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English Language
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The English language sits at the intersection of linguistics, literature, education, and communication, making it one of the most broadly studied subjects across academic disciplines. Students encounter it in courses ranging from second-language acquisition and curriculum design to literary analysis and rhetorical theory. Its academic interest lies in the language's dual nature: it is simultaneously a living system shaped by historical forces and a practical tool whose mastery carries significant social and professional consequences. Works like Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream and Macflecknoe anchor the literary dimension, while frameworks around bilingual instruction and standards-based curriculum ground the educational policy dimension.

The papers archived here reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a literary analysis angle, examining how Shakespeare's monologues reveal character or how rhetorical texts like the Encomium of Helen and Dissoi Logoi use language to persuade. Others adopt a policy or curriculum-design perspective, addressing standards-based instruction for English as a second language, bilingual education debates, and specialized curricula for young indigenous learners. Still others engage professional and business contexts, treating English as an instrument for workplace communication and management assessment.

A strong essay on this topic begins with a clearly bounded thesis — choosing either the linguistic, literary, educational, or professional dimension rather than attempting to cover all of them at once. Evidence drawn from specific texts, documented pedagogical outcomes, or rhetorical analysis tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating "English" as too broad a subject without anchoring the argument in a concrete context, which leaves the discussion feeling unfocused and difficult for readers to follow.

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Paper Doctorate
Speak Two Languages That I Feel I
¶ … speak two languages that I feel I inhabit two different identities. Or are the reasons for my feeling this way more complex? It is difficult to say, but I do know that although I am only one person, inhabiting one…
Paper Doctorate
Lexical Variation in Intensifiers Newfoundland
The use of words known as 'intensifiers' such as 'so' and 'very' are often studied by linguists, because patterns of use vary widely across genders and demographic groups. The use of intensifiers can be profoundly indicative of social trends as expressed by language. This paper is a literature review of several studies involving intensifiers in Canadian English.
Essay High School
How Television Affects the Way We Speak
Television has a significant influence on the way that we speak. Entertainment is a strong cultural influencer of how we communication, and television has for decades been among the most prominent entertainment mediums…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Baray\'s Analysis of Cultural Miscommunication
Baray's Analysis of Cultural Miscommunication -- Between German and American Jews, between Native and White Americans
Research Paper Doctorate
Using Technology in a 2nd Grade Classroom to Improve Student Achievement in Math
Of late, there has been a push to bring in technology to schools where teachers as well as students would be able to reap the benefits of the World Wide Web, the Internet, and other related technologies.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Assessment methods and their applications
Requiring students to produce compositions or essays in a standard five-paragraph format is one of most popular methods of assessing student performance, especially in English, History, and Social Studies classes.
Research Paper Doctorate
Media and Communication in Canada
In the history of mass media in Canada there has been a position that it has been susceptible to the dominance of American media. "Canadian mass media began from a need for national communication and yet now serves as a…
Research Paper Doctorate
Nutrition Class Chocolate Why the Bad Rap
In today's society, chocolate is everywhere. It seems that people have developed a love-hate relationship with chocolate. According to the U.S. Department of Commerce, in 1997, the average American ate 11.7 pounds of…
Paper Doctorate
Multiple essay questions: characteristics and effectiveness
Essay Questions ONE: Impact of Enlightenment on American Culture and Political Life The impact that the Enlightenment had on American culture is significant. In fact the American society that "evolved and is dominant today – including the democratic ideals, capitalism and the scientific method – all "derive from the Enlightenment ideals formulated in England" (Jandt, 2007, p. 184). The emphasis that Americans have on individual liberties and the dominant language in America and the structure of law were the result of the Enlightenment, Jandt explained (184). The author asserts that values related to democracy – including separation of powers (executive, legislative and judicial) – derived from the French philosopher Montesquieu, prominent in the French Enlightenment. Professor Robert Morse Crunden – with the University of Texas – explained that because of the Enlightenment's impact on America, "Educated men revolted against the irrationality and violence of post-Reformation Europe" (Crunden, 1996, p. 31). Those educated men – plus "local clergy, academics, businessmen and professional men" were enlightened, creating new ideas and producing profoundly important documents like the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution (Crunden, 31).
Paper Undergraduate
Nativism and race in American history
Not only do I agree with the statement that "Nativism (anti-foreign immigrant prejudice) and racism (anti-non-white prejudice) have been common in American history; they have raised temporary barriers to white ethnic…