English, asked by wiennopsawin, 1 year ago

3. Recent studies have found that majority of farmers are not getting a fair price for their crops.
Write an article on the topic 'Agricultural Problems faced by farmers of India'.
OR
You have placed order for some books to Cambridge publishers. But some of the books you
received are found to be damaged. Write a letter of complaint to the Manager, Cambridge
Publishers, Delhi.
4. Write a short story based on the following outline in about 100-150 words. 10
Rohit attends coaching class-appears for the entrance exam..-find it difficult to pay fees-.....
OR
It was very cold last night I was preparing for my internal exam. ......​

Answers

Answered by sunnykhartode4549
0

Answer:

school girlsShow caption

Education

I was a poor kid at a wealthy private school. It gave me social mobility, but also a sense of shame

Scholarships at private schools might be highly sought after, but they cause otherwise progressive people to support institutions that maintain structural inequality in society

Tara Kenny

@wordsbytara

Sat 17 Jun 2017 18.00 EDT

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I can’t remember why or when I set my pre-adolescent sights on a fancy private high school. I certainly don’t recall being pushed into applying for scholarships when my time was winding up at the local state primary school. If anything, I was the one marching my slightly bewildered and sheepish parents around to open days, on a quest to fulfil my burning desire to make it among the Toorak set. I was an upwardly mobile 12-year-old.

I vividly remember their horror when, while touring us around her sprawling utopia for girls, one principal proudly proclaimed, “When our girls leave they’re shocked by what they find in the real world, because everything is so perfect here”. I turned down a scholarship in her promised land to take up another at a co-ed equivalent widely considered progressive ... on the spectrum of uppity private institutions anyway school girlsShow caption

Education

I was a poor kid at a wealthy private school. It gave me social mobility, but also a sense of shame

Scholarships at private schools might be highly sought after, but they cause otherwise progressive people to support institutions that maintain structural inequality in society

Tara Kenny

@wordsbytara

Sat 17 Jun 2017 18.00 EDT

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare via Email

I can’t remember why or when I set my pre-adolescent sights on a fancy private high school. I certainly don’t recall being pushed into applying for scholarships when my time was winding up at the local state primary school. If anything, I was the one marching my slightly bewildered and sheepish parents around to open days, on a quest to fulfil my burning desire to make it among the Toorak set. I was an upwardly mobile 12-year-old.

I vividly remember their horror when, while touring us around her sprawling utopia for girls, one principal proudly proclaimed, “When our girls leave they’re shocked by what they find in the real world, because everything is so perfect here”. I turned down a scholarship in her promised land to take up another at a co-ed equivalent widely considered progressive ... on the spectrum of uppity private institutions anyway

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