Category: Social Science

  • Introduction to Forensic Science

    You will need to copy and paste these questions into a Word document and type in the answers. Use as much space as you need, and please do not put one sentence answers. Make sure you fully answer the question and answer ALL parts of the question. OPLEASE INCLUDE BOTH THE QUESTION AND THE ANSWER IN YOUR ASSIGNMENT. The assignments will no longer be viewable after the due date.Please use the power ponts provide ch6,7,8 please no plaggiarism,no ai no chat bots.

    Assignment

    Chapter 6:

    Chapter 7:

    Chapter 8:

    1. List and describe three types of fingerprints found at a crime scene.
    2. Describe each of the three classes of fingerprints. Which class is the most common in the population? Which is least common?
    1. What is the final step in fingerprint identification? Why is this step necessary if a computerized database of fingerprints is available to the forensic scientist?
    2. What are the two primary types of forensic biometrics?
    3. What is the most commonly used type of behavioral biometrics?
    4. What are some of the reasons why iris biometrics is replacing retina biometrics?
    5. Why is it almost impossible to obscure ones fingerprints by surgery or mutilation?
    6. What aspect of a fingerprint determines its individuality?
    7. Briefly describe how the Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS) creates a fingerprint image. What characteristics of the fingerprint does the AFIS record for comparison?
    8. What are some of the specific stages that comprise gait recognition as a form of behavioral biometrics?
    9. What is one of the main problems with retina biometrics?
    10. What is one significant advantage of automated facial recognition, as compared to other forms of biometrics such as iris and fingerprint systems?
    11. Briefly describe how a comparison microscope works and what it is used for.
    12. How can a scanning electron microscope be used to determine whether a suspect has recently fired a gun?
    13. What happens to the field of view as the magnification of the compound microscope is increased? Explain.
  • Computer Ethics

    Assignment Instructions

    Please note that you must submit this assignment as a .doc, .docx, or a .pdf file.respond to all 15 bullet points. Should be 6 pages not includign cover and reference page Use the material provided and you can use outside credtable sources no pagiarism no a i. no chat bots .



    Assignment Goal

    In Week 3, we explored how personal lenses shape perspective and how information systems influence what we see, what we know, and what we consider true. In the world of information technology, who has access to informationand who does notcan shape power dynamics, create inequities, and influence opportunities.

    In this assignment, you will investigate the idea that information is power by uncovering and sharing a piece of information about our college that is not widely known or easily discoverable through official or common sources (e.g., the college website, brochures, or orientation guides).

    You will also reflect on how unequal access to information connects to ethical reasoning, personal perspective, and digital systems that shape visibility and opportunity. There are 15 bullet points please respond to all15 bullet points. Should be 6 pages not including title and reference page Please use the material provided you can use outside credible sources please no plagiarism, no ai no chat bots


    Include the following:

    Overview

    • What is the information?
      • Clearly describe what you discovered.
    • Why is it not widely known?
      • Explain how this information is difficult to find or not publicized.
    • How did you find it?
      • Describe the process or source that helped you uncover it. Reflect on how your own perspective, persistence, or digital navigation skills may have shaped your ability to find it.
    • Why does this information matter to students, staff, or faculty?
      • Discuss its importance.
    • Who benefits from knowing this, and who may be disadvantaged by not knowing?
      • Consider how personal lenses shape what seems important or significant.
    • How does this shape power dynamics at the college?
      • Think about access, privilege, or influence.
    • What are the ethical concerns related to unequal access to this information?

      • Consider fairness, transparency, or access.
    • Apply at least one ethical framework from Week 3.

      • For example: utilitarianism, deontology, phenomenology, humanism, etc. Evaluate whether unequal access to this information is ethically acceptable and why.
    • How does this connect to broader digital issues like algorithmic visibility, data control, filter bubbles, or information systems?

      • Relate your case to real-world digital ethics and the power of information.

    Conclusion

    Summarize your discovery and reflection.

    What did you learn about:
    Perspective?
    Information access?
    Power?
    Ethical responsibility?

    References

    (List any interviews, informal sources, websites, or readings used. Use the required citation format if specified.)


    Submission Checklist:

    • Have I clearly described the hidden information?
    • Have I analyzed how it affects access and power?
    • Have I reflected on ethical implications in the digital world?
    • Have I structured my writing clearly and proofread for grammar?
    • Have I cited any sources used?

