Category: uncategorised

  • Inventory management in an actual firm

    I will need the following:

    1. The charts/graphs included in the Excel file to be inserted into the Word document.
    2. In the product analysis sections of the Word document (Chapters 4 and 5), the calculation methods that were used in the Excel file should be added to Chapters 4 and 5.
    3. A Table of Figures and a Table of Tables should be added.

    The assignment will remain as it is; however, within Chapters 4 and 5, where the analysis has been conducted, the tables and the calculation methods that were followed in the Excel files I attached should be included.

    In other words, what is already analysed in the text should also be clearly presented as figures taken from Excel, and for example the text should include references such as: as Figure X displays.

  • Children and Young Peoples Wellbeing

    Please use only module materials, word counting after each part, references only from material work provided by open University, at the end will have to be the marking criteria and needs to be UK style.

    Requirements: 2500

  • Self assessment

    You will review the template provided and then conduct a self-assessment using the outline below. Your self-assessment will prepare you for the final course project due in Week 9, which is the formal client biopsychosocialspiritual assessment.

    Note: Please know that only your instructor will review your self-assessment. Use pseudonyms where needed to protect the privacy of organizations and individuals you reference in your paper.

    Assignment Instructions

    Review the to get a clear sense of what the full process is like with a client. Then use the outline below to write a 510 page paper that includes complete responses to each component of Sections 1 and 2.

    Organize your paper in two sections as outlined below.

    Section 1

    In Section 1 of your document, include your responses to the following:

    1. Self-Identifying Information.
    2. Demographic information: Age, sex, ethnic group, current employment, marital status, physical environment/housing, and nature of living circumstances (apartment, group home or other shared living arrangement, or homeless). Discuss your neighborhood.
    3. Presenting Problem.
    4. What is a problem or issue you have experienced? Describe and discuss.
    5. What caused the problem or issue?
    6. What feelings and thoughts have been aroused by thinking about this problem or issue as you complete this assignment?
    7. How have you coped with this problem or issue?
    8. Who else, if anyone, is involved in the problem or issue? How are they involved? How do they view or how have they reacted to the problem/issue or solution?
    9. How have they contributed to the problem/issue or solution?
    10. Background History.
    11. Family history: Describe your family history, including your family origin, and names of your family members that comprise your support team. (Use pseudonyms to protect the privacy of your family members.)
    12. Family background: Discuss the value of family and what it means to you.
    13. Intimate relationship history: Discuss your relationship with a spouse or significant other and his or her impact on your life. Discuss the support or lack of support from your spouse or significant other.
    14. Educational and/or vocational training: Discuss your educational background (high school/GED, colleges attended, and trainings and degrees earned).
    15. Employment history: Discuss the last three years of employment, including the last places of employment and job titles. (This can be paid and/or volunteer work.)
    16. Military history (if applicable): Branch of military, rank, and number of years of service.
    17. Cultural background: Race/ethnicity, primary language/other languages spoken, the significance of cultural identity, cultural strengths, experiences of discrimination or oppression, migration experience, and impact of migration on the individual and family life cycle.
    18. Spirituality: Share your spiritual affiliations (i.e., denomination, church membership, extent of involvement, religious perspective, or special observances).

    Section 2

    In Section 2, reflect on your experience completing the self-assessment and respond to the following:

    1. Give an example of how technology can be used in the practicum and in the community to enhance ethical practices in social work. Describe the situation you have in mind.
    2. Discuss how to create awareness of values and ethical problem-solving in relation to advanced generalist social work practice.
    3. In your discussion, apply leadership skills, theoretical frameworks, decision-making processes, and best practice interventions that you have used as a culturally competent social work intern when you have worked with clients who have different backgrounds or beliefs.
    4. Explain how critical thinking skills informed your self-assessment. Provide specific examples.
    5. Explain how you limited bias toward yourself during the self-assessment.
    6. Explain how the strengths-based perspective informed your self-assessment.
    7. Explain how you can use this assignment and experience to inform your work as an emerging social worker, including how the strengths-based practice can inform social work practice with diverse clients.
    8. Explain how you will engage in collaborative practice with all systems (individuals, families, groups, organizations, and communities) in advanced generalist social work.

