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What has Scout learned about being a responsible adult and citizen over the course of the novel? What people and experiences were most influential in her growth and development? What people and experiences have had the greatest impact in your life?

User Felipecao
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Answer:

To be a compassionate pearson without prejudices

Her father and Boo

The experiences with racial hate

Step-by-step explanation:

In the course of the book To kill a Mockingbird Scout is morally shaped by key-events that lead her from being an innocent child, protected by her father, to become a selfconscious and compassionate person who is fully aware of prejudices and racial discrimination.

Scout is brought up by her father who serves as a role model; he teaches her to think, to question and to make her own choices and thereby provides her with an excellent moral foundation.

In her relation with Boo, ill-judged by many, she learns the true value of not judging people without knowing them.

The important events that shape her is first when Tom Robinson is accused (without any evidence) and secondly the ¨school show¨ assault by Bob Ewell in which Boo saves her and her brother.

User Deepak
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