Merit Essays

  • The Literary Merit of Animal Farm

    1083 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Literary Merit of Animal Farm The year of 1945 marked a great turning point in world history.  The end of the Second World War, the detonation of the atomic bomb, the beginning of the Cold War took place during that year.  Also in 1945, George Orwell published Animal Farm, The book drew wide interest due to its scathing commentary on the Russian communist movement at a time when Britain and Russia were still allies.  The body of criticism relating to the novel is among the greatest of twentieth

  • Measuring Merit: Pay for Performance

    889 Words  | 2 Pages

    standard salary schedule has prevailed in thousands of schools and districts across the country (Koppich, 2005). There was a burst of merit pay activity in the early 1980s. Twenty-nine states had initiated some sort of merit pay program for teachers by 1986. Since then, however, almost all of them have been diluted or discontinued (Dee & Keys, 2004). While the idea of merit pay for classroom teachers has been around for several decades, lately a resurgence of interest has surfaced in a growing number

  • The Literary Merit of A Lesson Before Dying

    1124 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Literary Merit of A Lesson Before Dying Ernest Gaines was born during the middle of the Great Depression on January 15, 1933. He was the oldest of twelve children. At the age of nine Gaines worked as an errand boy on the River Lake Plantation, the same plantation his book A Lesson Before Dying was set in. Gaines was raised by his Aunt Augusteen Jefferson, much like Grant, the protagonist in the novel, was raised by his Aunt Tante Lou. At the age of fifteen Gaines rejoined his immediate family

  • Importance Of Merit And Merit

    1000 Words  | 2 Pages

    Oxford dictionary defines “merit” as “The quality of being particularly good or worthy, especially so as to deserve praise or reward”. In 1868, Japanese officials revolted against what, from their perspective was a corrupt and obsolete government and restored the emperor to the throne is what is known as the Meiji Rebellion. After this, Japan was determined to “eradicate the corruption that they saw in the dying Tokugawa Shogunate by instituting a new era in which merit and merit alone, would determine

  • Affirmative Action Essay: Quotas for White Players in the NBA?

    926 Words  | 2 Pages

    argument that it's wrong to give whites an even greater advantage to make up for their lack of merit is irrelevant. If blacks got an equal start in life, they might even dominate the NBA more than they do now. The fact that they don't is a further injustice to their merit. This is a prize piece of rhetoric among anti-affirmative critics. Teams in the National Basketball Association select their players based on merit. For some reason, blacks have come to represent the vast majority of players in the NBA

  • Innovation and Traditionalism in Art

    3383 Words  | 7 Pages

    or another, noticed that almost any discussion concerning the merits and demerits of art, if it goes on long enough will come to the qualities of innovation and traditionalism in regards to aesthetic value. As soon as these two qualities are mentioned, there comes an inevitable forming up of those who favor innovation and deride tradition and those who favor tradition and deride innovation. Either side usually admits only enough merit to their opposition, and limitation of their own view, to make

  • Critical Analysis of Shakespeare's Hamlet

    639 Words  | 2 Pages

    just been murdered, his friends are sent to spy on him, his lover is forbidden to see him, and Hamlet feels that his life is pointless and miserable. "The pangs of disprized love, the law's delay, the insolence of office, and the spurns that patient merit of the unworthy takes..." These are the miseries that Hamlet must endure. This is why he makes this s...

  • Conducting Effective Performance Appraisals

    2406 Words  | 5 Pages

    Performance appraisal systems also provide a basis for planning improvement as well as means for determining merit increases, transfers and even dismissals. According to Berkeley’s Policy and Procedures, the purpose of performance appraisal is to be able to measure and enhance individual and institutional performance, and in turn to providing professional and career growth, determining merit increases, and meeting the internal and external demands for documentation of individual performance. Performance

  • Pushkin's The Queen of Spades

    711 Words  | 2 Pages

    Spades French connoisseurs already know Pushkin's The Queen of Spades in Mérimée's translation. It might appear impertinent to offer now a new version, and I do not doubt that the earlier one will appear more elegant than this one, which has no merit other than its scrupulous exactness. That is its justification. A preoccupation with explaining and rounding off induced Mérimée to blunt somewhat the crystalline peaks of the tale. We have resisted adding anything to Pushkin's clean and spare style

  • The Theory of Intelligence

    783 Words  | 2 Pages

    intelligences school of thought. The general intelligence proponents believe that there is one factor from which all intelligence is derived; the multiple intelligences proponents believe that there are different kinds of intelligence. Each theory has merit and evidence to support its claims. Two major schools of thought on the nature of intelligence. The first, supported by such psychologists as Eysenck, Galton, Jensen, and Spearman, believe that all intelligence comes from one general factor, known

