Helen Keller Stabbed Anne Sullivan with an ink pen. She stabbed her because she had a temper. Anne Sullivan was not hurt badly though.
Annie Sullivan gave Helen the gift of communication, empathy and understanding; she introduced the whole world to Helen and illuminated her dark life. Helen learned to "sign" and spell words in Annie's hand; Annie taught her to read Braille and opened the world of language to a deaf, blind girl. An excellent movie to see about this is "The Helen Keller Story" with Anne Bancroft and a very young Patty Duke as Helen, b&w,circa 1962.
of cource helen's parents spoiled her what do you think they would do punish her every day for becoming blind and deaf any ways her parents loved her beyond your knowing thanks for reading :) ;)
Hellen Keller, despite being blind and deaf, was an educator and author. She quickly learned to communicate by using finger signals on the palm and learned to read using Braille. She wrote many books on her struggles which helped other similarly disabled people lead productive lives.
Kate gives Helen candy to distract her from the situation and help calm her down. The sweet treat serves as a reward for behaving well and helps shift her focus away from the needle jab. It also works as a positive reinforcement for Helen's behavior.
Helen of Troy treated humans poorly beatin them and making fun of them.
Maybe this question is asking how one should treat a teacher. First, a teacher is person, so first, treat a teacher like a person. Second, a teacher is a person who has a lot of responsibility, so keep in mind that the teacher has a lot to think about and a lot to be accountable for. Then, if you are a student in this person's class, it is important to remember that the teacher is probably an expert in the field in which he or she is teaching, so some deference to the knowledge is in order. In general, it is appropriate to treat a teacher politely and with the respect that is due to all human beings.
with respect.
How her life changed.The Perkins Institute send over a young lady named Annie Sullivan, who would later become a best friend of Helen's, to treat Helen. Helen was a quick learner and in a very short time Sullivan had taught her the relationship between the symbols put in her hands to things they were related to. This was the first time in Helen's life when she didn't feel lonely. In an article written by Keller printed in Dennis Wepman's book, Helen Keller, Keller says:The world I see with my fingers is alive, ruddy, and satisfying. Touch brings the blind many sweet certainties which our more fortunate fellows mess, because their sense of touch is uncultivated. When they look at things, they put their hands in their pockets (Wepman 44). It is this image of the world that allowed her to see herself as a person and not as a disabled. She now admired her talent rather than feeling agitated about it. At this point people also started to call her Miracle because she was able to make such a connection. Not only had she become a favorite of the people but also for men like Alexander Graham Bell, Mark Twain, and even Albert Einstein. Einstein ones said:Your work, Mrs. Macy (the married name of Annie Sullivan), has interested me more than any other achievement in modern education. You not only imparted language to Helen Keller but you unfolded her personality, and such work has in it an element of the superhuman (Wepman 84).She also made a great impact on the director of the Perkins Institute, Michael Anagonos. They formed a great friendship, which unfortunately ended when Helen was twelve because Anagonos believed that Helen copied parts of a story and passed it as hers. To these charges Helen had a "trial" in front of eight school representatives. Four of these representatives, including Anagonos, voted her guilty, while the other four considered her not guilty. Keller didn't deny this but was latter quoted as saying: "Long after I had forgotten it, it came back to me so naturally that I never suspected that it was the child of another mind (Wepman 50)." Even at the young tender age of twelve she had started to make an impact. A little after this scandalous issue, Helen wrote a autobiography wondering if this work was hers or someone else's, the people proved to her that this was her work by never relating the two issues with each other.Helen's wanting to help others was very great not only as an adult but also as a child. In 1890, at just 10 years of age, she started raising funds for a little boy named Tommy Stringer. "Tommy Stringer, who, like her , was deaf and blind (Hunter 19)." She eventually raised sixteen hundred dollars for him. This money help send little Tommy to Perkins Institute. Not only did she help here, but she also helped Alexander Graham Bell's campaign to teach the deaf to speak (19). In 1932, Keller worked to set a standardized Braille form. She thought it was unnecessary for people to go through the trouble of learning so many different forms when one could be standardized (Wepman 81).
Whether a regular or substitute, a teacher should be treated with respect for the position. This does not mean you will or should always agree with the teacher, however students should always respect the position.
because he didnt want her to treat his daughter that way
Do your work the best you can, turn your work in on time and treat the teacher with respect and maybe he/she will start to be nice to you. Good luck.
Treat it as a very serious offence, report it to someone in your school's senior team, for example the head of year or head teacher.