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It is a long way from anywhere as I sit uncomfortably in my cramped seat en route to Inle Lake from Bago [https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html myanmar beaches]. It's three in the morning, I am exhausted, my body is aching and I have been either riding a bus or waiting to board one for the past 19 hours. This lake had better be as "remarkably beautiful" as all of the guide books tell us because it is the most difficult traveling I have done in five months.<br><br>It is water festival time, the hottest time of the year, and everyone in the country is taking the bus to visit relatives and to see the sights for themselves. We arrive in Bago, a town situated 80 km northeast of Yangon via Kyiakito in early afternoon to book our overnight bus to Inle Lake. The tour operator eagerly takes our money, but fails to let us know that it is next to impossible to secure a seat during this busy season on such short notice. As the hours tick by, we wait impatiently for a spot to become available, our desperate proprietor flagged every coach that passed through this dusty town down until finally a driver agreed to take us.<br><br>It was an embarrassing experience as we boarded the bus. People were kicked out of their seats to make room for us. Not speaking their language, our protests fell on deaf ears. We didn't want to make people sit on the floor for us, but there was nothing we could do about it, and we were shown to our designated spots.<br><br>The next 10 hours consisted of very loud variety shows a la "Laugh In" that I couldn't understand one word of, a bus so packed with luggage, that I was forced to stuff my 70L Backpack under my feet and temperatures so hot that it was difficult to breathe. Just as I was [http://Www.Fool.com/search/solr.aspx?q=drifting drifting] off to the glorious escape of sleep, we stopped at one in the morning for dinner. Who eats in the middle of the night? But sure enough, everyone disembarked and ordered full meals from the roadside food stand. We ended up staying at this lively stop for much longer than expected as our bus was under repair and wasn't going anywhere soon.<br><br>I had the chance to witness quite the spectacle though.<br><br>It is very late at night and children are running around playing, music is blaring, several food stalls are busy cooking up food and a market is open to sell vegetables and fruit.  [https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html best myanmar beaches] This place is [http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/thriving?s=ts thriving] as it makes its living off of the overnight buses that stop here full of people ready to spend money.<br><br>Eventually we were on our way, and once we settled into our seats the variety show was turned up to "11" for all to enjoy. Somehow, I managed to fall asleep again, but at 5:00 am I was awakened to blaring prayers over the loudspeaker. Nobody seemed to mind, so I sat in my seat and watched the scenery. We passed Ox carts full of produce for the market, horse carts taking people off to town, water buffalo and children walking to school until the driver stopped the bus to tell us that this was our stop.<br><br>We were let off on the side of the road and the rest of the bus headed on to Mandalay. Negotiations were to begin again for a pick up truck to the lake. We never did find one, but we managed to hop onto an over packed minivan where I was to spend the next eight hours in 45 degree weather with no relief from the heat. 5000 Kyat ($6 US) bought me a seat on the engine with a thin straw pad to sit on. Four of us were crammed in the front of the van. A driver who never stopped smoking, a young monk squished between the driver and myself and my husband who was wedged between the door and me.<br><br>31 hours after leaving our initial destination, we made it to Inle Lake, where we took the first guesthouse that we could find and quickly retired for the rest of the day.<br><br>I wouldn't know if Inle Lake was as beautiful as the guidebooks say, we were in [https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html best beaches myanmar] at the hottest driest time of the year, but for our stay at the lake it was cold, rainy and overcast. We never experienced that breathtaking panoramic view. But like everywhere that we visited in this country, the people made the [http://Www.Homeclick.com/web/search/search.aspx?Ntt=experience experience]. They were warm and friendly and we [https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html best beaches in myanmar] were even invited to a private home for tea and conversation. At a temple on the lake named Jumping Cat Monastery, a group of people were so enthralled with us, that the tables were turned and we were the attraction. People took turns having their pictures taken with us and we shared a laugh as we gave a thumb's up to the camera. Sunglass clad monks gave a peace sign and summer [http://www.Blogrollcenter.com/index.php?a=search&q=vacationers vacationers] put their arms around us to pose for pictures. When Dave showed people the pictures on his digital camera, everyone went wild, wanting him to take more.<br><br>As to whether or not Inlay Lake was worth the bus trip from hell? Of course it was. I experienced pure hospitality, I had the rare opportunity to see the Intha Leg Rowers, famous for their unique way of propelling their boat with one leg wrapped around their oar. I visited a monastery full of cats who have been trained by monks to jump through hoops and I was privileged enough to interact with a people who have been isolated from the outside world for so long.
