Warm Up 11

I want to be different from others because I don’t want to be the same as everyone else. Being different makes me unique, makes me proud to be me and happy. I want to be different to show the world the unique abilities I have and too put them into good use.

Warm Up 10

I think it is possible to be too different because no one is the same ever, being too different has no effect on if your disabled or not, being too different is meaning that you are not the same as someone else. You may have the same skin colour or your related but you think differently, you act differently, you process things differently, your mind performs differently. Meaning that everyone is “too” different in their own unique way

Warm Up 09

Grammar would be good to learn again, to give us a better understanding of the English language. We would have to learn with more of fun type of way, because just sitting there and listening and writing will become so boring we would regret bringing up the decision of learning grammar again.

Warm Up 06

Presentism is interpreted through TKAMB by the way we view racism now to back in those days of Maycomb. Racism now is viewed as a bad thing now days and it is frowned upon. Back then though racism was not a thing, people referred others as ‘white’, ‘black’, or ‘yellow’, because they had no idea it was being racist.

Warm Up 05

In chapter 25 of To Kill a Mockingbird, Mr Underwood explains in his tribunal that it is a sin to kill a cripple, he is referring to of course the in humane death of Tom Robinson. Scout narrates that if Mr Underwood wanted to make a fool of himself that is his business. Mr Underwood also links that the killing of Tom Robinson is like killing a harmless songbird.

Warm Up 04

Miss Maudie tells Jem that he is too young to understand what she means when she says ‘some men in this world are born to do our unpleasent jobs for us. Your father’s one of them.’ Miss Maudie is trying to explain that you need people to do everyday jobs in order for the world to work. Miss Maudie wants Jem to understand that there are people who have to do jobs they don’t want to, but have to because someone has to do them.

Warm Up 3

Harper Lee has found that making Tom Robinson guilty, brings out what society was in that time. When anyone heard there was a crime it was immediately pinned onto black people (or negroes), Harper Lee wanted to show that the racial inequality at that time was disturbing to the point in where white people such as Dill are even feeling sick from watching Tom Robinson being falsely accused. Harper Lee wants us to feel guilty, guilty for the fact that all of us were made equal and to treat people in such a manner that they were forced to death.

Atticus’s Statement Chapter 20

Atticus depicts one amazing statement to the court which proves that Tom Robinson is innocent and that all men are the same. Atticus proves to the court that the way that racial inequality has taken over the minds of all men and women in the year 1935 has played a major role in the court case. Atticus says that black men do make mistakes but he also say that “This is a truth that applies to the human race and to no particular race of men. There is not a person in this courtroom who has never told a lie, who has never done an immoral thing, and there is no man living who has never looked upon a woman without desire.”