Saturday, January 25, 2020

As You Like It Essay: Violating the Established Social Order

Violating the Established Social Order in As You Like It  Ã‚     Ã‚  Ã‚   The recent White House sex scandal raised issues about gender, desire, and an established social order - issues that questioned established social norms and ideas about the power and politics of sex. Our society is not the first to recognize the effects that sexual politics and gender relations have had on social order, however. The works of William Shakespeare are ample evidence that Elizabethan England was firmly in touch with these notions. Shakespeare’s keen observations and careful crafting demonstrate over and over again that the battle for power is an ever-present one, and that social order is an ever-changing phenomenon. Quite often, Shakespeare questions the "norms" of gender, desire, and social order, and does his best to show that these norms can easily be changed (often with hilarious consequences). As You Like It is a prime example. Rife with usurpations, cross-dressing, female aggressiveness, and even a god named "Hymen", Shakespeare does his best to throw the established norms into disarray. He takes the "rules" regarding gender, desire, and social disorder completely upside-down. As You Like It shows that, like a hymen, these rules are made to be broken. The catalyst for the chaos the drives the play is certainly the violation of social order. Charles the wrestler tells us, "†¦the old Duke is banished by his younger brother the new Duke†¦" (I,i,99-100), and we are off and running. The old usurped Duke (Senior) has gone to live in the forest of Arden with several loyal followers, "and there they live like the old Robin Hood of England" (I,i,116). This allusion to the social outsider who robs from the rich and gives to the poor highlights how th... ...of Chicago Press, 1946. Harris, Laurie Lamzen, ed. Shakespearean Criticism : Volume 5. Detroit : Gale Research Company Book Tower, 1984. Holland, Norman. Psychoanalysis and Shakespeare. New York McGraw-Hill, 1966. O'Connor, Evangeline M. Who's Who and What's What In Shakespeare. New York : Avenel Books, 1978. Shakespeare, William. As You Like It. Eds., Louis B. Wright and Virginia A. LaMar. New York : Washington Square Press, 1960. Spurgeon, Caroline. Shakespeare's Imagery And What It Tells Us. London : Cambridge University Press, 1965. Stevenson, Burton. The Standard Book of Shakespearean Quotations. New York : Funk & Wagnalls Company, Inc., 1953. Thaler, Alwin. Shakespeare and Our World. Knoxville, TN University of Tennessee Press, 1966. Webster, Margaret. Shakespeare Without Tears. New York Capricorn Books, 1975.      

Thursday, January 16, 2020

Celta – Pre-Course Task

CELTA Pre-Course Task – Pamela Thomason Task 1 1. My CELTA course will be within a multilingual group in a fairly small mixed gender class. Fellow students will all have some kind of formal education. 2. After finishing my CELTA I’ll probably teach both one-to-one lessons and lessons in monolingual groups. Task 2 1. I decided to teach adults partly because it will be easier to find employment in this context but I also like the idea of teaching to someone who voluntarily chose to learn the subject. 2. I can bring my experience as a language learner and teacher of my own language. 3.Adult learners are motivated to learn because they have chosen to study the subject. They may already speak several languages. They are usually disciplined. They may have ideas and expectations about how the class should go. Task 3 1. I would like to find out what other languages they speak, their level of education and their reason for wanting to learn English. I also think it would be usefu l to know about their interest and hobbies and their expectation for the course. 2. If the lesson is one to one I can ask the person directly. If it is a group class I might make them fill in a questionnaire.Task 4. I believe the most challenging learners would be the one who are studying English because of pressure from their parents. Task 5 I would say sense of humour, patience, enthusiasm, gives clear information and feedback, friendliness. Task 6 I associate grammar with logic, good writing, dryness (in the context of language learning), something difficult to memorise. Task 7 1. Correct 2. I went to the movies last night 3. He often comes late. 4. Correct. 5. Can I have a black coffee, please? 6. People with 12 items or fewer can queue here. Task 8First of all grammar is part of the teaching of a language and a teacher needs to know the subject he/she is teaching. It is also important that the students trust their teachers and can rely on them for any doubts or questions. Not k nowing the answer to their questions makes them doubt your teaching skills and discourages them from learning. Task 9 1. pronoun 2. article 3. conjunction 4. adverb 5. adjective 6. verb 7. demonstrative adjective 8. preposition 9. verb 10. noun Task 10 1. Lexical 2. Lexical 3. Auxiliary 4. Auxiliary 5. Auxiliary 6. Lexical Task 11 1. lexical 2. auxiliary 3. auxiliary 4. lexical 5. lexical 6. lexical 7. uxiliary 8. lexical Task 12 1-C 2-E 3-B 4-A 5-D Task 13 1 past tense form 2 –ing form 3 3rd person –present simple tense 4 base form 5 past participle form Task 14 Hear – heard – heard – irregular, Do – did – done – irregular, Help – helped – helped – irregular, Think – thought – thought – irregular, Take – took – taken – irregular, Steal – stole – stolen – irregular, Go – went – gone – irregular, Drink – drank – drunk – irregular, Arrive – arrived – arrived – regular. Task 15 1. Past progressive active. 