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While searching the net I ran a cross this great article from the writer of �The Secret DNA of Writing Essays-And Everything Else� he also has a �Essay Writing Services.<br>�There are some student testimonials, there, too,� says Drew, �as well as some from professional writers and college-level teachers. NewView makes writing easier because it actually requires students to cope forthrightly with �What�s new to the reader� with a simple but powerful process that nobody else has access to, but everyone can learn, even just using the book. The software makes it more convenient to use when you�re writing something.�<br><br>|<br>On December 8, 1975, Newsweek magazine ran a front-cover story titled, �Why Johnny Can�t Write.� It raised national concerns about the quality of writing that students produce in American K-12 schools. And it caused a 30-year flood of thousands of protest articles with the same title.<br>Furthermore, in 1998, 2002, and 2007, national tests continued to prove that those concerns were still justified, tests which were reported by the National Education Association-only one out of five seniors showed they could write well enough to do writing required in college. And in 2003, the National Commission on Writing declared there was a national crisis in teaching writing in America and recommended, basically, that all levels of schools and governments chip in lots more money, time, and people to cope with the crisis.<br>However, what authorities have not realized, even yet, is that most of the major problems with teaching writing come from teachers focusing their students� writing merely on the FORMS of writing, without teaching the CONTENT of writing.<br>For instance, teachers emphasize correct grammar, punctuation, and organization, which are all forms. And when they teach how to write essays, they spend all their time on [http://www.Blogher.com/search/apachesolr_search/introductions introductions] and conclusions, thesis statements, topic sentences, and paragraphs-more forms. All those writing forms are needed, to be sure, but nowhere is there a connection between any of them and the most crucial thing [https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html best beaches in myanmar] writing-CONTENT that is new to the reader.<br>True, most teachers and textbooks DO tell students to avoid cliches, to say something interesting, to say something original or new, but they don�t provide students with an actual process for coming up with something new.<br>Don�t get me wrong. I�m not blaming teachers of writing: I�m merely describing the situation.<br>Actually, it�s a cultural problem, that is, a cultural conceptual problem.<br>You see, nobody really knows how to talk about the concept of newness, so how can teachers be expected to instruct on newness in [http://Browse.deviantart.com/?qh=&section=&global=1&q=writing writing]? In fact, our civilization has ignored coping with the concept of newness for thousands of [https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html beaches of myanmar] years.<br>Why? Because for all of us newness has been this mysterious, formless, HUGE black box in our minds that we put everything into that we-<br>1. haven�t experienced yet,<br>2. haven�t been told about yet, and<br>3. haven�t thought about yet<br>Let�s verify this, right here. As a mental experiment, try this: Can you think of even ONE useful category that would fit ALL kinds of newness? (Of course, I mean other than the three groups in the previous paragraph. Let�s also add the idea of recency, making four. We do usually think of something that recently occurred as being new, such as a new headache or a new bill. What makes them new is only that they occurred nearby in time, or recently.)<br>So, right now, try to come up with at least one category of newness, and then resume reading after the line of asterisks, below.<br>**************** I couldn�t do it, either-until I realized a couple more things.<br>First, very like the vague concept of what�s new, the concept of what�s old has been a mysterious, formless, HUGE black box in our minds that takes in-<br>1. everything we�ve experienced,<br>2. everything we�ve been told, and<br>3. everything we�ve ever thought about<br>-in fact, everything in our lives up until now! Even with these three categories, what�s old is so huge that we really can�t wrap our minds around it, can we?<br>Second, I discovered that we can  [https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html myanmar beaches] cope with newness and oldness if we realize this fundamental relationship between the two-what�s new always depends on what�s old.<br>For instance, you know the old saying, �You can�t talk about color to a blind man (who has been blind since birth).� If your reader has no experience with the kind of thing you are talking about-that is, no experience with a shared group that the thing belongs to, something it is like,such as movies or computers-then you can�t talk with him about it. You really can�t explain anything unless you use words and ideas from groups of things you [https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html beach myanmar] already share with him.