Physics, asked by akashakki1620, 1 year ago

Do you think keesing was justified in punishing Anne?Would you support such a punishment in your class?Why or why not?

Answers

Answered by rudyxx07
98

Mr. Keesing was irritated by Anne's talkative nature. He warned her many times and finally decided to punish her by giving her extra homework. We cannot say that he lacked empathy or compassion, but he definitely lacked the connection one should have with one's students. He was justified, to a certain extent, in punishing her as she disturbed the class and would have been a definite distraction to other students. The positive thing was that he did not give any corporal punishment and did not even insult or ridicule her in class.

I would support such a punishment in class to avoid distraction and optimise learning in the classroom environment.

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Answered by kirtivardhansingh999
9

Answer:

ʜʏ ɢʏs

ʜs

ʜʀ ʏʀ ɴsʀ

Explanation:

Mr. Keesing was irritated by Anne's talkative nature. He warned her many times and finally decided to punish her by giving her extra homework. ... He was justified, to a certain extent, in punishing her as she disturbed the class and would have been a definite distraction to other students.

ᴘʟᴢ ᴍᴀʀᴋ ᴍᴇ ᴀs ʙʀᴀɪɴʟɪsᴛ

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