School Shootings Essay

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    Summary of "Shooting An Elephant" In George Orwell's essay "Shooting An Elephant," Orwell works as a sub divisional police officer in the town of Moulmein. One morning Orwell receives a phone call from the sub inspector at a police station from the other end of the town telling him a tame elephant has escaped and is causing chaos. Orwell begins his short journey towards the elephant bringing a gun with him, expecting the noise to scare it away. Once he arrived at the destination, he would find the

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    On December 17, 2012, a man shot twenty-seven people—twenty of which were children—at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. Had there been a gun for the school’s defense, the amount of those killed could have been significantly lower. As Adam Lanza entered the building, armed and ready to kill, a good guy could have shot him, saving many lives. Guns control prohibits good people from having the ability to stop the bad guys. Gun control laws should be loosened because they violate

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    This lesson has three main objectives. These are to direct students in ‘active reading’ through George Orwell’s Shooting an Elephant. Determining the central idea of the essay and how it develops over the text, different themes that are introduced, what the author’s viewpoint. The final objective is to give students time in class to read. I intend to do this through a lesson and demonstration on active reading, class discussion, and through small group work. To start off what is active reading

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    she went to the roof very quietly past her parent’s room. When she got to the roof, the message was true. She did find something that made her dreams come true. She found a shooting star. She was also into astronomy a lot, and had never seen a shooting star before. She then also learned that she was in trouble. Why? The shooting star was coming right towards her at a blazing speed. She thought she was done for. But then, the star stopped about 20 feet from her, then inched slowly toward her. As the

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    After reading George Orwell’s “Shooting an Elephant” it made me think a lot about times when I stayed silent and went along with something that I thought was wrong or did not want to do. Orwell did not want to kill the elephant but thought that if he did he would be more respected or that if he did not shoot it the people would hate him even more. I have stayed silent for many things and there is one time where I should have said something and I did not. I was put in an uncomfortable spot and it

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    imperialism or whether it’s a smaller example such as different culture, political domination can be found in all these readings. Each of these authors use an “unexpected event” to show off how their experience of being an outsider. In George Orwell’s, “Shooting an Elephant”, the story begins through the eyes of a colonial policeman in British Burma who is hated by the Burmese people. He says that secretly he supported the Burmese and hated their oppressors, the British, who he worked for. The policeman

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    In Shooting an Elephant, George Orwell uses his experiences as a European police officer in Burma during early 20th century imperialism in order to convey that imperialism destroyed both the native and the white man’s freedom. When Orwell is reluctant to shoot the elephant, he states “I perceive in this moment that when the white man turns tyrant it is his own freedom that he destroys.” He appeals to the audience’s emotion by stating this, making it clear that he feels more pressured by the native

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    Everyone has a moment in their lives that changes the way they think, or identifies our true views; an event that reveals a part of them that was never known before then. For example, in the essay “Shooting an Elephant” by George Orwell, Orwell himself is working as a British police officer in Burma in the 1920’s. He does not like his job because of his hate for the oppressive nature of the British government. However, he does take the job seriously. One day, he gets a report about an elephant tearing

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    In George Orwells’s “Shooting an Elephant”, we see how the author describes how he is in a very special and difficult circumstance. The background information he gives in the story explains how he was born and raised in India, but went to school in England. Soon after, he became an officer for the English government but was stationed over in India during their imperialistic reign. Much of this information is useful to the reader in helping understand his unique situation that he finds himself in

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    In the story “Shooting an Elephant” George Orwell says, “The people expected it of me and I had got to do it; I could feel their two thousand wills pressing me forward, irresistibly”. By him saying this it reminded me of a time I was once pressured into doing something that I really didn’t want to do. Giving into pressure whether it’s you being pressured by your peers, or even pressured by people you don’t know, you should never do something or give into doing something if it goes against what you

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