<br>So if your reader is Tarzan of the Jungle (Tarzan taught himself to read, in the original story) and you use the word soap in your writing without explaining it, then Tarzan won�t know what you mean, since soap is something he has never experienced, has never been told about, and has never thought about. And you can�t describe a beautiful sunset to a blind man because he has never seen that group of things we call colors.<br>Now, that�s not too big of a mental leap, is it, to say that what�s new depends on what�s already old (or already known) to the reader?<br>Okay. Then what we need now are some categories we can use to divide up the concepts of new and old so we can make a working relationship between the two.<br>Here is a list of what I call old views:<br>? Values<br>? Expectations<br>? Experiences<br>? Reasoning<br>? Language<br>And here is a list of what I call new views:<br>? Reverse<br>? Add<br>? Subtract<br>? Substitute<br>? Rearrange<br>With these two sets of categories, we can teach students to identify what they share with their readers-the old view, and then we can show them how to process those with the five new views, making them new.<br>For instance, one student may identify her own strong old view value of not liking the divorce her parents went through, also noting that her friends don�t like divorces, generally, either.<br>Then we can suggest that she use the reverse new view [http://www.covnews.com/archives/search/?searchthis=process process] to say that divorce has some advantages, some good things about it. And on her own she more than probably could come up with examples that show her actually spending more [http://Thesaurus.com/browse/personal personal] time with her father each week, going to a show or to dinner more often with him, as well as the wonderful fact that he now buys her more expensive personal gifts than before the divorce. Then we can help her put that into a thesis statement, make it resonate in topic sentences, use it to provide examples and stories in her body paragraphs, and create a fine introduction and conclusion.<br>We can teach Johnny-and Janey-to write content with newness and still use forms in doing it. But only if we stop focusing so exclusively on forms and start focusing first on what�s new to the reader. And only then should we show them how they can use traditional forms to support and convey that newness.<br>As we all know, in the real world newness of content generates forms, not the other way around.<br>By universally teaching �what�s new to the reader� as the most important factor in writing courses, we�ll never have to see another irritating article titled, �Why Johnny Can�t Write�-and we�ll save a mountain of money in the process.<br><br>Learn more about essay writing

Huidige versie van 4 jul 2017 om 03:57

While searching the net I ran a cross this great article from the writer of �The Secret DNA of Writing Essays-And Everything Else� he also has a �Essay Writing Services.
�There are some student testimonials, there, too,� says Drew, �as well as some from professional writers and college-level teachers. NewView makes writing easier because it actually requires students to cope forthrightly with �What�s new to the reader� with a simple but powerful process that nobody else has access to, but everyone can learn, even just using the book. The software makes it more convenient to use when you�re writing something.�

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On December 8, 1975, Newsweek magazine ran a front-cover story titled, �Why Johnny Can�t Write.� It raised national concerns about the quality of writing that students produce in American K-12 schools. And it caused a 30-year flood of thousands of protest articles with the same title.
Furthermore, in 1998, 2002, and 2007, national tests continued to prove that those concerns were still justified, tests which were reported by the National Education Association-only one out of five seniors showed they could write well enough to do writing required in college. And in 2003, the National Commission on Writing declared there was a national crisis in teaching writing in America and recommended, basically, that all levels of schools and governments chip in lots more money, time, and people to cope with the crisis.
However, what authorities have not realized, even yet, is that most of the major problems with teaching writing come from teachers focusing their students� writing merely on the FORMS of writing, without teaching the CONTENT of writing.
For instance, teachers emphasize correct grammar, punctuation, and organization, which are all forms. And when they teach how to write essays, they spend all their time on introductions and conclusions, thesis statements, topic sentences, and paragraphs-more forms. All those writing forms are needed, to be sure, but nowhere is there a connection between any of them and the most crucial thing best beaches in myanmar writing-CONTENT that is new to the reader.