    Frameworks and Personal Lenses

    This week, we focus on how our personal backgrounds shape the way we interpret ethical questions in technology. You will read about frameworks and personal lenses, including why it is important to notice your own assumptions, define key terms clearly, and communicate respectfully with people who see the world differently. By the end of the reading, you should be able to explain how perspective influences ethical reasoning and apply at least one ethical framework to a technology-related scenario.

    Reading Tips

    Use the guiding questions to support your reading.
    The guiding questions are there to help you focus on key ideas, not just memorize facts. Use them to:

    • Highlight or annotate where major terms or arguments are introduced.
    • Reflect on how historical developments in computing continue to impact us today.
    • Prepare for discussions by forming your own examples and questions based on the reading.

    Other reading strategies do you include:

    • Preview the reading before diving inscan headings and key terms.
    • Engage criticallydont just accept what you read. Ask: Do I agree? Does this apply today?
    • Relate the material to real lifethink about how ethical dilemmas show up in your own tech use or in current events.
    • Take notes in your own words to build understanding. Use this to help you take notes.

    Week 3 Chapter Reading: Personal Lenses and Ethical Frameworks

    Ethics is often taught as if it happens in a neutral space, as if people can simply examine a problem and arrive at a clean, objective answer. In reality, ethical reasoning is shaped by the person doing the reasoning. This week introduces a practical idea: before we try to evaluate the ethics of a technology, we should first examine the framework we bring into the evaluation. In this text, that framework is described as a set of personal lenses, which include our background, identity, experiences, education, and social position.

    Some discussions of ethics begin with a practice sometimes called full disclosure, in which individuals reflect on aspects of their identity and life experiencesuch as age, race, gender identity, sexual orientation, religious background, region, socioeconomic status, education, career path, and worldview. The purpose of this reflection is not to elevate personal details, but to recognize how they shape interpretation. Ethical reasoning does not emerge from a neutral or detached position. None of us reads or writes from nowhere. We read and write from somewhere, and that somewhere influences what we notice, what we question, what we assume, and what we treat as normal.

    Personal lenses influence ethical reasoning in at least three ways. First, they affect what we perceive as a problem. For example, one person may treat workplace monitoring software as a reasonable management tool, while another views it as a privacy violation that erodes dignity. Second, lenses influence how we interpret evidence. Two people can read the same set of facts about a data breach and disagree about whether the main issue is negligence, complexity, or inevitability. Third, personal lenses influence what we consider an acceptable solution. One person may prioritize stronger laws; another may prioritize individual choice; another may prioritize corporate responsibility and design ethics.

    Pause and Reflect

    Think of a technology you use daily (a learning platform, a phone app, a workplace system, or a social media site). What is one ethical issue you notice immediately about it? Now ask yourself: what in your background or experiences makes that issue stand out to you? Write down two personal lenses that may be shaping your reaction.

    A cylinder placed in the corner of a room casts a rectangular shadow on one wall and a circular shadow on the other, labeled This is True, while the cylinder itself is labeled This is Truth.'

    Figure: Perspectives of Truth

    To illustrate how perspective shapes what appears true, the chapter uses the idea of truth versus Truth. Imagine two people looking only at a shadow. One person sees a square-like shadow and concludes the object must be a cube or a square. Another person sees a circular shadow and concludes the object must be a sphere or a circle. Each conclusion can feel correct from that position. A third observer who steps back and sees the entire setup recognizes that the object is a cylinder, and that different light sources produce different shadows. The lesson is not that people are foolish. The lesson is that people often reason from limited information shaped by their position, and that ethical discussion improves when we expand what we are willing to consider.

    Two people stand on opposite sides of a rotated number on the ground; one says Its a 9 and the other says Its a 6, illustrating how perspective shapes interpretation.

    Figure: 6 vs. 9 as evaluated from one’s own perspective

    A related example is the 6 vs. 9 scenario. Two people stand on opposite sides of a number painted on the ground. One insists it is a 6; the other insists it is a 9. Their disagreement is not just about stubbornness. It is about perspective. Think about a more challenging question: can we step away from our own perspective without pretending we do not have one? That is the heart of ethical maturity. It requires acknowledging our lenses while still trying to understand the lenses of others.

