Monday, January 20, 2020
Albert Einstein :: essays research papers
 What I find most admirable about Albert  Einstein is the way he thought up his theories  and had the ability to conduct experiments on  them. By doing this, he answered many  questions of the scientific realm of the world.  Some of the traits I admire are:    1. A trait I admire is his curiosity because he  always wanted to find out how things worked.  When he was five years old his father gave  him a compass. It was a mystery to him. He  wanted to know why the arrow always  pointed north. His father explained magnetism  to him, but that explanation didn't make the  invisible power less mysterious. When he was  older, he learned more about magnets. He  knew that the earth's magnetic field made the  needle point north. Since I am also very  curious about how things work, this trait is  one that I definitely share with him.    Another trait that I admire is that he was a  friendly teacher with a sense of humor, and  that is what his students liked about him. In  1909 Albert was offered a position as an  associate professor at the University of  Zurich. His friendliness and sense of humor  made him popular with his students even  though they thought he was a little strange.  How did they think he was strange? Well, on  his first day of class he came dressed in  pants that were too short and he had his  notes on a single scrap of paper. But after  talking for a few minutes, his students knew  that they had a very special teacher. He  cared about physics and about his students.  He enjoyed talking to his students and would  interrupt his own work just to help them. He  was always welcoming questions and often  invited his students to a local cafe or his  home to continue classroom discussions I  found that teachers I had in the past who  were friendly made learning more interesting.    Another trait was that he was good at math.  Albert didn't care for school. The only subject  he did like was math because figuring out  problems was easy and fun for him. His uncle  introduced him to algebra when he was  eleven years old because he knew Albert  enjoyed working with numbers. Albert was so  good at algebra that he was soon ready for  an advanced type of math.    At twelve years old, Alberts friend, Max  Talmud gave him a book on geometry. The  book captured his imagination and opened up  a whole new world of logic. He considered  geometry as a kind of miracle, like the  compass. He had no trouble going through  the book and solving all the problems. He  soon taught himself the more advanced form  of math called calculus.  					    
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