HEY MR. SIMS IF YOU'RE READING THIS THEN GREAT I JUST WANTED TO LET YOU KNOW THAT
YOU ARE THE BEST FREAKING TEACHER EVERY I AM REALLY GOING TO MISS YOU!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :-(
LOVE ALWAYS STEPHANIE DENSON
sdenson16
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
SUMMARY
- Topic: Snakes
- Poisonous snakes do not attack humans for food
- What the poision does to the human body
- What to do when you get bit by a snake
- how snakes look
The main topic about this article is about snakes. Poisonous snakes do not attack humans for food because they are to big. Most poisonous snakes arecolored to warn others off. The poision in the snakes venom weakens the blood corpuscles and the lining of the blood vessels causing profuse bleeding. When bitten, do not try to suck the venom from the wound as it will not help but instead get a broad, firm crepe bandage and apply it over the wound and up the full limb to compress the tissues and prevent the spread of the venom.
THESIS
Fathers
Do Make A Difference
Growing up in the United States without a father
figure or having a strong male role model in your life is extremely difficult.
With the way the world is changing it is very important that children have both
their mother and father in which they can rely on. More and more children are
being raised daily in single parented homes. The percentages of fatherless
homes are getting higher and higher by the year. Children who grow up in a
single parented environment are more affected in life compared to the children
who are raised by both parents; this just goes to show you that fathers do make
a difference.
What objects is this face composed
of?
Do you think a passerby would easily see
this face?
umm maybe not
What else do you see in the objects
composing your face?
If your face could talk, what would it say to passers-by?
Hey there... no you down there... how are you? its kind of lonely at the top mind keeping me some company... PLEASE
Take me step-by-step from the classroom to
where you found your face.
Step out of the class room and walk straight until
the end of the hall
Turn right and go straight until you
are at the first hallway on the left
Turn there and go straight until you are at the
first door on the right
Open the door and go down the stairs until you are
at the bottom and exit the building on the right
Turn left and go straight until the path
ends.
Turn left again and walk until you see another path
on the left
Turn and at the first tree look up
LITERACY NARATIVE
Literacy Narrative
Tell a story about a time you learned something.
when i was a little girl my dad walked out on our family. so growing up in a household where there is no father present is really hard. my mom struggled to take care of us, things were very difficult for us. so i had to learn how to be a strong person at a very early age . at the time i used to think that i was too youn to to be goin through some of the things that i did but i eventually learned that it was those things that molded me into the person that i am today.
Tell a story about a time you learned something.
when i was a little girl my dad walked out on our family. so growing up in a household where there is no father present is really hard. my mom struggled to take care of us, things were very difficult for us. so i had to learn how to be a strong person at a very early age . at the time i used to think that i was too youn to to be goin through some of the things that i did but i eventually learned that it was those things that molded me into the person that i am today.
FIVE TOPIC QUESTIONS FOR RESEARCH PAPER
FATHERLESS CHILDREN
1. where are the fathers?
2. how does it affect the children?
3. how do the mothers feel?
4. why do the fathers leave the families?
5. how do the father feel after abandoning their family?
SOURCES
Fatherless Children”
Murphy, Jane C.,” Legal Images of
Fatherhood: Welfare Reform, Child Support Enforcement, and Fatherless Children”.
Notre Dame Law Review, Vol. 81, No.1, 01 January. 2005 325p. Print
Blankenhorn, David, “Fatherless America: confronting
our new most urgent problem”, Harper Perennial Publications, 5 January.1996.
336p. Print
Popenoe, David,” Families Without
Fathers: Fathers, Marriage and Children in American Society”, New Brunswick,
N.J, 2009. 275p. Print
Ray, Linda. “The Effect Of Fatherless
Homes In America”, Livesstrong.,14
June. 2011. Web. 25 September. 2012. Web
Brent, David A.,” RE: Fatherless Homes
Statistics: Youth Suicide and Divorce/ Single parent Homes”, FatherMag. FatherMag, 1995. Web
Edin, Kathryn, and Laura
Lein. “Making Ends Meet: How Single Mothers Survive Welfare and Low-Wage Work”,
Russell
Sage Foundation Publications, New York, 8 March.1997. Print
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