what do you think about English subject....
Answers
Answer:
English is the subject which help us a lot in the future where we go we speak English instead of other languages like Hindi Telugu and so on if we learn English very well we can achieve a good success while job interviews.
Explanation:
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Answer:
Everyone has a favorite subject in school, but it’s obvious why English takes the cake. Here are the top 9 reasons why English should be your favorite subject if it’s not already.
Everyone has a favorite subject in school, but it’s obvious why English takes the cake. Here are the top 9 reasons why English should be your favorite subject if it’s not already.
1. Movie Day
There’s only so many “math movies” that I can rattle off the top of my head, but English? If there’s a book version, then there’s probably a movie version, too. You youngsters may not remember the complete feeling of joy that washes over you when the rolly-cart was perched at the front of your classroom, but it triggers some of my fondest memories of school—and almost all of them were in English.
2. Class Debates
Characters. Themes. Ms. London’s favorite song. You name it, and we debate it. Everyone loves to share his or her opinions, and English class is where it happens the most. Was Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows better in book-form or movie-form? Was Katniss really in love with Peeta, or was it all just a show? This is a debate made in English nerd heaven…which brings me to #3.
3. There’s no right or wrong answers.
Maybe this makes some of you math-minded folks nervous, but us English nerds love the idea that you can explain your way out of anything. As long as there’s evidence in a text to support it, it could potentially be deemed a good answer! In math, if the answer is 6, it’s always going to be 6. But, in English, we might just talk about how it feeeeels for the answer to be 6, or what would happen if the answer were 7 instead. Not having to fit into a uniform box is pretty cool.
4. It’s rare that your teacher mispronounces your name.
English teachers love language. They live for the first day of school when their class lists are posted. I know I’ve spent some serious time pouring over students’ names to make sure I don’t sound like a Key and Peele sketch when calling roll, and it doesn’t hurt that my maiden name was Minutillo growing up. I spent my fair share of years as a student getting my last name butchered (and having teachers say it wrong for an entire school year), so I’d like to think my students appreciate the effort I put in to make sure that their names come out loud, clear, and correct.
5. Ain’t nobody got time for notes
This may not be true of all English teachers, but in my experience, there’s not a lot of note taking to do. You may have some vocabulary specific to a standard, but you’re not spending days on end taking notes. And the best part is that if you do take notes, they’ll probably be something you actually come back to more than once throughout the school year.
6. No intense studying
If you read the book, then there’s not a lot of studying to do. One of the best parts about English class is that a big chunk of assesments are about what you think about a text. Again, there may be some vocabulary you need to understand related to a topic, but you’re not going to be pouring over a textbook for hours.
7. You get to read about all of the other subjects
English isn’t just about novels, sentence diagramming, and essays. You may ask yourself, “When am I ever going to need this?” And the answer is ALWAYS! You have to read and write in every other subject, and you do it in your “real” life, too. I could give you an article about the best way to groom your cat or why the water cycle is important. No matter what subject is your “favorite”, English is creeping into it somehow.
8. Culture & Travel
Some smart person once said, “A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies… The man who never reads lives only one.” And isn’t that the truth? English class (and reading in general) allows you to travel the world, experience cultures you’d never get the chance to see otherwise, and develop a sense of empathy. You are confronted with problems and feelings that you yourself may never experience. Last year I read All the Light We Cannot See, which tells the story of a blind girl living in France during WWII. Not only did I read about a period of history that I cannot experience myself, but I experienced life with a disability in a way I’d never be able to otherwise. How. COOL!
9. Express yourself
What other class invites you (on a pretty regular basis, I might add) to share and write about your opinions? Not only does English class afford you that opportunity, but it’s also a great avenue to share about yourself as a person. Your teachers know that you are real people living real lives outside of the hours you’re in school. English is one of the few subjects where you get to share those real-life experiences frequently.
Every day in English class might not be a scene out of The Dead Poets Society, but some days it sure does feel that way. I love seeing my students get invested in a debate or make some monumental improvement on a writing assignment, which is why English is obviously the best subject.
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