    Imagining the world through a lens fundamentally different from ones own is intellectually and emotionally demanding. Social position including race, socioeconomic status, gender identity, and cultural background shapes how individuals experience technology, authority, and vulnerability. Because technological systems often distribute benefits and burdens unevenly, policies that appear neutral from one vantage point may produce disproportionate harm from another. Ethical maturity therefore requires disciplined communication: active listening, careful clarification of terms, and the willingness to restate another perspective accurately before responding. The goal is not rhetorical victory, but empathetic understanding and reasoned analysis.

    This is where ethical frameworks come in. A framework is a structured way to evaluate rightness and wrongness. The chapter preview lists several frameworks that appear throughout the course, including deontological ethics (duty and rules), utilitarianism (outcomes and overall well-being), rationalism (reason and logical analysis), and broader lenses such as humanism, feminism, and phenomenology (lived experience). No single framework is universally accepted, and that reality explains why people can disagree sincerely about the same case.

    Because ethical reasoning depends on both personal lenses and ethical frameworks, this course will repeatedly return to one skill: defining terms. If two people use the same word but mean different things, they may talk past each other. For example, if one person defines privacy as control over personal information and another defines it as freedom from surveillance, they may reach different conclusions about the same technology. Building shared understanding requires patience and clarity.

    Why This Matters in Technology

    Technology is rarely just a tool in practice. The same system can produce very different experiences depending on who is using it, who is being monitored by it, and who is excluded from it. When we ignore personal lenses, we risk assuming that our experience of a technology is the standard experience. When we acknowledge lenses, we become more capable of identifying bias, unequal impacts, and hidden assumptions in design and policy.

    In computer ethics, this matters because many modern technologies are deployed at scale, affecting thousands or millions of people. A system that seems efficient to one group can feel invasive or discriminatory to another group. Ethical reasoning improves when we ask: Who benefits? Who is harmed? Who decides? Who has access? Who gets to define the terms?

    Consider a common technology scenario: an employer adopts AI-assisted productivity tracking software that monitors keystrokes, mouse movement, application usage, and idle time. One employee may view this as fair accountability, especially if they have experienced coworkers who avoid work while others carry the load. Another employee may view the same system as constant surveillance that reduces trust and treats people like machines. A deontological approach might focus on whether monitoring violates duties related to respect and autonomy. A utilitarian approach might weigh productivity gains against stress, burnout, and turnover. A phenomenological lens might ask what it feels like to work under continuous monitoring and how that changes a persons sense of dignity.

    Now consider a second scenario: a college deploys an online proctoring tool that uses webcams, room scans, and behavior detection to flag potential cheating. Some students may feel reassured that the system protects academic integrity. Other students may feel anxious, exposed, or unfairly scrutinized, especially if the system misidentifies normal behaviors as suspicious or if students lack a private space at home. Here, personal lenses and socioeconomic context can heavily influence what seems reasonable. When you evaluate such a tool ethically, you are not only judging the technologys features. You are also judging the assumptions embedded in how the tool is used.

    Pause and Reflect

    Choose one of the scenarios above (productivity tracking or online proctoring). Identify one personal lens that might make a person more supportive of the technology and one personal lens that might make a person more concerned about it. Then name one question you would ask in a respectful conversation to better understand the other persons perspective.

    The chapter closes by previewing foundational concepts that will appear throughout the course. Technology is everywhere, and its rate of change is not linear. Ethical systems vary, and legal and social institutions attempt to reflect shared values, even when people disagree about what those values should be. Perhaps the most important claim is that ethical problems in technology are often not caused by the technology itself. They are caused by the choices people make about development, deployment, access, power, and oversight. The same tool can be used to help or to harm. Ethical reasoning is the practice of evaluating those choices and their impacts with humility, clarity, and care.

