English, asked by habhowgaming, 5 months ago

My most difficult subject paragraph​

Answers

Answered by samikshajadhav16
3

Explanation:

DIFFICULT SUBJECT - ENGLISH

Any subject can be difficult. It depends on your preparation, your teacher, and the supports in your school. Even English (ELA) can be very difficult if the teacher simply assigns writing without providing expectations for the finished product or doesn’t teach you how to achieve those expectations or provide a number of exemplars to aspire towards.

As long as the teacher understands the material and has a number of learning interventions and mental models to use with students to help them improve their understanding, as long as the teacher is skilled at assessing your knowledge and is able to discover misunderstandings and weaknesses to target for developing, it comes down to you: your willingness to learn it and your willingness to ask for (and to accept) help and your willingness to keep trying, to not give up.

Each course/subject has its own challenges. Learning a language involves different skills and drills. As do maths. Both requires practicing and rehearsing or problem solving.

Social Studies was the most difficult for me. It isn’t taught as a domain of learning nor did we do much thinking. Basically, you read and memorized facts and events and date ranges. Everything was memorization. We did very little—if any—evaluation or creation or synthesis. I don’t know if we read any primary documents.

As a teacher, learning that each subject and domain engages with a different kind of knowledge, valuing different types of evidence and how that evidence is evaluated and validated, made me respect social studies and history, when I didn’t before.

I think a big piece missing from the teaching of subjects—when something is missing—is the reluctance of teachers sharing how each subject has aesthetics and values. Teaching the beauty of a solution or an approach, the final product, and with rubrics, qualifying what makes a project or assignment Good, may interest more students more than simply being accurate and getting a good grade. Some qualities and styles are more acceptable than others. I think students need to witness a teacher geeking out over particular aspects of the class being taught.

Answered by shauryamohanty91
2

Answer:

The answer of your question is this mark me brainliest please

Explanation:

My favourite subject is physics. Physics is perceived by my friends as the toughest subject of all as it is an amalgamation of maths and chemistry. But I happen to love physics mainly because of the broad everyday impact it has on society. Since I happen to like the subject, I’m good at it and usually score well and better than my classmates. As a result of which, I am almost like a tutor to my friends during physics examination time. Albert Einstein and Steven Hawking are two of my greatest role models in life. Other than being legendary theoretical physicists and having achieved great steps in their own field, they are a true inspiration with respect to their personal lives as well. While Albert Einstein having faced the difficulties and atrocities during the World War, especially having born in a humble family, went on to discover the theory of relativity in spite of all the hardships.

This is what makes Albert Einstein the greatest scientists of all time. And the thing about another widely popular scientist, Steven Hawking is much more inspirational than other scientists. Being a differently-abled person, and having stuck on a wheelchair for years, he discovered a black hole on the universe which has cascading effects on other inventions and our understanding of the universe. I want to grow up to be like them and make a worthwhile contribution to the field of physics. I aspire to study at top institutions in the world such as Harvard, CalTech and Princeton University. I one daydream of winning the Nobel Prize for physics

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