For all of the questions below, write a specific, focused ar…

For all of the questions below, write a specific, focused argument. Rather than a typical five paragraph essay, include no introduction or conclusion. Instead, your first sentence should be the debatable thesis guiding the next 300 words. 1. Using two specific examples from Elie Wiesel’s Night as well as at least one specific example from his work “Why I Write,” explain how solidarity provides a way of making sense out of the Holocaust between the reader and the text and between characters in the text. Write no more than 300 words.

You are working with a student on your caseload and you have…

You are working with a student on your caseload and you have been trying to collaborate with the teacher regarding the progress you are observing and would like to get her feedback.  Unfortunately, you have not been able to meet with her during one of her breaks during the day or one of yours.   You are in the staff room sitting with some of your colleagues and she comes in, pulls up a chair to your table and wants to discuss the student.  What do you do? (Provide two detailed options of how to handle the situation.)

For all of the questions below, write a specific, focused ar…

For all of the questions below, write a specific, focused argument. Rather than a typical five paragraph essay, include no introduction or conclusion. Instead, your first sentence should be the debatable thesis guiding the next 300 words. 3. Using at least two of the poems written by Kadya Molodowsky, write an essay that argues for a distinctly American way of responding to the Holocaust for those Jews in America. How do they make sense of what their family members are going through? How do they make religious sense of the Holocaust? OR, how does their experience compare and contrast with Wiesel’s experience? Write no more than 300 words.