they're not really that similar at all . In school we compared the lynching and a poem called Epitaph by Dennis Scott. those two poems are much easier to compare
Yes. Boys went to school. Girls didn't. Wealthy girls had private tutors (as Queen Elizabeth did).
Gwendoline Courtney has written: 'Denehurst Secret Service' 'Those Verney girls' -- subject- s -: In library 'At School with the Stanhopes' 'Those Verney girls' -- subject- s -: Protected DAISY 'The Girls of Friar's Rise'
yes that would be very sweet at any age. just don't go too out. :)
get a group of girls to do a profomance and make it a surprizes with pizza and lollies and chicos witch are lollies by the way
The girls act against her. They repeat every word she says and they pretend to see a spirit in a shape of a bird, and it is trying to harm the girls. Because the court accepted spectral evidence, the judge believed the girls. Mary got scared and blamed all the "witch craft" on John Proctor. Also you could just read the play.. it's not that hard to comprehend. It's at a high school reading and comprehension level.
In colonial times, most girls did not go to school in the sense we use today, and received no grades.
yes i can
yes, but only until they were 8 (dame school)
Colonial girls
colonial school is a school with one room and extremely small. and people would pay the teacher with corn. boys went to the school the full day girls only went for the begging then went home.
Some were slaves and some lived normal lives and went to school. :)
Those whose families could afford to pay for school went to school; the rest went to work.
Yes, they did go to school, but didn't go much beyond 8th grade. They were not allowed in university or into professions.
Colonial clothing of contemporary style.
In the poem "Colonial Girls School" by Phyllis McGinley, the line "kissed us awake" conveys the idea of the warmth and nurturing care that the students received from the school matron every morning, as if they were being gently coaxed into the start of a new day. It symbolizes the matron's role in providing comfort and support to the girls, helping them begin each day on a positive note.
The tools the colonial girls used were weaving wheel, hands, sewing needles, and lots of other things.
Girls school..... this means a school for girls. Girls' school is the possessive and would imply that the girls owned the school.