2. Past modal perfect active. 3. Present perfect active. 4. Past progressive passive. 5. Past active 6. Modal progressive active.Task 16 1. Present continuous 2. Past simple 3. Present simple 4. Past perfect 5. Present simple 6. Future perfect 7. Past simple – Past continuous 8. Present perfect continuous Task 17 1. Past 2. Future 3. Past up until present 4. Present 5. Present (maybe past and future too) Task 18 The verb â€Å"to be†. The â€Å"ing† form. Task 19 – Future – The action takes place regularly (past, present, future) – Past- the action takes place in the moment of the story Task 20 All these verbs cannot be use in the progressive form. The simple present should be used in these cases. Task 21 How the word is pronounced. If it is a noun, adjective, verb, pronoun etc.If it is a noun if it is countable or uncoun table. If it is a verb, if it is transitive or intransitive. Bigger dictionaries also provide examples of usage. Task 22 1. â€Å"Highest† is incorrect. When speaking about people’s heights the adjective â€Å"tall† is used. 2. â€Å"Enervated† is a very formal word – not appropriate in this context. 3. â€Å"Pretentious† has a negative connotation and conflicts with the statement that it is a good essay 4. A slap cannot be loving 5. Footing is not used Task 23 1. Adverb-adjective collocation 2. Verb-noun collocation, verb-noun collocation 3. Adverb-adjective collocation 4. Verb-preposition collocation 5.Adverb-adjective collocation 6. Verb-preposition collocation; adjective-noun collocation Task 24 1-B; 2-C; 3-A Task 25 1-B; 2-C; 3-A Task 26 1. Their 2. South 3. Language. 4. Peaceful 5. Young 6. Call 7. Search 8. Equation 9. Sugar Task 27 1. guarantee 2. cavalry 3. mechanisation 4. language 5. retreat 6. speculative 7. success 8. balance 9. identity 10. articulate. Task 28 Photograph, photography, photographer, photographic To record/a record, to increase/an increase, to present/a present, to import/an import They may experience problems because the words have the same root but the stress falls in different syllables. Task 29Mother, forget, announce, tonight, notable, mention, patrol, indicative Task 30 Work-related email – read carefully paying attention to all the details Short newspapers articles – read to understand the message of the text Long newspaper articles – browsing through, trying to gasp the main message Task 31 1. Gist reading/Reading to infer 2. Scan reading 3. Reading to infer 4. Gist reading/Intensive reading Task 32 It is time consuming, can put the person off. It is difficult to keep the interest alive when you have to pause every two minutes. It is also useless as the main information can be obtained even without understanding all the words.Task 33 They may have studied the la nguage in the past in their native country and learned the phonetic sounds differently (it happened to me) so they don’t recognise the words. When reading you know when a word starts and end, when listening it is not always so. In reading you have more time to process information. Task 34 I was listening to a friend. I did that in two ways. We were first chatting and then discussing when and where to meet later. In the former case I was listening to infer her point of view on things, in the second case I was listening in a way that focused on the information I needed. I also spoke to my mum.Since she does a lot of small talk I was skim listening, just making sure I could follow her thread of thoughts without paying to much attention to details. Task 35 1. Intensive listening 2. Gist listening 3. Scan listening 4. Intensive listening 5. Listening to infer meaning 6. Gist listening Task 36 Learning grammar doesn’t give you the ability to speak a language. When we acquire our mother tongue we learn how to speak first and then learn the grammar. Something similar should happen when learning a new language. Listening and speaking are key. Task 37 1. Could be clear depending on context but generally I would say no 2.Yes 3. Yes 4. It is ambiguous in itself but as a reply to A it is understandable. Task 38 1. Transactional 2. Transactional 3. Interactional 4. Interactional 5. Transactional 6. Interactional Task 39 They acquire confidence. They find themselves in real life situation as opposed to just doing learning abstract things. They can learn something from the people they are talking to. They learn other, non-verbal skills, to make themselves understood and that helps the improvement of the language on the long run. Task 40 1. S 2. W 3. S 4. S 5. W 6. S 7. S 8. W 9. W. 10. W 11. W. 12. S Task 41 1.She threw the ball hard so it hurt hen I caught it. The words â€Å"though† and â€Å"threw† and â€Å"caught† and â€Å"caught† sound the same. 2. My brother lives in Sweden. The vowels are not pronounced. It could also be that the student’s mother tongue does not use many vowels. 