subject
English, 05.05.2020 19:42 gensevilla54

Reread the two essays above "Being Brave Means Overcoming Fear" and "What Bravery Means" and compare how the authors of the two essays develop the central idea of each passage.

Being Brave Means Overcoming Fear
by Oliver Hobbes

pg.1 Being brave can look different in different situations, but it almost always means that a person overcomes fear. According to the Merriam-Webster dictionary, the word “brave” means “having or showing courage.” Courage is only necessary in a situation where a person is afraid. People are afraid of different things, so a situation that requires bravery can be different for different people. But everyone who overcomes his or her fear is being brave. For a student, being brave might mean notifying a teacher about someone cheating. It could mean deciding not to do something dangerous even though all your friends expect you to do it. It also might mean telling the truth when lying would be easier. All of these examples require a conscious choice to do something one is afraid to do.

pg.2 Karen Silkwood knew what it meant to be brave. She worked at the Kerr-McGee nuclear power plant in Oklahoma in the 1970s. Soon after she began work, Silkwood noticed that the plant’s health and safety practices were lacking. She found false records, dangerous-material spills, safety violations, and poor training. So Silkwood testified about the problems before the Atomic Energy Commission in Congress. Her company called her a troublemaker, and Silkwood was harassed daily at work. Nevertheless, she continued to tell the media about the problems at the plant. Several years later, the Kerr-McGee plant was closed.

pg.3 Karen Silkwood was brave enough to make an unpopular choice. She was surely afraid of the consequences of speaking up about the dangerous negligence she witnessed. But Silkwood overcame her fear. She knew that the plant’s poor safety practices endangered hundreds of people in and around the plant. Even when she experienced daily harassment at work, Silkwood chose to keep exposing the problems. Her choice was very unpopular, but she knew it was the right thing to do.

pg.4 Being brave means mastering fear. Often, being brave means doing the right thing, especially when doing what’s right is not what everyone else is doing. The world needs people who, like Karen Silkwood, are brave enough to overcome fear and make the right choice.

What Bravery Means
by Hannah Chase

pg.1 Many people believe that being brave means overcoming fear. But that definition of bravery is too limited. It implies that a person who is not afraid is not being brave. Yet people also show bravery by making independent choices or changing bad habits.

pg.2 It takes courage to go against what other people want you to do, even when you are not afraid of the consequences. For example, in 1810, a Polish teenager named Ernestine Rose took her father to court. He was trying to force her to marry a man, but she refused. Even though refusing was unusual in Rose’s time, the judge ruled that she did not have to agree to the arranged marriage. Rose grew up to become a tireless advocate for women’s rights. Sometimes being brave means staying true to yourself, just as Rose did. Making an independent choice is brave, even when the person does not overcome fear to do it.

pg.3 Mastering your own bad habits is also brave. Someone who lies frequently but chooses to stop this destructive habit is being courageous. It would be easier to keep lying because it is convenient and habitual. For example, a child who lies to his parents by saying that he’s finished with his homework gains the freedom to play. Changing this behavior means giving up freedom. By making the decision to stop lying and do his homework, the child is committing a brave act, regardless of his reasons for doing so. It is true that he might be afraid of being punished by his parents or teachers for not doing his homework. But he could also not be afraid at all. He might decide one day that having more time to play is not as important as being an honest person. The brave act is the decision to break the bad habit and the determination to follow through with that decision each day.

pg.4 Bravery looks different in different situations. It doesn’t always involve overcoming fear. Many people make choices that require determination and strength, and these people are no less brave than those who overcome their fears.

ansver
Answers: 1

Another question on English

question
English, 21.06.2019 15:10
Which excerpt from tinker v. des moines shows how precedent support an argument? a. "as we shall discuss, the wearing of armbands in the circumstances of this case was entirely divorced from actually or potentially disruptive conduct by those participating in it. it was closely akin to 'pure speech' which, we have repeatedly held, is entitled to comprehensive protection under the first amendment. cf. cox v. louisiana, 379 u.s. 536, 555 (1965); adderley v. florida, 385 u.s. 39 (1966)." b. "while the absence of obscene remarks or boisterous and loud disorder perhaps justifies the court's statement that the few armband students did not actually 'disrupt' the classwork, i think the record overwhelmingly shows that the armbands did exactly what the elected school officials and principals foresaw they would." c. "i, for one, am not fully persuaded that school pupils are wise enough, even with this court's expert from washington, to run the 23,390 public school systems [n4] in our 50 states." d. "under our constitution, free speech is not a right that is given only to be so circumscribed that it exists in principle, but not in fact. freedom of expression would not truly exist if the right could be exercised only in an area that a benevolent government has provided as a safe haven for crackpots."
Answers: 1
question
English, 21.06.2019 21:30
Esther is a person and who makes friends easily. parallel structure how?
Answers: 1
question
English, 21.06.2019 23:30
Select the correct answer. read this excerpt from incidents in the life of a slave girl by harriet ann jacobs: among the ladies who were acquainted with my grandmother, was one who had known her from childhood, and always been very friendly to her. she had also known my mother and her children, and felt interested for them. at this crisis of affairs she called to see my grandmother, as she not unfrequently did. she observed the sad and troubled expression of her face, and asked if she knew where linda was, and whether she was safe. my grandmother shook her head, without answering. "come, aunt martha," said the kind lady, "tell me all about it. perhaps i can do something to you." which of these important concepts uncommon to abolitionist literature does jacobs depict in the excerpt? 1. some kind white characters were included in slave narratives so that northerners would not be offended. 2. southern society was complex and diverse with both good and bad people unlike northern stereotypes showed. 3. many kind slave owners and their slaves developed deep friendships. 4. most whites and blacks lived in harmony in the south and made efforts to each other. a. 1 and 4 b. 1 and 3 c. 1 and 2 d. 2 and 3
Answers: 3
question
English, 22.06.2019 02:30
Awell-worded thesis statement is both and generally acceptable . . broad agreeable . . limited significant . . limited significant . . broa
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
Reread the two essays above "Being Brave Means Overcoming Fear" and "What Bravery Means" and compare...
Questions
question
English, 22.07.2021 17:00
question
Computers and Technology, 22.07.2021 17:00
question
Mathematics, 22.07.2021 17:00
question
English, 22.07.2021 17:00
Questions on the website: 13722362