    End of Chapter Key Terms

    • terms icon.pngright vs. wrong The distinction between actions or choices considered morally acceptable and those considered morally unacceptable.
    • good vs. evil The contrast between that which is morally virtuous, beneficial, or constructive and that which is morally wrong, harmful, or destructive.
    • rightness vs. wrongness The quality of being in accordance with moral or ethical principles versus being in violation of them.
    • shared understanding A mutual agreement or common interpretation of ideas, terms, or values among individuals or groups.
    • Ethics The branch of philosophy concerned with moral principles that govern behavior and decision-making.
    • Deontological Ethics An ethical theory focused on duties and universal principles and judges the morality of actions based on adherence to rules or duties, regardless of their consequences.
    • Rationalism A philosophical view that emphasizes logical reasoning as the primary sources of knowledge and ethical judgment.
    • Utilitarianism An ethical framework that evaluates actions based on their outcomes, aiming to maximize overall happiness or well-being.
    • Humanism An ethical perspective centered on dignity and human flourishing. A worldview that centers human dignity, agency, and the promotion of individual and collective flourishing as ethical priorities.
    • Feminism An approach emphasizing care, relationships, and structural analysis that advocates for gender equality and emphasizes the importance of care, context, and power dynamics in moral decision-making.
    • Phenomenology A philosophical approach that focuses on individuals lived experiences and the ways in which they perceive and interpret the world around them and the study of lived human experience and technological mediation.
    • personal lenses The unique perspectives shaped by an individuals experiences, values, and cultural background through which they interpret the world.
    • rate of technological advancement The speed at which new technologies are developed and adopted within society.

  • Agriculture Environmental Science and Sustainability

    This week we examined how personal lenses shape what we perceive as true, and how digital information systems influence what we see, know, and believe.

    In your initial post (400 words) no plagiarism, no a i no chat bots , use the material attached respond to the following:
    1. Describe a situation (on social media, news platforms, search engines, or campus systems) where two people might sincerely see the same issue differently because of how information is presented or filtered.
    2. How do personal lenses and digital systems work together in shaping what appears to be true?
    3. Apply one ethical framework (utilitarianism, deontology, phenomenology, humanism, etc.) to evaluate the responsibility of platforms or institutions in shaping information access.

    Be specific. Use examples from this weeks reading, the 6 vs. 9 scenario, or the TED Talk to support your analysis.

    Frameworks and Personal Lenses

    This week, we focus on how our personal backgrounds shape the way we interpret ethical questions in technology. You will read about frameworks and personal lenses, including why it is important to notice your own assumptions, define key terms clearly, and communicate respectfully with people who see the world differently. By the end of the reading, you should be able to explain how perspective influences ethical reasoning and apply at least one ethical framework to a technology-related scenario.

    Reading Tips

    Use the guiding questions to support your reading.
    The guiding questions are there to help you focus on key ideas, not just memorize facts. Use them to:

    • Highlight or annotate where major terms or arguments are introduced.
    • Reflect on how historical developments in computing continue to impact us today.
    • Prepare for discussions by forming your own examples and questions based on the reading.

    Other reading strategies do you include:

    • Preview the reading before diving inscan headings and key terms.
    • Engage criticallydont just accept what you read. Ask: Do I agree? Does this apply today?
    • Relate the material to real lifethink about how ethical dilemmas show up in your own tech use or in current events.
    • Take notes in your own words to build understanding. Use this to help you take notes.

    Week 3 Chapter Reading: Personal Lenses and Ethical Frameworks

    Ethics is often taught as if it happens in a neutral space, as if people can simply examine a problem and arrive at a clean, objective answer. In reality, ethical reasoning is shaped by the person doing the reasoning. This week introduces a practical idea: before we try to evaluate the ethics of a technology, we should first examine the framework we bring into the evaluation. In this text, that framework is described as a set of personal lenses, which include our background, identity, experiences, education, and social position.

    Some discussions of ethics begin with a practice sometimes called full disclosure, in which individuals reflect on aspects of their identity and life experiencesuch as age, race, gender identity, sexual orientation, religious background, region, socioeconomic status, education, career path, and worldview. The purpose of this reflection is not to elevate personal details, but to recognize how they shape interpretation. Ethical reasoning does not emerge from a neutral or detached position. None of us reads or writes from nowhere. We read and write from somewhere, and that somewhere influences what we notice, what we question, what we assume, and what we treat as normal.

    Personal lenses influence ethical reasoning in at least three ways. First, they affect what we perceive as a problem. For example, one person may treat workplace monitoring software as a reasonable management tool, while another views it as a privacy violation that erodes dignity. Second, lenses influence how we interpret evidence. Two people can read the same set of facts about a data breach and disagree about whether the main issue is negligence, complexity, or inevitability. Third, personal lenses influence what we consider an acceptable solution. One person may prioritize stronger laws; another may prioritize individual choice; another may prioritize corporate responsibility and design ethics.

