and provide...
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...Class of 2016, Congratulations, we've made it! Today is our first, “big first”, our step in the real world, adulthood, and that time when all the dreaded college loan debt comes back to haunt us. It seems like just yesterday, we were starting the best adventure of our lives. Now, as we sit here pondering how to pay that debt and thinking about what the future has in store, I can’t help but be proud that we have made it. Having survived the core, our exams, essays, endless nights up studying, the miserable hangovers, and the shots fired on State St., I think we all should be proud to have made it here in one piece. In all seriousness, today is a milestone for each us as well as our families, and it is to our loved ones that we owe our deepest thanks. I think I can speak for most of us here ready to receive our diplomas, that we would not be here if it wasn’t for the endless support we had every step of the way, the shoulders we had to lean on when things got rough, and the days we thought we couldn’t make it, but we did with a quick pep talk... or a shot or two of tequila. After today, we leave the protection of the College, the community of our friends, roommates, and teachers, to find and forge new communities of our own. I want to spend our final moments together reflecting on the distinctive kind of education that has shaped the way in which we think about the opportunities and challenges we have faced. AIC prides itself on dedication, intellectual and personal...
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...Running head: Constitution Timeline Julie Haire Grand Canyon University: POS-301 June 29, 2012 Paul Oranika Constitution Timelines The great nation we live in is unlike any other because of “liberty, equality, individual rights, self-government, and lawful powers” that are afforded to its people through the United States Constitution (Patterson, 2011, p28). Since we began our journey away from parliamentary government, the colonists who created this nation worked hard to create a nation that would be fair to all who lived here. Americans enjoy the pursuit of happiness, freedom of living and equality because of our Constitution. The foundation for our constitution can be traced back as far as medieval times and the Magna Carta. Even then people were fighting for the rights of the people. Through the signing of this document the King could not infringe upon the rights of the people in any unfair or unjust way. The colonist used many ideas from this document to help create our first constitution it helped to create the due process of law. “This concept, embraced by the leaders of the American Revolution, is embedded in the supremacy clause of the United States Constitution and enforced by the Supreme Court”( Edsitement, 2012, parg 1). As time passed many who lived in England began to feel conflict with in the country they lived in and set sail for a new land called the America’s. Upon arrival they began to build colonies. During this time the Mayflower...
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...interest. I believe that a person’s interest in any field makes him produce great ideas and achieve big. The technology I chose might be different to the typical smartphone and satellite theories but it has certainly made a huge impact and will continue to revolutionize the world. Solar energy is a natural renewable resource that is available in unlimited quantities and is a great source used for solar heating, solar photovoltaic, solar thermal energy, solar powered cars and calculators. Solar power is energy received directly from the sun, later converted into other forms of energy. It is perhaps the cleanest and most abundant renewable energy resource available. The simplest answer to the question, why I selected “solar energy” for my essay is that, it is the cheapest resource and the more important fact is that it will never terminate. It is currently being used to power solar cars, heaters and other important things but since it is a new invention, it will take some more time to influence the world. Inventors opened the mysteries of transforming the sun's beams into mechanical power more than a century ago. In 1767 a Swiss scientist named Horace-Benedict de Saussure created the first solar collector, it was an insulated cubical box, layered with glass to absorb heat energy. The box later became known as the solar oven producing heat at 230 degrees Fahrenheit. In 1839, another milestone in the solar journey was achieved as a French scientist, Edmond Becquerel defined the photo...
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...There are many ways to live a healthy, safe and happy lifestyle. There are many things a person may experience in their life to make them feel better. Meditation is an activity that is used throughout the world to enhance happiness in an individual’s life. There are numerous amounts of reasons why meditation can help you live a healthy, safe and happy lifestyle which will be discussed further on. Meditation is known as a cure to anything and is in debate that people who meditate are much stronger, healthier, happier and active people. There are many studies which have been undertaken which will also be referred to further on. This essay conveys the benefits of meditation in health, happiness, how to meditate as well as showing studies that have been conducted around the world in proving how effective meditating really is. First of all meditation is a three step process that leads to a state of consciousness that brings serenity, clarity, and bliss to an individual’s life (meditation station, 2006) and is also referred to as mindfulness training. Meditation may increase anyone’s ability to stay in the present moment as opposed to worrying about the future and past. Medititation is also known as enabling an individual to connect more with their feelings and emotions. Meditation improves a person’s concentration which results in a clear mind which makes an individual more productive, especially in creative disciplines like writing (Pettinger, 2012). It helps people not get too...
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