English, asked by shantimagar834, 4 months ago

Today's reader are tomorrow leader. Do you agree with this .explain

Answers

Answered by parry8016
8

Explanation:

Dear Quote Investigator: There is a popular motivational quotation that is usually attributed to Margaret Fuller and is displayed on many educational websites:

Today a reader, tomorrow a leader.

Wikiquote lists an extensive collection of quotations from Fuller, but I was unable to find this one. Fuller’s opus “Woman in the Nineteenth Century” is in the Google Books database, but I cannot find the quotation within it. Fuller died in 1850 and stylistically the quotation sounds anachronistic for her time period. What do you think?

Quote Investigator: QI was unable to find any substantive support for crediting Margaret Fuller with this motto. The earliest evidence appeared in 1926 in an intriguing report published in a journal called “The Library” from the Newark Public Library in New Jersey. The head of the library had received a collection of 43 slogans constructed by students, and that set included the statement under investigation. The creator of the slogan was a student named W. Fusselman. Here is an excerpt from the journal article: 1

Answered by varshamittal029
2

Concept:

Today's readers tomorrow's leader

Answer:

The title of this text is a quote from Margaret Fuller (1810 – 1860), a nineteenth-century transcendentalist. Her views on reading and leadership are supported by many other respected figures. Being a reader across a broad range of subjects is important for those desiring to, or currently in, leadership positions. Reading provides insights from fields outside our own experience and expertise that may be applied in new ways. an excellent example is an impact the sector of Mindfulness has on individuals and on leadership in organizations now that the advantages and practices are more widely understood. Not only does reading improve our cognitive skills; it increases our knowledge, extends our vocabulary, broadens our perspective, requires focus, and reduces stress. Whether we’re reading books, articles, blogs, or magazines, this extra information provides us with credible evidence for our projects, strategies, and plans. Equally importantly, comparative reading challenges pre-existing ideas, providing us with a more complete understanding of subjects and generating healthy debate.

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