    Pause and Reflect

    Think of a technology you use daily (a learning platform, a phone app, a workplace system, or a social media site). What is one ethical issue you notice immediately about it? Now ask yourself: what in your background or experiences makes that issue stand out to you? Write down two personal lenses that may be shaping your reaction.

    A cylinder placed in the corner of a room casts a rectangular shadow on one wall and a circular shadow on the other, labeled This is True, while the cylinder itself is labeled This is Truth.'

    Figure: Perspectives of Truth

    To illustrate how perspective shapes what appears true, the chapter uses the idea of truth versus Truth. Imagine two people looking only at a shadow. One person sees a square-like shadow and concludes the object must be a cube or a square. Another person sees a circular shadow and concludes the object must be a sphere or a circle. Each conclusion can feel correct from that position. A third observer who steps back and sees the entire setup recognizes that the object is a cylinder, and that different light sources produce different shadows. The lesson is not that people are foolish. The lesson is that people often reason from limited information shaped by their position, and that ethical discussion improves when we expand what we are willing to consider.

    Two people stand on opposite sides of a rotated number on the ground; one says Its a 9 and the other says Its a 6, illustrating how perspective shapes interpretation.

    Figure: 6 vs. 9 as evaluated from one’s own perspective

    A related example is the 6 vs. 9 scenario. Two people stand on opposite sides of a number painted on the ground. One insists it is a 6; the other insists it is a 9. Their disagreement is not just about stubbornness. It is about perspective. Think about a more challenging question: can we step away from our own perspective without pretending we do not have one? That is the heart of ethical maturity. It requires acknowledging our lenses while still trying to understand the lenses of others.

    Imagining the world through a lens fundamentally different from ones own is intellectually and emotionally demanding. Social position including race, socioeconomic status, gender identity, and cultural background shapes how individuals experience technology, authority, and vulnerability. Because technological systems often distribute benefits and burdens unevenly, policies that appear neutral from one vantage point may produce disproportionate harm from another. Ethical maturity therefore requires disciplined communication: active listening, careful clarification of terms, and the willingness to restate another perspective accurately before responding. The goal is not rhetorical victory, but empathetic understanding and reasoned analysis.

    This is where ethical frameworks come in. A framework is a structured way to evaluate rightness and wrongness. The chapter preview lists several frameworks that appear throughout the course, including deontological ethics (duty and rules), utilitarianism (outcomes and overall well-being), rationalism (reason and logical analysis), and broader lenses such as humanism, feminism, and phenomenology (lived experience). No single framework is universally accepted, and that reality explains why people can disagree sincerely about the same case.

    Because ethical reasoning depends on both personal lenses and ethical frameworks, this course will repeatedly return to one skill: defining terms. If two people use the same word but mean different things, they may talk past each other. For example, if one person defines privacy as control over personal information and another defines it as freedom from surveillance, they may reach different conclusions about the same technology. Building shared understanding requires patience and clarity.

    Why This Matters in Technology

    Technology is rarely just a tool in practice. The same system can produce very different experiences depending on who is using it, who is being monitored by it, and who is excluded from it. When we ignore personal lenses, we risk assuming that our experience of a technology is the standard experience. When we acknowledge lenses, we become more capable of identifying bias, unequal impacts, and hidden assumptions in design and policy.

    In computer ethics, this matters because many modern technologies are deployed at scale, affecting thousands or millions of people. A system that seems efficient to one group can feel invasive or discriminatory to another group. Ethical reasoning improves when we ask: Who benefits? Who is harmed? Who decides? Who has access? Who gets to define the terms?

    Consider a common technology scenario: an employer adopts AI-assisted productivity tracking software that monitors keystrokes, mouse movement, application usage, and idle time. One employee may view this as fair accountability, especially if they have experienced coworkers who avoid work while others carry the load. Another employee may view the same system as constant surveillance that reduces trust and treats people like machines. A deontological approach might focus on whether monitoring violates duties related to respect and autonomy. A utilitarian approach might weigh productivity gains against stress, burnout, and turnover. A phenomenological lens might ask what it feels like to work under continuous monitoring and how that changes a persons sense of dignity.

