Richard

"I have no special talent. I am only passionately curious" - Albert Einstein

Trevor Noah: Born a Crime

“Born a Crime” by Trevor Noah describes his experience growing up in South Africa during apartheid as a colored child born from a white father and black mother. Apartheid was a racist government meant to turn South Africa into a white-ruled area by keeping other races under total control using methods such as segregating races and providing minimal education to non-whites. The book provides engaging short stories from Trevor Noah’s childhood with information about apartheid mixed in, detailing Trevor Noah’s experiences along with his mother’s daring attempts to defy apartheid and raise Trevor freely and well educated.

Theme: Never give up in the face of adversity.

These are all examples of Trevor Noah and his mom overcoming various forms of adversity, like discrimination, extreme poverty, and even apartheid itself. Trevor’s mom is even willing to jump off a moving vehicle to protect herself and her sons from danger.

Central Idea: Identity

Trevor Noah explores his identity throughout the book, mostly out of necessity to not get bullied and to fit in. Trevor’s identity is complex, being a colored child born from a white father and black father with elements of both black and white culture.

Central Idea: Apartheid

Apartheid greatly effects all main characters, causing Trevor Noah to be discriminated against, his mother to grow up in extreme poverty and have to risk legal punishments and defy apartheid to raise Trevor freely, and his father to have to move out and be very secretive to not get caught as a black and white couple.

Am I a Humanist?

I am a humanist because I strongly agree with most of humanism’s main ideas. I agree that we should view the world through science, not religion because scientific concepts have proof and, while religions are based on some facts, they are mostly assumptions. I also agree that we should have religious tolerance because not toleration other religions is discrimination. However, I only partially agree with humanism’s views of education because, while I do agree that education is important, I don’t agree with emphasizing humanities or emphasizing any subject because depending on your career, it could be completely useless. I agree with individualism because having more individual control means everybody can better pursue their interests. I also agree with status through achievement because status coming from which class you were born in with no way to change it is just completely unfair. I chose these points for my infographic because these were all large changes from the medieval times to the renaissance.

 

Works Cited:

Brittanica

https://kids.britannica.com/students/article/humanism/274981

Ch. 28

file:///Users/richard.wei/Downloads/Ch%2028%20Humanism.pdf

Conflict Found Poem

App Process Journal-Work In Progress

 

This powerpoint is the process journal for my summative app. This is updated each class.

Welcome to Your New Blog!

When you blog you create posts and posts are categorised according to your subject. Some categories have already been set up for you. If you need more categories you can add them as needed. It’s important that your posts have the following:

  • An engaging title – this should not include the name of the subject since this is referenced in the category.
  • Body – this is where you share your learning. This can include text, images, embedded videos from Dragons’ Tube or elsewhere. You should always consider how your post looks to your audience. Is it engaging? Do they want to keep reading?
  • Category – select one that has been set for you or add a new category. Posts can have more than one category e.g. Humanities and Myself as a Learner

Click on the images below to learn more about blogging:

 

 

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