Category: Science

  • Science Question

    Guidelines:

    • Must write at least 800-1000 words for your essay.
    • Must be between three and five pages.
    • Use Times New Roman, double-space, 12-point font.
    • Upload a PDF or Word Document Only.
    • Do Not Use AI, ChatGBT, or any other platform to write your essay.
    • Grammarly is okay to use and Editor when using Microsoft Word.

    Directions:

    Please take a moment to review the previous modules we have covered. Then, choose a module that you wish to analyze for your reflection essay. The purpose of this essay is to reflect on the course material from one of the modules we have examined in this course. It is an opportunity to dive deeper into one of the topics and demonstrate to the instructor what you have learned from the module, including anything you found interesting, any disagreements you may have had and the reasons for them, topics you appreciated and would like to analyze further, and your overall thoughts about the module. You must also reference at least two course themes and show how and why the course content of that module relates to at least two course themes.

    Consider this assignment as if you were writing an essay to explain to your cousin, friend, or family member what the module was about, but most importantly, include what you think about the module, why it is essential to cover in our course, and how it helps you better understand and interact in society.

    Please refrain from summarizing the module; this is a reflection essay, which means you should share your thoughts on the material. Do not summarize the module.

    In your essay, ensure that you do the following:

    • In your essay, use the introduction to introduce the module that you are going to write about. Share why you selected the module, what you like about the module, and why you think the module is/should be an essential topic for society to be aware of and engage with. Is the module you selected relevant to society today? If so, how so? Explain, and will this topic be relevant 20 years from now? If so, why?
    • For your body paragraphs. Divide them into sections. Select three topics you wish to analyze and explain why you believe those topics are crucial for further examination. Each topic should be a section, which should be a group of paragraphs, not one paragraph per section. The goal is to dive deep into the issues you want to write about. A section should be about a subject, and that section should have a group of paragraphs; a good number will be 3-5 paragraphs per section of about 6-10 sentences each paragraph.
    • The subject you selected to write for your sections can be a concept(s), a historical moment, a person, or a community we discussed in the module, a learning material such as a reading, a short video, or a podcast, or you can also choose something from the lecture and lecture slides.
    • To write your sections, consider the following questions,
    • Explain what the topic is?
    • How is it defined, and how do you define it?
    • What course themes can you identify in the module and explain how and why?
    • What are the main components of the topic, and how does it relate to society?
    • How does this topic connect to other related issues in or outside the classroom?
    • Include things you found interesting and explain why those things are essential for other people to know.
    • Are there any patterns, trends, or changes that you can identify?
    • How might your analysis be useful or applied to understand the topic?
    • Also, ask yourself, what do we overlook if we do not explore these three topics you have selected, and why are they important?
    • After you have three sections, it is time to write a conclusion. Provide a brief conclusion to summarize your overall thoughts about the module.
    • In your essay, you must refer to at least three (3) course materials and two outside sources.
    • Create a short bibliography of the sources you used in the course.
    • Cite the course material using MLA format. You may also reference the material by stating its title.
    • Do not use AI or any program that does the work for you.

    Requirements:

  • Nutrition &health: general& bones and joint health

    Objective:

    To understand the dietary requirements for general health (a healthy adult should maintain) and explore the specific needs for Bones and Joints health, to explore common health issues related to them, and analyze the role of nutrition in maintaining musculoskeletal health.

    Instructions:

    1. Part A Search Process
      • Search the literature (and your textbooks) to find the latest nutrition requirements (with respect to Protein, Minerals and Vitamins) for general health and specific requirements of healthy Bones and joints.
      • Provide a one short paragraph explaining your search method and where you have taken the information.
    2. Part B Nutrition Summary Table
      • Complete the Nutrition Summary Table provided.

    Requirements:   |   .doc file

  • Science Question

    First Watch These Four Videos:

    Crash Course on Research Methods in Sociology:

    Elizabeth Stokoe on Conversational Analysis:

    Elaine Lui on The Sociology of Gossip

    A Coalition of Lineages: The Fernandeo Tataviam Band of Mission Indians (How to Study a Living People) by Carole E. Goldberg and Duane Champagne

    Instructions: Once you have watched all three videos and taken notes on these films, write a coherent, cogent, well thought, well sourced (class sources primarily), well organized, sociologically imaginative essay. Your essay should be typed, double-spaced (Times, 12-font) and at least 5 pages. You may go over 5 pages. This is an essay so you have to create an outline, formulate a thesis or main idea, consider what course materials you will incorporate, and what themes/ideas will you develop from the questions below. This is not an assignment you can just “whip up.” First you will have to watch four videos and take lots of notes. Please submit your notes with your assignment as appendices. This assignment will take thoughtful development and multiple drafts.

    Requirements:

  • Science Question

    Crash Course on Research Methods in Sociology:

    Elizabeth Stokoe on Conversational Analysis:

    Elaine Lui on The Sociology of Gossip

    A Coalition of Lineages: The Fernandeo Tataviam Band of Mission Indians (How to Study a Living People) by Carole E. Goldberg and Duane Champagne

    Instructions: Once you have watched all three videos and taken notes on these films, write a coherent, cogent, well thought, well sourced (class sources primarily), well organized, sociologically imaginative essay. Your essay should be typed, double-spaced (Times, 12-font) and at least 5 pages. You may go over 5 pages. This is an essay so you have to create an outline, formulate a thesis or main idea, consider what course materials you will incorporate, and what themes/ideas will you develop from the questions below. This is not an assignment you can just “whip up.” First you will have to watch four videos and take lots of notes. Please submit your notes with your assignment as appendices. This assignment will take thoughtful development and multiple drafts.