3. However hard I try it never works. The confusion may come from the fact that â€Å"however† can also be used as an adverb to introduce a contrasting idea and in that case it is followed by a comma. 4. First of all he invited me to sit down, after that he offered me a coffee. I was very surprised by his politeness. The student is not familiar with punctuation and capitalisation.Task 42 There are spelling issues and also cohesion and syntax mistakes. To improve the students’ writing skills I would encourage them to write and then correct their mistakes. I would also make them do a lot of reading. Task 43 a. 3; b. 6; c. 1; d. 5; e. 2; f. 7 Task 44 1. f; 2. g; 3. b; 4. e; 5. i; 6. h. 7. d 8. c. 9. a Task 45 1. the word is idiomatic and probably unknown to the student. Can be substituted with â€Å"write that down†. 2. too indirect – can be confusing. Substitute with: Look at question number 4 and answer it. 3. too many instruction at the same time. Substitute with: Read the text on page 3.After they complete the task: Compare the answer with the person next you. After they complete the task: Write a short summary and story and discuss it with your partner. 4. Ambiguous. Substitute with â€Å"Answer the question at the bottom of the page†. Task 46. 1. Working in group is vital to improve your communication skills and acquire fluency. Students interacting in a group reinforce their own learning. 2. If I translate everything you become dependant on translation. You do not learn a language by simply translating. It can also occur that there is no one-to-one translation from your language to English. . Prejudice is not tolerated in this classroom. If you want to learn you have to set aside all prejudice and be open to difference. Without this open mindset you cannot lear n. 4. Books are important in giving you a structure and allowing you to review at home. Task 47 I would arrange the classroom so that the students playing the assistant and those asking the questions are facing each other. I could use pictures of different language schools and handouts with course information. There could be confusion on the order in which the â€Å"potential students† consult the â€Å"information desk assistants†.Some students may finish earlier than others. Task 48 1. I would explain that â€Å"slim† is the opposite of fat and usually has a positive connotation while â€Å"thin† means very slim, possibly too slim and can have a negative connotation. I would then make examples of famous people who are either slim of thin. Maybe I would ask students to provide examples too. 2. In this case I would mime the two gestures. 3. I would explain that the first expression refers to something that happened regularly in the past while the second o ne refers to the present and it means that I always get up early so it is not a problem for me. . I would explain that â€Å"nervous† means agitated and â€Å"upset† means worried or sad about something. For example: â€Å"I am nervous because I have an exam† and â€Å"I am upset because I failed the exam†. 5. The first expression refers to the present time so it is for 4 weeks back from now. The second one for weeks back from some specific event. Eg. â€Å"Four weeks ago I went to the doctor. † Four weeks before my trip I went to the doctor†. I might also express this graphically with a drawing. Task 49 1.I think the reason the students could not answer questions about the text is that they were to focusing on reading it correctly to pay attention to the content. Personally I would let them read silently and then ask questions. 2. In this case it may be that the topic they were asked to discuss was too advanced and students did not have suff icient vocabulary to tackle it. I would change it to something easier. Task 50 A teacher is a professional and, like all professionals, has to adhere to certain rules. All the points indicated are part of a teacher’s responsibility towards the students and the institution he/she is working for. Celta – Pre-Course Task CELTA Pre-Course Task – Pamela Thomason Task 1 1. My CELTA course will be within a multilingual group in a fairly small mixed gender class. Fellow students will all have some kind of formal education. 2. After finishing my CELTA I’ll probably teach both one-to-one lessons and lessons in monolingual groups. Task 2 1. I decided to teach adults partly because it will be easier to find employment in this context but I also like the idea of teaching to someone who voluntarily chose to learn the subject. 2. I can bring my experience as a language learner and teacher of my own language. 3.Adult learners are motivated to learn because they have chosen to study the subject. They may already speak several languages. They are usually disciplined. They may have ideas and expectations about how the class should go. Task 3 1. I would like to find out what other languages they speak, their level of education and their reason for wanting to learn English. I also think it would be usefu l to know about their interest and hobbies and their expectation for the course. 