  • The Prostitute In Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment, Notes from Underground, and The Meek One

    1431 Words  | 3 Pages

    women forced by extreme poverty to take up the trade of a loose woman, Fyodor Dostoevsky, a petit-bourgeois fallen on hard times himself, took a rather different approach to the whole issue; he recognized that these women were not utterly without merit as so many people of the time thought. Georg Brandes spoke accurately when he said, "Dostoevsky preaches the morality of the pariah, the morality of the slave." Dostoevsky explored these themes through prostitute characters in many of his works. The

  • Entice Students to Read Rather than Dictate What Students Must Read

    1411 Words  | 3 Pages

    surprising few recommend what the masses should read in order to be viewed as 'well-read' in society. The Great Gatsby is a classic that is required reading in almost every high school in America. What accolades does this novel have to render it such merit? Without a doubt, The Great Gatsby is a novel worth reading. As noted in the assignment description, some students have read this book several times in their high school and college careers. The attraction to teach this book reflects more than the

  • buddhism

    1222 Words  | 3 Pages

    Buddhism's history began. It originated on the continent of Asia around 500 B.C.. The founder of Buddhism; Gotama Siddhattha, a former price in what is now known as India, is known as "The Buddha," which roughly translates to " one who is awake" (Merit 102). "At the age of twenty-nine, deeply troubled by the suffering he saw around him, he renounced his privileged life to seek understanding. After six years of struggling as an ascetic he finally achieved enlightenment at age thirty-five" (DailyZen)

  • The Role of the Nativity in Magi and Carol of the Brown King

    635 Words  | 2 Pages

    followed the North Star? They were obviously seeking the Christ child, but they were also searching for the truth and righteousness that he represents. Sylvia Plath in her poem "Magi" and Langston Hughes in his poem "Carol of the Brown King" discuss the merit of their respective minority groups through allusions to the nativity. Plath uses the journey to discuss both the ignorance of philosophers' quest for the "truth" and its neglect of females, and Hughes uses the righteousness of the nativity to emphasize

  • Hypochondriasis

    846 Words  | 2 Pages

    Hypochondriasis is a mental illness wherein an individual is preoccupied with the fear of having or the idea of having a serious disease. It involves the misunderstanding of bodily symptoms. The sensations of most hypochondriacs are intense and disturbing, leading to incorrectly connecting the symptoms to a serious disease. It said that hypochondria is caused by a patients excessive worrying with having or developing a disease. Often these patients seek medical attention, but a doctor's reassurance

  • Hamlet

    743 Words  | 2 Pages

    end the suffering. He believes that life is synonymous with suffering. The “whips and scorn of time, Th’oppressor’s wrong, the proud man’s contumely, The pangs of disprized love, the law’s delay, The insolence of office, and the spurns That patient merit of th’unworthy takes...

  • Reflections on the Analytic/Continental Divide

    3547 Words  | 8 Pages

    Accordingly, I should begin such a paper by saying that neither analytic nor continental philosophy are truly cohesive, unified, groups; much which seems inconsistent flows under their banner, as does much disagreement. However, today, few groups of any merit are cohesive and unified, if they ever were. Even science isn't unified any more. So much for fine print bordering on the platitudinous. This paper has four sections. The first section places analytic and continental philosophy within a historical

  • Billy Budd Essay: Moral Shades of Grey

    974 Words  | 2 Pages

    Moral Shades of Grey in Billy Budd Vere's decision, according to the Wartime Acts under which he was subject, was lawfully justified. To do anything else would be a direct violation of the law, and thus, the position in which he was placed. The captain could not follow any twinge of conscience that he felt, for it was not his position to do so. As Vere put it, "But do these buttons that we wear attest that our allegiance is to Nature? No, to the King." He and the judges were forced to follow

  • The Chapter of Circe in James Joyce's Ulysses

    1433 Words  | 3 Pages

    supports the literary finesse of Circe is chemical imbalance. Specifically, I came across research to support the theory that Circe is a metaphor for Schizophrenia. Though this cannot be considered a major watermark, the idea does not lack merit and is interesting in the least. The chapter progresses in the same way the disease progresses. The chapter begins with strong anxiety in Act I. In Act II, the reader is introduced to delusions of grandeur, which are symbols for paranoia

  • Low Self Esteem

    2358 Words  | 5 Pages

    heartbreaking stories about self dislike were told by many depressed teenagers and older people. What are the causes of this kind of low self esteem and how can one person get solutions to outcome them? Self Esteem is defined as confidence in your own merit as an individual#. Such concepts as self-esteem and self-image have been regarded by some social psychologists as useful, while others have regarded them as unnecessary. There is a considerable amount of research on such topics but it would be very