True, most teachers and textbooks DO tell students to avoid cliches, to say something interesting, to say something original or new, but they don�t provide students with an actual process for coming up with something new.
Don�t get me wrong. I�m not blaming teachers of writing: I�m merely describing the situation.
Actually, it�s a cultural problem, that is, a cultural conceptual problem.
You see, nobody really knows how to talk about the concept of newness, so how can teachers be expected to instruct on newness in writing? In fact, our civilization has ignored coping with the concept of newness for thousands of beaches of myanmar years.
Why? Because for all of us newness has been this mysterious, formless, HUGE black box in our minds that we put everything into that we-
1. haven�t experienced yet,
2. haven�t been told about yet, and
3. haven�t thought about yet
Let�s verify this, right here. As a mental experiment, try this: Can you think of even ONE useful category that would fit ALL kinds of newness? (Of course, I mean other than the three groups in the previous paragraph. Let�s also add the idea of recency, making four. We do usually think of something that recently occurred as being new, such as a new headache or a new bill. What makes them new is only that they occurred nearby in time, or recently.)
So, right now, try to come up with at least one category of newness, and then resume reading after the line of asterisks, below.
**************** I couldn�t do it, either-until I realized a couple more things.
First, very like the vague concept of what�s new, the concept of what�s old has been a mysterious, formless, HUGE black box in our minds that takes in-
1. everything we�ve experienced,
2. everything we�ve been told, and
3. everything we�ve ever thought about
-in fact, everything in our lives up until now! Even with these three categories, what�s old is so huge that we really can�t wrap our minds around it, can we?
Second, I discovered that we can myanmar beaches cope with newness and oldness if we realize this fundamental relationship between the two-what�s new always depends on what�s old.
For instance, you know the old saying, �You can�t talk about color to a blind man (who has been blind since birth).� If your reader has no experience with the kind of thing you are talking about-that is, no experience with a shared group that the thing belongs to, something it is like,such as movies or computers-then you can�t talk with him about it. You really can�t explain anything unless you use words and ideas from groups of things you beach myanmar already share with him.
So if your reader is Tarzan of the Jungle (Tarzan taught himself to read, in the original story) and you use the word soap in your writing without explaining it, then Tarzan won�t know what you mean, since soap is something he has never experienced, has never been told about, and has never thought about. And you can�t describe a beautiful sunset to a blind man because he has never seen that group of things we call colors.
Now, that�s not too big of a mental leap, is it, to say that what�s new depends on what�s already old (or already known) to the reader?
Okay. Then what we need now are some categories we can use to divide up the concepts of new and old so we can make a working relationship between the two.
Here is a list of what I call old views:
? Values
? Expectations
? Experiences
? Reasoning
? Language
And here is a list of what I call new views:
? Reverse
? Add
? Subtract
? Substitute
? Rearrange
With these two sets of categories, we can teach students to identify what they share with their readers-the old view, and then we can show them how to process those with the five new views, making them new.
For instance, one student may identify her own strong old view value of not liking the divorce her parents went through, also noting that her friends don�t like divorces, generally, either.
Then we can suggest that she use the reverse new view process to say that divorce has some advantages, some good things about it. And on her own she more than probably could come up with examples that show her actually spending more personal time with her father each week, going to a show or to dinner more often with him, as well as the wonderful fact that he now buys her more expensive personal gifts than before the divorce. Then we can help her put that into a thesis statement, make it resonate in topic sentences, use it to provide examples and stories in her body paragraphs, and create a fine introduction and conclusion.
We can teach Johnny-and Janey-to write content with newness and still use forms in doing it. But only if we stop focusing so exclusively on forms and start focusing first on what�s new to the reader. And only then should we show them how they can use traditional forms to support and convey that newness.
As we all know, in the real world newness of content generates forms, not the other way around.
By universally teaching �what�s new to the reader� as the most important factor in writing courses, we�ll never have to see another irritating article titled, �Why Johnny Can�t Write�-and we�ll save a mountain of money in the process.

Learn more about essay writing