2. If the lesson is one to one I can ask the person directly. If it is a group class I might make them fill in a questionnaire.Task 4. I believe the most challenging learners would be the one who are studying English because of pressure from their parents. Task 5 I would say sense of humour, patience, enthusiasm, gives clear information and feedback, friendliness. Task 6 I associate grammar with logic, good writing, dryness (in the context of language learning), something difficult to memorise. Task 7 1. Correct 2. I went to the movies last night 3. He often comes late. 4. Correct. 5. Can I have a black coffee, please? 6. People with 12 items or fewer can queue here. Task 8First of all grammar is part of the teaching of a language and a teacher needs to know the subject he/she is teaching. It is also important that the students trust their teachers and can rely on them for any doubts or questions. Not k nowing the answer to their questions makes them doubt your teaching skills and discourages them from learning. Task 9 1. pronoun 2. article 3. conjunction 4. adverb 5. adjective 6. verb 7. demonstrative adjective 8. preposition 9. verb 10. noun Task 10 1. Lexical 2. Lexical 3. Auxiliary 4. Auxiliary 5. Auxiliary 6. Lexical Task 11 1. lexical 2. auxiliary 3. auxiliary 4. lexical 5. lexical 6. lexical 7. uxiliary 8. lexical Task 12 1-C 2-E 3-B 4-A 5-D Task 13 1 past tense form 2 –ing form 3 3rd person –present simple tense 4 base form 5 past participle form Task 14 Hear – heard – heard – irregular, Do – did – done – irregular, Help – helped – helped – irregular, Think – thought – thought – irregular, Take – took – taken – irregular, Steal – stole – stolen – irregular, Go – went – gone – irregular, Drink – drank – drunk – irregular, Arrive – arrived – arrived – regular. Task 15 1. Past progressive active. 2. Past modal perfect active. 3. Present perfect active. 4. Past progressive passive. 5. Past active 6. Modal progressive active.Task 16 1. Present continuous 2. Past simple 3. Present simple 4. Past perfect 5. Present simple 6. Future perfect 7. Past simple – Past continuous 8. Present perfect continuous Task 17 1. Past 2. Future 3. Past up until present 4. Present 5. Present (maybe past and future too) Task 18 The verb â€Å"to be†. The â€Å"ing† form. Task 19 – Future – The action takes place regularly (past, present, future) – Past- the action takes place in the moment of the story Task 20 All these verbs cannot be use in the progressive form. The simple present should be used in these cases. Task 21 How the word is pronounced. If it is a noun, adjective, verb, pronoun etc.If it is a noun if it is countable or uncoun table. If it is a verb, if it is transitive or intransitive. Bigger dictionaries also provide examples of usage. Task 22 1. â€Å"Highest† is incorrect. When speaking about people’s heights the adjective â€Å"tall† is used. 2. â€Å"Enervated† is a very formal word – not appropriate in this context. 3. â€Å"Pretentious† has a negative connotation and conflicts with the statement that it is a good essay 4. A slap cannot be loving 5. Footing is not used Task 23 1. Adverb-adjective collocation 2. Verb-noun collocation, verb-noun collocation 3. Adverb-adjective collocation 4. Verb-preposition collocation 5.Adverb-adjective collocation 6. Verb-preposition collocation; adjective-noun collocation Task 24 1-B; 2-C; 3-A Task 25 1-B; 2-C; 3-A Task 26 1. Their 2. South 3. Language. 4. Peaceful 5. Young 6. Call 7. Search 8. Equation 9. Sugar Task 27 1. guarantee 2. cavalry 3. mechanisation 4. language 5. retreat 6. speculative 7. success 8. balance 9. identity 10. articulate. Task 28 Photograph, photography, photographer, photographic To record/a record, to increase/an increase, to present/a present, to import/an import They may experience problems because the words have the same root but the stress falls in different syllables. Task 29Mother, forget, announce, tonight, notable, mention, patrol, indicative Task 30 Work-related email – read carefully paying attention to all the details Short newspapers articles – read to understand the message of the text Long newspaper articles – browsing through, trying to gasp the main message Task 31 1. Gist reading/Reading to infer 2. Scan reading 3. Reading to infer 4. Gist reading/Intensive reading Task 32 It is time consuming, can put the person off. It is difficult to keep the interest alive when you have to pause every two minutes. It is also useless as the main information can be obtained even without understanding all the words.Task 33 They may have studied the la nguage in the past in their native country and learned the phonetic sounds differently (it happened to me) so they don’t recognise the words. When reading you know when a word starts and end, when listening it is not always so. In reading you have more time to process information. Task 34 I was listening to a friend. I did that in two ways. We were first chatting and then discussing when and where to meet later. In the former case I was listening to infer her point of view on things, in the second case I was listening in a way that focused on the information I needed. I also spoke to my mum.Since she does a lot of small talk I was skim listening, just making sure I could follow her thread of thoughts without paying to much attention to details. Task 35 1. Intensive listening 2. Gist listening 3. Scan listening 4. Intensive listening 