Consider the main characters from "Stolen Day" and "The Night The Bed Fell." In a paragraph, discuss which character learns the most and which one learns the least. Use details from the sections to support your ideas. Use the reading selections to help you answer the question.

I am NOT asking for the answers. I want to know what the main characters in "Stolen Day" and "The Night the Bed Fell" learned. That is all I want to know. I will find them in the story and use that as my "details from the sections to support your ideas."

the boy from stolen day just talks about having inflammatory rheumatism, and he still doesn't learn his lesson. So, the boy in Stolen day learned the least.

Even though I haven’t read these works, one suggestion I can make is pretty common to most stories/books/plays. The character who changes the most by the end of the story is undoubtedly the one who learned the most. The character who learns the least is probably a static character, changing very little, if at all.

yaheet

who learned the most?

In the story "Stolen Day," the main character, Tommy, learns a valuable lesson about empathy and perspective. Throughout the story, Tommy is bedridden and forced to stay home from school due to an illness. As he watches the world outside his window, Tommy becomes consumed with jealousy and frustration towards the neighborhood kids who were able to go out and play. However, towards the end of the story, Tommy realizes that while he was envious of their freedom, the other kids were completely unaware of his illness and its restrictions. This realization helps Tommy understand the importance of considering other people's situations before making judgments. On the other hand, in the story "The Night the Bed Fell," the main character, young James Thurber, learns the least as he remains oblivious to the chaos happening around him. Despite the series of mishaps and accidents occurring in his household that night, including his father falling out of bed and his brother accidentally locking himself in a trunk, James remains blissfully unaware. Throughout the story, James maintains a sense of innocence and naivety, never seeming to truly grasp the events unfolding around him.

Ah yes