    Now consider a second scenario: a college deploys an online proctoring tool that uses webcams, room scans, and behavior detection to flag potential cheating. Some students may feel reassured that the system protects academic integrity. Other students may feel anxious, exposed, or unfairly scrutinized, especially if the system misidentifies normal behaviors as suspicious or if students lack a private space at home. Here, personal lenses and socioeconomic context can heavily influence what seems reasonable. When you evaluate such a tool ethically, you are not only judging the technologys features. You are also judging the assumptions embedded in how the tool is used.

    Pause and Reflect

    Choose one of the scenarios above (productivity tracking or online proctoring). Identify one personal lens that might make a person more supportive of the technology and one personal lens that might make a person more concerned about it. Then name one question you would ask in a respectful conversation to better understand the other persons perspective.

    The chapter closes by previewing foundational concepts that will appear throughout the course. Technology is everywhere, and its rate of change is not linear. Ethical systems vary, and legal and social institutions attempt to reflect shared values, even when people disagree about what those values should be. Perhaps the most important claim is that ethical problems in technology are often not caused by the technology itself. They are caused by the choices people make about development, deployment, access, power, and oversight. The same tool can be used to help or to harm. Ethical reasoning is the practice of evaluating those choices and their impacts with humility, clarity, and care.

    End of Chapter Key Terms

    • terms icon.pngright vs. wrong The distinction between actions or choices considered morally acceptable and those considered morally unacceptable.
    • good vs. evil The contrast between that which is morally virtuous, beneficial, or constructive and that which is morally wrong, harmful, or destructive.
    • rightness vs. wrongness The quality of being in accordance with moral or ethical principles versus being in violation of them.
    • shared understanding A mutual agreement or common interpretation of ideas, terms, or values among individuals or groups.
    • Ethics The branch of philosophy concerned with moral principles that govern behavior and decision-making.
    • Deontological Ethics An ethical theory focused on duties and universal principles and judges the morality of actions based on adherence to rules or duties, regardless of their consequences.
    • Rationalism A philosophical view that emphasizes logical reasoning as the primary sources of knowledge and ethical judgment.
    • Utilitarianism An ethical framework that evaluates actions based on their outcomes, aiming to maximize overall happiness or well-being.
    • Humanism An ethical perspective centered on dignity and human flourishing. A worldview that centers human dignity, agency, and the promotion of individual and collective flourishing as ethical priorities.
    • Feminism An approach emphasizing care, relationships, and structural analysis that advocates for gender equality and emphasizes the importance of care, context, and power dynamics in moral decision-making.
    • Phenomenology A philosophical approach that focuses on individuals lived experiences and the ways in which they perceive and interpret the world around them and the study of lived human experience and technological mediation.
    • personal lenses The unique perspectives shaped by an individuals experiences, values, and cultural background through which they interpret the world.
    • rate of technological advancement The speed at which new technologies are developed and adopted within society.

  • Agriculture Environmental Science and Sustainability

    please respond to daniel with 150 words no plagiarism, no ai no chat bot

    a situation when two people might be seeing the same issue differently would be on social media like Instagram, TikTok, and X when political or social topics trend to show up. for example, if two people were to look something up about climate change the algorithm will start recommending videos or post that share the same topic. one person could be seeing post from an environmental activist who is talking in urgency about the changes going on. while the other person interacts with post that are more skeptical about what’s going on. making both confident that their view is the right one because of what they’re seeing.

    personal lenses and digital system work together to make what is shown to us as the truth. personal lenses would include someone’s background, what they believe in, and their experiences. those are what can influence what content the person will be seeing. digital systems show things that reinforce their beliefs by showing them similar content. this creates a kind of feedback that make the users see information they believe in. and doing so would improve the understanding and help people make better decisions as they’ll be informed.

    using a utilitarian ethical framework, platforms have the responsibility to make a system that produces the greatest overall benefit for us. if algorithms prioritize engagement over everything else, they could show people misinformation or extreme viewpoints because it’ll get more views. for a utilitarian perspective, platforms shouold adjust their system to reduce harm and promote reliable information and show multiple viewpoints.

