Giver Essay

Imagine if you were told everything you knew was wrong. This is the Giver, by Lois Lowry. In the Giver, a boy named Jonas as he discovers he has lived a lie.. Jonas must keep the huge secret from his family and friends. The fact that the world is imperfect. Through the story Jonas’s world becomes turned upside down, and never again will he look at the world the same. This society is a dystopia because Elders keep people in the dark, and don’t allow uniqueness and difference, which is true imperfection.
To keep the community a utopia, the Elders choose everything that everyone does. The Elders keep everything perfect through daily rituals, releasing those who do bad, and only they know what the world is truly like, giving them the power to do anything they want. The utopia hides everyone from pain and imperfection. When Jonas sees the truth, what the world is truly like, he then comes home and sees his family laughing and he thinks: “They have never known pain,” (Pg.94) This is important because he’s finally realizing that Elders are only trying to keep the community perfect, while they are only blinding the citizens from the real world. The Elders keep everyone in the dark, keeping them ignorant and keeping things in check. Jonas is now realizing that the place he lives in may not just be not a utopia, but maybe even a dystopia.
Jonas’s community is a dystopia because of the terrible things those in power do to those in the community. Jonas’s community is a dystopia hidden in a “perfect” place. The Elders actually have these poor people living in a dystopia. While the Elders mean well and keep everyone out of harm, if there is the rare case that someone gets hurt, it would scar them. “He fell with his leg twisted under him, and could hear the crack of bone.” (Pg.93)
This is one of Jonas’s memories of pain. The Giver shows this to him, partially to remind him that the world isn’t perfect, but also to prepare him for the pain of the truth. The fact that there is no such things as perfect, and that the world is not a pretty place. Jonas can see things clearly and realizes that perfect doesn’t exist. He understands the world better and has as much power as the Elders. All he needed was the truth.
Jonas’s society is simply an illusion. Not perfect, but imperfect. A dystopia. The Elders attempt to keep citizens safe, by hiding them from the truth that would destroy them to see. The community has dug itself in a hole that they can never dig themselves out of. Is being perfect worth hiding people from the truth? The community ruins people’s lives without the people even knowing. The people are like puppets, and the Elders are the puppeteers. In the end, after you see all the terrible things the Elders do, can you really call it a utopia, or can you see the truth?

Spanish Skit

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Our group worked pretty well. There where a couple times were we where we didn’t agree on things. Overall I think that we were a good group. Our skit was okay. There were a couple of moments with weird pauses, but it was pretty quick. Our skit was pretty bad. We were looking down at our scripts a lot.
A couple ways we could improve are learning our scripts better, communicating more with our group, and working more on the script.

Math Profile

Ben C. 9/10/16
Group A Math Profile
When I switched to LREI in the fifth grade the environment was really different and math was the most different class compared to my old school. Math became a real struggle for me and was my worst class in fifth grade. Over the Summer, Ana gave me an eighty something page worksheet and said to do one page a day. I did that and came back the next year feeling prepared. I got good grades and made it into seminar. In the sixth grade I started to enjoy math instead of dreading it. I especially loved geometry. From always getting 1’s and 2’s in the fifth grade, I think I’m pretty good at math considering where I am at now. When I do my homework, I like to take 10 to 15 minute intervals so that it’s not so much at one. I take about a five minute break and then do more of the homework. When I get stuck, i put down my pencil, and just think. Nothing else. I just think until i have even a seed of the answer. That is all I have to say about me and math.