5. Listening to infer meaning 6. Gist listening Task 36 Learning grammar doesn’t give you the ability to speak a language. When we acquire our mother tongue we learn how to speak first and then learn the grammar. Something similar should happen when learning a new language. Listening and speaking are key. Task 37 1. Could be clear depending on context but generally I would say no 2.Yes 3. Yes 4. It is ambiguous in itself but as a reply to A it is understandable. Task 38 1. Transactional 2. Transactional 3. Interactional 4. Interactional 5. Transactional 6. Interactional Task 39 They acquire confidence. They find themselves in real life situation as opposed to just doing learning abstract things. They can learn something from the people they are talking to. They learn other, non-verbal skills, to make themselves understood and that helps the improvement of the language on the long run. Task 40 1. S 2. W 3. S 4. S 5. W 6. S 7. S 8. W 9. W. 10. W 11. W. 12. S Task 41 1.She threw the ball hard so it hurt hen I caught it. The words â€Å"though† and â€Å"threw† and â€Å"caught† and â€Å"caught† sound the same. 2. My brother lives in Sweden. The vowels are not pronounced. It could also be that the student’s mother tongue does not use many vowels. 3. However hard I try it never works. The confusion may come from the fact that â€Å"however† can also be used as an adverb to introduce a contrasting idea and in that case it is followed by a comma. 4. First of all he invited me to sit down, after that he offered me a coffee. I was very surprised by his politeness. The student is not familiar with punctuation and capitalisation.Task 42 There are spelling issues and also cohesion and syntax mistakes. To improve the students’ writing skills I would encourage them to write and then correct their mistakes. I would also make them do a lot of reading. Task 43 a. 3; b. 6; c. 1; d. 5; e. 2; f. 7 Task 44 1. f; 2. g; 3. b; 4. e; 5. i; 6. h. 7. d 8. c. 9. a Task 45 1. the word is idiomatic and probably unknown to the student. Can be substituted with â€Å"write that down†. 2. too indirect – can be confusing. Substitute with: Look at question number 4 and answer it. 3. too many instruction at the same time. Substitute with: Read the text on page 3.After they complete the task: Compare the answer with the person next you. After they complete the task: Write a short summary and story and discuss it with your partner. 4. Ambiguous. Substitute with â€Å"Answer the question at the bottom of the page†. Task 46. 1. Working in group is vital to improve your communication skills and acquire fluency. Students interacting in a group reinforce their own learning. 2. If I translate everything you become dependant on translation. You do not learn a language by simply translating. It can also occur that there is no one-to-one translation from your language to English. . Prejudice is not tolerated in this classroom. If you want to learn you have to set aside all prejudice and be open to difference. Without this open mindset you cannot lear n. 4. Books are important in giving you a structure and allowing you to review at home. Task 47 I would arrange the classroom so that the students playing the assistant and those asking the questions are facing each other. I could use pictures of different language schools and handouts with course information. There could be confusion on the order in which the â€Å"potential students† consult the â€Å"information desk assistants†.Some students may finish earlier than others. Task 48 1. I would explain that â€Å"slim† is the opposite of fat and usually has a positive connotation while â€Å"thin† means very slim, possibly too slim and can have a negative connotation. I would then make examples of famous people who are either slim of thin. Maybe I would ask students to provide examples too. 2. In this case I would mime the two gestures. 3. I would explain that the first expression refers to something that happened regularly in the past while the second o ne refers to the present and it means that I always get up early so it is not a problem for me. . I would explain that â€Å"nervous† means agitated and â€Å"upset† means worried or sad about something. For example: â€Å"I am nervous because I have an exam† and â€Å"I am upset because I failed the exam†. 5. The first expression refers to the present time so it is for 4 weeks back from now. The second one for weeks back from some specific event. Eg. â€Å"Four weeks ago I went to the doctor. † Four weeks before my trip I went to the doctor†. I might also express this graphically with a drawing. Task 49 1.I think the reason the students could not answer questions about the text is that they were to focusing on reading it correctly to pay attention to the content. Personally I would let them read silently and then ask questions. 2. In this case it may be that the topic they were asked to discuss was too advanced and students did not have suff icient vocabulary to tackle it. I would change it to something easier. Task 50 A teacher is a professional and, like all professionals, has to adhere to certain rules. All the points indicated are part of a teacher’s responsibility towards the students and the institution he/she is working for.