  • Agriculture Environmental Science and Sustainability

    please respond to abril with 150 words no plagiarism no ai no chat bots

    An example of a situation where two people could have a differing viewpoint on the same issue could be when they come across information on social media about a controversial issue, like climate change or a political event. For instance, two students could search for the same information on social media sites like TikTok or Twitter (X), and depending on their prior interactions on the sites, they could be shown completely different information. One student, who has previously interacted with videos about environmental activism, could be shown videos about the evidence for climate change, while the other student, who has previously interacted with videos about political activism, could be shown videos about the lack of evidence for climate change. This scenario is similar to the 6 vs. 9 scenario, where two people could be standing on opposite sides of the same number. The first person is seeing a 6, and the second is seeing a 9. Both of their views are technically accurate from their point of view. In a digital world, an algorithm is similar to the position. It is what determines what we are initially exposed to and how we process that in relation to our understanding of a particular issue.
    Personal Lenses and Digital Systems are interconnected in relation to how we understand something to be true. Personal lenses include personal experiences, beliefs, cultural background, and prior knowledge. Digital systems include a search engine or a recommendation system that filters information based on user behavior. When a digital system recognizes what a user tends to click on or watch, it tends to show more of that type of content in the future. In essence, a user ends up in a type of bubble called a filter bubble, where they are mostly exposed to content that is in agreement with their existing beliefs. They can then feel confident in their understanding of an issue because most of the information they are exposed to confirms their beliefs. Utilitarian ethics dictate that a platform or institution should strive to create a system that provides the greatest good for the greatest number of people. However, if a system merely confirms existing beliefs, then it can actually contribute to misinformation and division. Utilitarian ethics dictate that a platform should strive for accurate information and a variety of viewpoints in order to make a decision for the best good of society.
    Ultimately, both personal beliefs and digital systems contribute to how people understand information, thus explaining why sincere disagreements can occur even when people feel as though they are seeing the same reality.

  • This discussion is based on chapter 14 (please read chapter…

    This discussion is based on chapter 14 (please read chapter 14 before starting the discussion)

    THE TEXT BOOK LINK

    Read article below

    Please review the grading rubric.

    Prompt 1: Chapter 14 discusses several variations (changes or trends) in family life. The Pew Research Center article presents data on recent trends in marriage and family. Pick TWO trends (variations) that have most significant impact on family in America. (5 points) – Discuss the impact of these trends on FAMILY as a social institution – the main focus should be on discussing the IMPACT – for example single parent families have increased significantly – what impact does this trend have on family as a social institution?

    Prompt2 : What is behind change in American family structure (5 points) – please use data presented in the article to address this prompt.

    Prompt 3: What is the future of marriage as an social institution? Is marriage on a decline? If yes, discuss why? If no, discuss why (6 points) please use data/statistics from the textbook or other sources to support your stance. You need to provide reference for any claims you make. (6 points)

    Prompt 4 – Respond to 2 posts (4 points)

    How the discussion will be graded

    Meets all expectations Meets partial expectations Does not meet expectations
    Prompt 1 (5 points) Clearly identifies two trends(variations) and discusses the IMPACT of these trends( 5 points) Trends (variations) are identified but discussion does not focus on IMPACT of these trends (2-3 points) Trends (variations) are not identified (0 points)
    Prompts 2 (5 points) Clearly discusses reasons behind the changes using data from the article (5 points) Reasons are discussed but no reference to data presented in the article (3 points) Inadequate response (0 points)
    Prompt 3 (6 points) Takes a clear stance on relevance of marriage as an social institution -Use of data to support with references used to make any claim. (6 points) Takes a stance but no data to support any point. No references provided (2) General statements about marriage being good and beautiful with no reference to actual changes taking place (0 points)
    Prompt 4 (4 points ) Thoughtful response to 2 posts with clear reference to an idea discussed in the post. The response is substantive (4 points) Brief and superficial response – simply stating that I agree with your point (2 points) No response (0 points)
  • Analyze foreigner labels connotations and explain Englishs g…

    Please read Chapter 6 of Judith Martin and Thomas Nakayamas Intercultural Communication in Context and answer the following questions:

    1. Foreigner labels

    Generate a list of labels used to refer to people from other countries who come to the United States – for example, immigrants and aliens. For each label, identify its general connotation (positive, negative, or mixed). Reflect on how the connotations of these words may influence your perceptions of people from other countries. Would it make a difference if we referred to them as guests or visitors?

    2. English as a global language

    How can the dominance of English as an international language be understood through our five touchstones – culture, communication, power, context, and history?

    Please upload your answers to Teams.

  • Undefined

    I need help with this assignment due tonight, and I have attached the assignment.

    Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): RM Exercise 3 S 2026.docx

    Note: Content extraction from these files is restricted, please review them manually.

  • Social Science Question

    In this assignment, you will create a proposal detailing and building upon the information presented in the last two assignments. First, present the current policy that is negatively impacting an oppressed population, including who and in what ways the population is being affected. Then describe a detailed plan designed to remedy the shortcomings of the current policy. In addition, discuss the leadership skills necessary to gain support for the proposal and determine which of those skills you already possess and which you may need to develop. You will include an evaluation plan that presents the data needed to demonstrate that the change has had the desired outcome. This will include the definition of success and the ways in which the data will be collected. Remember to support all main points, assertions, arguments, conclusions, or recommendations with relevant, credible, and convincing evidence.

    By successfully completing this assignment, you will demonstrate your proficiency in the following competencies and behaviors:

    • EPAS Competency 2: Advance human rights and social, racial, economic, and environmental justice.
      • C2.GP.A: Advocate for human rights at the individual, family, group, organizational, and community system levels.
        • Related Assignment Criteria:
          • Explain a detailed plan for enacting change to address discrimination in the selected policy or program.
          • Discuss leadership skills needed to implement the plan to address discriminatory issues in the selected policy or program.
          • Explain how the plan to change the policy or program will be evaluated.
          • Explain how the evaluation data will be collected and managed.

    Instructions

    For this assignment, in a 46 page paper:

    • Explain a detailed plan for enacting change to address discrimination in the selected policy or program.
      • Include steps for implementation, a budget, and specific sources for funding.
    • Discuss leadership skills needed to implement the plan to address discriminatory issues in the selected policy or program.
      • Reflect on your personal application of or capacities for these leadership skills.
    • Explain how the plan to change the policy or program will be evaluated.
      • Detail the data that will be necessary to measure the plan’s success.
    • Explain how the evaluation data will be collected and managed.
      • Describe how the data will be collected and managed to maintain ethical integrity.
    • Support main points, assertions, arguments, conclusions, or recommendations with relevant, credible, and convincing evidence.
      • Synthesize evidence to demonstrate its importance to your discussion or argument.
    • Apply APA style and formatting to scholarly writing.
      • Demonstrate correct stylistic conventions, document structure, and source attributions.

    Additional Requirements

    Your assignment is expected to meet the following requirements:

    • Written communication: Written communication is free of errors that detract from the overall message.
    • APA formatting: Resources and citations are formatted according to current APA style and formatting standards.
    • Resources: A minimum of six resources.
    • Length of paper: 46 double-spaced pages (not including reference list).
    • Font and font size: Times New Roman, 12 point.

    Requirements: 4-6 pages

  • After Welfare article analysis

    First, read the magazine article After Welfare by Katherine Boo (2001) – it is provided as a PDF and accessible link. Then, choose ONE theory covered during Modules 1 or 2 (options pasted below) to analyze the Jones family’s story. Do not just choose the theory you presented or that you know the best…choose the one that best explains what you see happening in the family’s story! You must explain why you chose the theory, use course and theory terminology, reference (cite) class readings/textbook in APA format, and cite specific and appropriate examples from the article to illustrate theoretical applications. Your exam should be written in 12-point Times New Roman font and should be at least 1,000 words in length (including in-text citations, not including the reference page at the end). You may single or double space. Successful exam submissions typically range from 1,000 to 2,000 words. Do not pad your response with “fluff” – keep your analysis concise and concentrated. This is an open-book, open-note exam. Cite all sources used in your response. I’ve provided APA resources in the exam folder. You are NOT allowed to use any form of AI tool to complete your exam. If AI use is suspected, the submission will be analyzed using AI detection tools and graded accordingly. Modules 1 and 2 Theories: Symbolic Interactionism Life Course Attachment Ambiguous Loss Feminist

    Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): After Welfare _ The New Yorker.pdf

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