Author: Harry

iGCSE Writing To Respond

Dear Ms Samantha Taylor,

On reading your article about teenagers and social media. I feel I had to share my views and thoughts with regard to this very important issue.

It is indeed very shocking to read about the amount of time spent by teenagers and young adults on social media. As a teenager myself I very often get carried away on Facebook and other on-line social sites or in sending and receiving text messages and forget time completely. But this is something that happens with face to face conversations. People in general, do not get together socially and think I will only talk with a friend or someone for two minutes but end up spending like 10 minutes every time they have to talk. People forget about time when socializing.

Technology and social media, i feel has just passed its pioneering stage, and is constantly being developed and improved. As a young person, living in a modern developed country, i need to keep up with these developments or i will end up being left behind by my peers and developing technology. This will affect my social life and my chance of getting job to do with ICT when i am older.

Also, I am growing up in a society where families sometimes live great distances apart. For example, my grandmothers, cousins and such live many thousands of miles away and the only other way is sending of a letter which will take a long time and may be very expensive.

The danger present to teenagers of disclosing too much information about themselves is a serious problem , but if children are taught about this at a pre-teenage, it may limit into risks. Jonathan Frazer despair of info technology and his concern is that teenagers are to become enslaved social inadequate’s has a little truth to it, but there are many people who are socially inadequate due to a variety of reasons not involving social media and its influences. That is just life.

Teenagers and children can be taught to differentiate between social media relationships and normal people to people in relationships, and therefore not became as the writer Susan Greenfield says, becoming detached from the real world. As for empathy, I feel this is a feeling that is cultivated through nurture and not nature and this empathise lies in a person early years and their development and upbringing

To conclude, I feel it is important that the young people understand the dangers of social media and the importance of developing social media friendships other than on social media sites. I also feel that if this technology is available, youth should be able to use it, not only for on-line socializing but for research, exchange of ideas and information. To be able to use the technology for study, to keep up to date with the world news and current affairs. It is quick and available at the press of a few buttons, and everyone should have the opportunity of using it .

Kind Regards

Harry Robinson

Writing To Argue New Piece

I am against capital punishment because once you do something wrong it may not always be on purpose and they may still get killed for what they have done for example, if someone was driving a car and there head lights at the front of the car was broken and someone walked in front of the car on a dark road and the driver of the car could not see them, hit and killed them and called the police of some type of emergency service then the person shouldn’t really get arrested and face a death penalty because it was really not their fault in a way, but if they done a hit and run and the police found out then they should face a death penalty because they did not have the decency to own up and say they did it but not on purpose.

Other people may disagree with being against capital punishment but may be for it and may be for it because they are religious and they may think that if you take someone’s life your life should be taken too. Capital punishment is not inflicted in all countries because some countries do not agree with it like the UK in the 21st century but before when the UK agreed with capital punishment there used to be little crime but now that law is not about no more, more crime has been committed in the UK.

Some countries even execute people who are under 18 years old when the crime was committed, others use the death penalty against people with mental issues too. The death penalty is cruel, inhuman and degrading some countries sentence people to life in a prison where they spend the rest of their life in prison because of the crime they have committed, the most common and most known argument is that sooner or later, innocent people will get killed, because or mistakes or flaws in the justice system.

My conclusion to being against the death penalty is that no life should be taken because if you are supposed to die after life then we should just wait until we die of old age or sickness. But if you have committed a crime you should just be put in prison for life not executed or sentenced the death penalty because also some people may be against it because of their religion, but some people my be for it because they may think that if you take someones life from them then your life should be taken from you.

Writing To Describe 2

Mum decided to book three tickets and we were packed and off. Destination Yemen or The Wild West of Arabia as the media call it. The first plane took us to Dubai where we had to wait till early morning to board the second plane to Yemen. It was early evening and Mum rang her childhood friend but he was out of the country, so she rang my cousin Mo who picked us up and took us to diner.

The restaurant he took us to was a typical Yemeni restaurant, very different to any I had been to. Women and men are segregated so we were taken to a private room upstairs. There was only a carpet on the floor that was very distinctive with red and white stitching. So we sat down and Mo, my cousin, ordered the food. A large plastic mat was put on the carpet and masses of different dishes were put on the mat. I ate calamari till I nearly burst. As I walked into the restaurant, the scent in the air was a sour smell of petrol and I felt as if I couldn’t breathe. Mo took us for a drive around town as my sister and I had never been to Dubai. It was all very modern and impressive, but all I wanted was to see the desert.

It was dawn, as I was on the plane en route to Yemen as I saw the sun rising it made me very tired as I was watching it. About fifteen minutes into the flight, Mum told me we were over the Empty Quarter. The sands were like an ocean, rippled with dunes. The sunlight and the shadows of the dune made the desert sands look like they were of every shade of yellow, orange and red. I could not turn away from the window, the sights were magical.

In about four hours, we landed in Sana’a airport. There were armed soldiers everywhere carrying machine guns. We walked from the plane to the terminal and the first I heard was a buzzing on the window panes as well as there were thousands of dead flies on the floor and it looked like sweets that was scattered. The taxi that took us to the hotel was a small mini bus, and the driver had a big lump of something he was chewing in his cheek. Mum said it was a plant called Gat and they chewed as a stimulant. The hotel was luxurious, with marble floors, coffee and cake shop, air conditioning and no flies. Actually I did not see many flies for the rest of the trip so maybe the flies at the terminal was the gathering point for Yemen’s flies. Our room was on the fourteenth floor and the view of the city was amazing. Sanaa is the capital of Yemen and it is built-in a massive crater.

We met with an uncle who showed us around the newer parts of town and them we met with his wives and their children. Two days later, we went to stay with an aunt in a town called Radha. The road to Rad-ah was through some very high mountains and they had no barriers on the edges of the roads, it felt unsafe because it felt like as soon as the car drove round the corner it felt like I was going to tip-off the mountain. My sister was absolutely petrified, and spent nearly the whole drive there, with her head down and her eyes firmly shut. Aden is has a big harbour and is the second biggest town in Yemen, and that was our next place to visit. We stayed in a hotel that had a private beach and all the rooms were chalets. It was wonderful. I made friends with the workers and they would take me out on their jet skis and their boats with the tourists. In the evening we would play football, volleyball and I taught them cricket. One of the guys, went snorkelling every morning and he took me with him. I caught a squid one time and he took it home and got his wife to make it into calamari and brought it back to me still hot at lunch time. My sisters, flip-flop kept falling of her foot and she kept complaining and it gave me a headache. She thought there were sharks waiting to eat her, and every time we went into the sea, she would get to about mid-thigh deep and then climb onto Mum’s shoulders.

 

I really enjoyed this holiday, met tons of family, saw many new and different things and except for the chicken business, would love to go again. I enjoyed the journey but at first I wasn’t really sure about the holiday but after I tried a few stuff it turned out to be my favourite holiday I have ever had.

Tempest Essay Plan

1. Discuss one or more of the play’s comic scenes involving Trinculo, Stephano, and Caliban. How do these scenes parallel and parody the main action of the play? Pay particular attention to Trinculo’s speech about Caliban in Act II, scene ii, lines 18–38. This is one of the longest speeches in the play. How does it relate to larger thematic issues in the play, such as the difference between “men” and “monsters,” or the relationship between colonizers and the colonized?

2. Look at a few of the many passages in the play in which there is mention of noises, sound, or music. Focusing on one or two characters, discuss the role of noise in The Tempest.

3. Virtually every character in the play expresses some desire to be lord of the island. Discuss two or three of these characters. How does each envision the island’s potential?