    Requirements:

  • Science Question

    When you observe a piece of art, your response is influenced by who you are as a human being: your life experience, your temperament, your preferences, your worldview, your feelings, values, and beliefs even your mood that particular day. All of these factors can all influence how you respond to an artwork.

    Because of this, a work of art can have very different, but equally valid, meanings for different people.

    This essay will give you an opportunity to observe, consider, and interpret what an artwork means for you.

    You do not need to know anything about art. You are considering it as a thoughtful observer, and sharing your views with your reader.

    NOTE: I do not care nor do I want to hear what a chatbot has to say about it. I am not interested in an art history analysis. I want to understand how you, as a human being, interpret it from your own point of view. ETA: Because of this, you absolutely can and will use the first person “I” instead of the more distanced third person typical of some academic writing.

    The artwork well use for this essay is the untitled work, often called Your Body Is a Battleground (1989) by American artist Barbara Kruger.

    Barbara Kruger – Your Body Is a Battleground

    Your audience

    Your reader will be someone interested in art that is open to interpretation. (They may or may not be familiar with this particular piece.) They are curious to hear what this artwork means for you and why; i.e. what has led you to your personal understanding of it.

    Process: how to prepare:

    1. Guided brainstorm:

    This brainstorm will exercise your critical thinking by making inferences based on observation.

    Consider whether you will approach this brainstorm using deductive reasoning (having a broad first impression then looking at details that support it) OR inductive reasoning (examining the details first to form a more holistic impression.

    Look at the above image (on a laptop or other computer, not your phone) and write down the following by hand (handwritten brainstorming is strongly preferred):

    What stands out to you? What basic elements comprise the design? What seems significant about them? When you look closer, or for a longer time, what new details do you notice? What connections can you make, either among the elements or with your ideas and inferences? What do these elements remind you of? How do you relate to them personally?

    Gather your thoughts in your brainstorm (free write, list, journaling clustering, etc., whatever works for your purpose) and set them aside. Come back later with a fresh mind and review. Collectively, what do your notes point to as a core idea? In other words, what is a central point you want to make about how you interpret and relate to this piece? That idea will lead to your draft thesis.

    NOTE: You have several options in terms of the lens through which you interpret this image. Your inferences can be personal (i.e. about your own direct life experience), or your take on this might be political, or social, or psychological, etc. It’s up to you which interpretation you find most compelling, but ultimately focus on one in particular for your essay.

    You will post your brainstorm as your Essay 1 Prep 1: Brainstorm assignment.

    2. Draft thesis:

    Your thesis draft will be a sentence that expresses the main point you want the reader to understand about what this artwork means for you. See the module lesson on thesis statements here: Intro to Thesis Statements

    3. Outline:

    Based on your thesis, think about the key points you want to make to expand on your main idea. Look again at your initial brainstorm from when you were closely observing the artwork. (You can do a follow-up brainstorm too.)

    In your outline, each supporting claim / topic sentence (one per body paragraph) will express a thought you have about the specific visual or word-based elements you noticed and how they led to your interpretation of this piece and how you relate to it.

    In one paragraph youll also compare what you believe may have been the artists original intent versus how youre interpreting it. (See next section.)

    NOTE: You will post your draft thesis & outline as your Essay 1 Prep 2: Thesis & Outline assignment.

    4. Consider the original context:

    After youve come to your own conclusions / interpretations of the artwork and drafted your main thesis and outline, read more about the artist and context for this piece here: The Broad Museum: Barbara Kruger: Untitled (Your body is a battleground)

    Consider what the artist may have intended by making this artwork. (Its fine if its different from your take!) In one paragraph of your essay, youll compare your interpretation vs. what the artist may have intended.

    However, WAIT to look up the original context until after youve formed your own interpretation. You need your own unfiltered impressions first for your essay to be authentically you.

    No other research is necessary for this essay.

    5. Draft essay:

    Using your outline as a map, draft an introduction, body paragraphs, and a brief conclusion. See the lessons in this module for guidelines on these basic essay elements.

    As you draft, here are three questions to ask yourself (and clarify):

    What does my reader need to know or understand at this point?

    What am I trying to say?

    Why does it matter? (i.e. what are the implications?)

    6. Review, revise & format:

    Review your draft and revise as needed to ensure: your intro sets up your topic for your reader; your thesis and supporting claims are clear and consistent; and each body paragraph develops its focused point in a thoughtful way with supporting details and elaboration. (Again, see the module lesson content for tips.)

    Format your paper in MLA format, do a final proofread, then submit. Your Works Cited will consist of the artist and artwork information; see our textbook A Writer’s Reference, section MLA 4-b, #51 (which includes an example of how to format and what to include).

    Resources

    For more guidance on your essay, in our textbook A Writer’s Reference review:

    C1: Planning

    C2: Drafting (especially the section on argumentation thesis statements)

    C3: Writing paragraphs

    C4: Reviewing, revising, editing

    For full specifications (page length, etc.) and to submit the assignment, click here: Essay 1: Interpretive argument

    AI Policy

    This essay is based on your own perceptions, experiences, and opinions. Only you can write this. AI cannot do it for you, at least not convincingly, and your grade will reflect any attempt at taking a shortcut. Do your own work independent of AI from the brainstorm through producing and revising the paper. Your essay should be based entirely on your own insights and the voice should be exclusively your own.

    Click NEXT to continue in the module.

    Requirements: