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... One of the greatest tools to informing and teaching students is books. Books can broaden the horizon of a sheltered mind and show them a world that they would never have seen before. The only question is, what if the books that can create such knowledge and virtue are banned from today’s youth? ... Books with such themes or issues could provide students with a safe way to venture into cultures of the past and ultimately provide them with the morals and ethics to produce a successful future. ... First, students should learn why books that focus on these issues are sometimes banned from their reading lists. ... A final way for an educator to successfully demonstrate how much a student could loose if cultural books, such as The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, were banned would be to celebrate Banned Books Week. ... These discussions and activities would make the students aware of what kind of learning is lost if certain books were banned from their education. ... Just because books bring out many different subjects that fear many different people does not mean that we should get rid of them. These books are out in the world and accessible to the public because they need to be read by the public. ... If we banned books from the public we would only see the world through the eyes of Dr.
Approximate Word count = 1056 Approximate Pages = 4.2 (250 words per page double spaced)
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