English, asked by Anonymous, 5 months ago

Topic: Narrative essays.

"A teacher you will never forget".

Note: 1. In not more than 300 words.
2. Atleast 2 pages.
3. Atleast 4-5 paragraphs.


Please help me with this... Please don't spam otherwise I will report it... First and correct answer will be marked as BRAINLIEST answer...​

Answers

Answered by avjitsingh09
31

Answer:

Is it okk???

Explanation:

HOME

 

NONFICTION

 

EDUCATOR OF THE YEAR

 

A TEACHER YOU WILL NEVER FORGET

A teacher you will never forget

January 8, 2015

By kidancing BRONZE, Coconut Creek, Florida

More by this author  Follow kidancing 

Does your teacher take the time to talk to you about your day? Does your teacher stay with you no matter what until you accomplish  as little as the math problem? Does your teachers heart shine across the entire school?  Well, my teacher Mrs.Bourne will do more than any teacher will ever do for her students. Mrs.Bourne is a Pre algebra teacher I had last year.  She has been teaching for a very long time and still has the passion to continue teaching for middle school. Mrs.Bourne is such an amazing teacher because she is very involved with students lives and has an extraordinary teacher style.

Mrs.Bourne takes a lot of her time to talk her students about anything as little as what’s going on with their day.  She always wants to say hi with big grin on your face when you walk by her. I have a very memorable experience with her about how she cares a lot about her students. We have classes full of all girls at our school were we do team bonding activities and parties every week just for some little fun. I was not happy with the class I got assigned too because all of very close friends were with my math teacher, Mrs. Bourne. I just didn’t fit in and Mrs. Bourne saw that. I was generously offered a spot in her advisory. I will always be called now the sudo-adopted  child.  She made one of my favorite middle school memories with my best friends. She shows that she is not one of those teachers who just comes in classroom, teaches a lesson, says goodbye and locks her doors for the day. Mrs.Bourne is someone way different and better than that.

Mrs. Bourne teaches in a very unique way that no one can teach besides her. She is very smart at what she teaches and never lets one lesson drag along. What I mean by that is that she always puts the same amount of effort, passion, and hard work into everything she teaches. We always do interesting, interactive activities in her class to test our knowledge. We played battleship to test our knowledge of quadrants.  I never had a math lesson from her where I couldn’t understand the lesson.  I always feel a spark of magic when I enter her room. I can always talk to her about anything math related or un math related. This goes right back to how she is so involved with students lives.

As I conclude, Mrs.Bourne is such an amazing teacher because she is very involved with students lives and has an extraordinary teacher style. She personality just lights up the room like the fireworks at Walt Disney World. You can always come to her about anything and some how always has the best advice to give you. She is an astounding teacher that anyone would want to have.

Answered by deepanshu67892
4

Answer:

I started school in a very small desert town. I could read already when I entered school. They had me skip a second grade and later advanced me to another grade. My parents divorced, and my mother, sister, and I moved into an urban area in the second semester of my fifth-grade year. I was placed in fifth grade and would have entered sixth grade at nine years old. Middle school started in seventh grade in those days. I was aware enough to know that entering middle school as a ten-year-old would be a disaster. After hearing my arguments, the principal placed me with Mrs. Vincent for the remainder of my elementary years. She individualized instruction in the early 1960s when it was not a popular concept. She required me to do all class assignments, but when ‘I finished, if my score was over 90%, I could pursue my own interests. She kept that promise, giving me direction and ideas. She enriched my knowledge and broadened my interests. I am grateful to her and to the principal. He left the school in my fifth-grade year, and I am sorry I don’t remember his name. Thanks to his emotional intelligence, I entered the seventh grade as a twelve-year-old and although I was a “brain”, my social integration from then through high school was positive.  

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