Answer:
By now that you have understood the basic role of parents, teachers and students in education as well as who the stakeholders of education are, who do you think should be blame now for the poor performance of students in school?
Ask teachers and you will likely be told lot of reasons why parents should be the ones to be blame.
Similarly when you ask parents this same question too, you will no doubt get lots of suggestions why teachers must take this blame and the same goes for students as well.
Let us look into few of these reasons and see how it assessment can help us in finding solution to this important question.
Explanation:
The correct answer is: "To apply for the junior accountant position, please send your cover letter, résumé, and list of references to Nazir Suresh, Human Resources."
The clearest and precise sentence explaining how to apply for a junior accountant position is the following: "To apply for the junior accountant position, please send your cover letter, résumé, and list of references to Nazir Suresh, Human Resources."
This is correct because in business writing, to have to be clear, exact, and precise. No need to overextend a message when it can be conveyed directly. The correct message stated above contains all the elements needed to be understood. The name, the reason, the proper way to do it, and the information that has to be attached.
“It is awfully hard work doing nothing”
Answer:
She could be a mentor or make commentary on Shakespeare's play, including both Lady Macbeth and Macbeth himself struggling with their moral codes and having small psychotic breakdowns, some bigger than others (Lady M literally dies).
Honestly that last one is a little tricky. She wants to help Macbeth, essentially by destroying him. Maybe that's what your teacher means? She's very confident and has a sort of complex that she controls fate, while criticizing Macbeth for his over-confidence. She says some paradoxical things and so do the witches, such as the phrase "when the battle's lost and won" meaning, technically that they both won and lost the battle, a paradox. Of course, it means the actual loss comes from casualty, but grammatically it is a paradox. Macbeth doesn't really have a clue what it means.
Explanation:
I'm sorry I could not be so definite. I love Macbeth and even performed in it two years ago. These questions are a little strange. Ha-ha! Hope this helped in some way anyhow.