book reviews
Book reviews for scholastic growth; read material from the world's top educators with our collection of novels, memoirs, biographies, philosophical texts and textbooks.
Score High in Economics with the Textbook Solution Manuals of Economics
Economics is one of the fundamental pillars of any country. Sounds like a lot of work, isn’t it? It indeed is! Whenever we talk about economics, people always relate it to money. But, economics is more than that. In economics, you also have to weigh or choose between different alternatives.
By Axel Smith5 years ago in Education
8 Picture Books That Build Visual Literacy
Visual literacy may be a term many haven’t heard. It’s the piecing together of a story from images and data in graphic form. What are the images telling the reader? Who are the characters? Their emotions? What are they experiencing? Pictures books help develop a child’s visual literacy skills by offering a story they tell themselves through images on the page. The skill of visual literacy lends itself to a myriad of applications beyond picture books.
By Cynthia Varady5 years ago in Education
Character Analysis : Beowulf
Character Analysis of Beowulf Literature is a major part of the history of the English language. There are many different writings that philologists and linguists used and still use to decipher the happenings, cultures, values, and systems of the past. Beowulf is a very important Old English Epic which inspired J.R.R. Tolkien in his writing of The Hobbit series. Even though the Epic is traditionally an oral poem with unknown dating of its composition, it does have a written manuscript which was produced prior to 1000AD, and potentially even as early as 700AD. However, the manuscript, as well as the oral poem, was created anonymously and did not have a name, thus it was named after the protagonist of the story. The story is based in Scandinavia where Beowulf, Prince of the Geats, arrives in Heorot to aid Hrothgar, a very respected King of the Danes, in defeating the monster Grendel. Grendel has been terrorizing the Mead Hall, killing soldiers and men, for twelve years. Finally, Beowulf comes to the rescue and kills the monster with his immense brute strength. Afterwards, Grendel’s mother, filled with rage and vengeance, attacks the Mead Hall. Beowulf slays the monster. In his victory, he goes home to Geatland and becomes the King of the Geats. He lives as an honourable and noble King until his death fifty years later. He is forced in is old age to defeat a dragon and dies on the battlefield. The Geats cremate his body and build a tower in his honor. In this story, there are a few important characters, but compared to Beowulf himself, they are very minor rolls. Hrothgar and Grendel would come in as distant seconds. Accordingly, Beowulf’s character is very well developed and represented with the author’s use of appropriately integrated direct characterization, Beowulf’s relationships and interactions with other characters, and the author’s meaningful uses of language, specifically during his fight scenes.
By Alexandria Brooks5 years ago in Education
Unpacking, ‘Scoop’ by Evelyn Waugh for Modern Readers
Scoop is known as the great satire of Fleet Street, written in the 1930s. Evelyn Waugh was a writer, journalist and book reviewer, known for his comedic tone and other novels such as Brideshead Revisited. Despite all his literary success, fellow writer, James Lees-Milne, called him, “the nastiest tempered man in England.”
By Violet Daniels 5 years ago in Education
The Size of the Truth
I have always been a fan of young adult books, and, as a teacher, these are often the books that I spend a great deal of time working with. In my personal life, I generally choose to read YA fiction because I think that it often involves a more inventive quality of storytelling. Because authors are trying to engage younger, developing readers with very complex topics and themes, YA books are often much deeper than people may assume. I recently finished Andrew Smith’s “The Size of the Truth”--one of his few middle-grade books--and I was blown away. I thought that the book was thoughtful, fun, and carried many difficult, heavy themes that you wouldn’t necessarily expect to find in a book geared towards a young reader.
By Kurt Mason5 years ago in Education
Our Sanctuary
Our Sanctuary Many children in the nations of this world call their schools homes because it is the only place they feel safe. Sometimes home is elsewhere in the comfort of others. Barry, author of “The Sanctuary Of School” writes about her experiences as a child as a seven-year-old who felt lost and alone when she arrived home where her parents were and felt at home with her classmates, teachers, crayons a place Barry felt she could express herself and be noticed by someone. Home can mean many things it can mean the warmth of others, a place, a person, an object it can mean anything that brings safety and carries us back home because among all things school was Barry’s sanctuary.
By Sthefani Ren5 years ago in Education
Solutions for Different kind of Dosh problems by specialist astrologers
Doshas in Vedic crystal gazing is the condition that has un-ideal or bad. The word doshas or yogas have been taken from the Sanskrit language. These Indian crystal gazing doshas or yogas happen as a result of the un-ideal situation of the planets in the twelve places of your introduction to the world outline. There are numerous sorts of doshas in your kundli which makes troublesome circumstances, for example,
By sofia patel5 years ago in Education
Life As A Metaphor
If you are not willing to believe that man can talk to cats, that the sky can rain with sardines and eels, or that Johnny Walker is more than the man on the whisky bottle, this book is probably not for you. Haruki Murakami is an author who creates his own world with his own rules. The Japanese author is known for his wild imagination and deeply metaphorical, riddle-like plots that often leave the readers with more questions than answers. In his novel Kafka on the Shore, published in 2002, Murakami ponders the connection between fate and free will, consciousness and dreams, and isolation and loss.
By Scribblegirl5 years ago in Education
Education? Smart? Stupid? Intelligent?
You are not intelligent. You don't have any education how would you help out society. In this essay, we will be describing Nell, Fiona, and Starling and how they are influenced by this can create a rich education but you won't need a large amount of knowledge. To have a kind of rich education is important to understand what it means to be smart as well as what it means to be intelligent for they are different from each other. Each of them being different, well being of intelligence, which is influenced by the people around them. In the next part of the essay, we will be discussing intelligence and how there are going to be some people who will help while others will not. Where the younger generation needs to become more intelligent than the last generation, so they know what needs to get done seeing that each day is different than the next. With that being said the essay will discussing the novel called the form the book called the “The Diamond Age” by Neal Stephenson this will enable us to understand what is education. Regarding what is intelligent as well as what we can do with it: the novel’s argument is the most important element of a rich education and Constable teaches the difference between being smart and being intelligent.
By Fayette Brownie5 years ago in Education