Wednesday, January 8, 2020

Capital Punishment Pros and Cons - Free Essay Example

Sample details Pages: 3 Words: 751 Downloads: 1 Date added: 2017/09/22 Category Advertising Essay Type Argumentative essay Did you like this example? Capital punishment is the lawful infliction of death as a punishment and since ancient times it has been used for a wide variety of offences. Although there are some countries that have abolished death penalty from their law, there are still many which still practice the act of killing a person for crime. Capital punishment is prevalent in the US, Asian and Middle Eastern countries. Crimes that carry the death penalty vary greatly worldwide from treason and murder to theft. Some of the ways of executing criminals are hanging, shooting, electrocution and giving lethal injections. However, many cases that come before the court very often force public reflection on the purpose of the death penalty. While some think that death penalty is necessary for those who have committed a terrible crime, there are others who consider it as an immoral act that goes against the values of humanity. To begin with, a person who has committed a crime like killing or raping another person shoul d be given death penalty, which is as severe punishment as the act in itself. It is said that when a criminal is given a capital punishment, it dissuades others in the society from committing such serious crimes. They would refrain from such crimes due to fear of losing their lives. This would definitely help in reducing crime rate in society. One more advantage is that if a criminal is jailed, he may again commit the same crime after being released from prison. Giving him capital punishment would make sure that the society is safe from being attacked by criminals. It seems to be an appropriate punishment for serial killers and for those who continue to commit crimes even after serving imprisonment. It is also important that instead of announcing life imprisonment for the convicts, where they would have to live a futile life behind closed bars, it is better to kill them. It is said that imprisoning someone is more expensive than executing him. Rather than spending on a person who may again commit terrifying crime, it is better to put him to death. Some believe capital punishment is equated as revenge for pain and suffering that the criminal inflicted on the victim since a person who has taken the life of another person does not have a right to live. Sentencing such a criminal can give relief to the family members of the victim for their loved one has obtained justice. It is generally suggested for the safety of fellow prison inmates and guards, as people who commit horrifying crimes like murder are believed to have a violent personality and may, in future, attack someone during imprisonment. These reasons emphasize the importance of capital punishment for the betterment of human society. In contrast, opponents of the death penalty point out that capital punishment is not always just and appropriate. Usually, it has been seen that poor people have to succumb to death penalty as they cannot afford good lawyers to defend their stance. There are very r are cases of rich people being pronounced capital punishment. Also, an individual from minority communities are more likely to be given death penalty. Not to mention that every human being is entitled to receive a second chance in life. Putting a convict behind bars is always a logical option than killing him, as there is a chance that he may improve. People who have served life sentences are reported to have bettered their earlier ways of living and have made worthwhile contribution to the society. Furthermore, there is also a chance that an individual is innocent and is wrongly charged for a crime he has never committed. There have been cases where individuals were released after being given death sentence, because they were proved innocent. There are also cases where a persons innocence was proved after he was put to death. Hence, it is best to avoid executing a person. Finally, it is reported that there is no relation between capital punishment and crime rate, for example, giving death penalty does not decrease crime rate in the society. Crimes are prevalent in countries where capital punishment exists and also where it has been abolished. All things considered, I believe that the question whether to give capital punishment to a criminal or not, may depend on his previous criminal records and the seriousness of the crime he has committed. However, having no death penalty we agree to accept high levels of murder and other serious crimes that we presently have. Don’t waste time! Our writers will create an original "Capital Punishment Pros and Cons" essay for you Create order