    Note: Only your instructor will review this assignment to protect the privacy of your personal data.

  • Assignment 3.2

    Just fill out these questions. Preferably hand written to show your work when necessary

    Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): 34 Assignment- Geometry and Trigonometry.pdf, Learning Activity 32 Assignment- Budgeting a Future.pdf

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

  • Trigonometry Question

    Practice sample paper paper….

    Requirements:

  • Abigail Clancy you

    Establishing an action group in Nigeria can come with challenges . Here are some potential difficulties:

    – *Funding*: Securing funding and resources can be tough, especially if you’re relying on donations or grants .

    – *Government Regulations*: Navigating complex registration and compliance requirements can be a hurdle. Nigeria’s regulatory environment can be challenging .

    – *Public Awareness and Engagement*: Raising awareness about your cause and getting people to care can be an uphill task, especially if it’s a niche issue ?.

    – *Building Trust*: Establishing credibility and trust with the community, stakeholders, and potential partners can take time .

    – *Logistical Challenges*: Finding a suitable office space, managing logistics, and coordinating activities in a country with infrastructure challenges can be tough .

    – *Security Concerns*: Depending on the nature of your work, security might be a concern, especially if you’re tackling sensitive issues like human rights or corruption .

    These are just a few potential challenges. What’s your action group focused on?

    Requirements:

  • Week 6 i-Human Case Link: Anna Sink

    Part I

    Follow these guidelines when completingeach component of theassignment.Contact your course faculty if you have questions.

    Directions

    1. Review the i-Human Virtual Patient Encounter Orientation in Week 1 Modules if needed. Requirements, tutorials, and a practice case are provided.
    2. Accessthe i-Human caseby clicking the Week 6 i-Human Case Link: Anna Sink on the page. Then, click the blue bar tolaunch the case in a new browser window
    3. Download the tUse of this template is required. A 10% deduction will be applied if the template is not used. See the rubric.
      1. Answer the questions on the Anna Sink i-Human Virtual Patient Encounter Worksheet after completing the case.
      2. Save the template and include your name in the file name.

    Include the following sections (detailed criteria listed below and in the grading rubric). Answer the questions under each section with explanation and detail.

    1. Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation (SBAR) Documentation
      • Appropriate information in each section
      • All key findings mentioned
      • Data is well-organized and concise
      • Documentation is professional, with correct spelling
    2. Defuse Questions
      • During the Anna Sink case, describe a time when you felt knowledgeable and confident in your skills.
      • List and describe something new you learned related to client care.
      • If you could go back and ask Anna one more question right now, what would it be and why?
      • How can you apply what you learned in this case to your nursing practice?
    3. Post-Simulation Questions
      • Discuss at least two ways to facilitate and promote self-care management when caring for Anna.
      • Discuss how you would identify personal, system, or community resources available to support self-care management in patients dealing with anxiety.
      • Provide the full APA reference for the scholarly source.
    4. Part II

    5. This assignment enables the student to meet the following course outcomes:
      • CO 1: Demonstrate a head-to-toe physical assessment. (PO 1)
      • CO 2: Differentiate between normal and abnormal health assessment findings. (PO 4)
      • CO 4: Demonstrate effective communication skills during health assessment and documentation. (PO 3)
      • CO 6: Demonstrate caring and professional behavior during patient interactions. (POs 6, 7)
      • Accessthe i-Human caseby clicking the Week 7 i-Human Case Link: Anthony James on the page. Then, click the blue bar tolaunch the case in a new browser window.
        1. You have two attempts at the case.
        2. Wear headphones or earbuds for the best listening experience.
        3. Take notes on the case.
      • When you have completed a case, click Submit. Review the final score and feedback provided by i-Human.
        1. Scores are adjusted based on your performance level.
        2. Faculty will convert your highest score in i-Human to points earned in the grading rubric below.
      • Download the . Use of this template is required. A 10% deduction will be applied if the template is not used. See the rubric.
        1. Answer the questions on the Anthony James i-Human Virtual Patient Encounter Worksheet after completing the case.
        2. Save the template and include your name in the file name.
        1. Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation (SBAR) Documentation
          1. Appropriate information in each section
          2. All key findings mentioned
          3. Data is well-organized and concise
          4. Documentation is professional, with correct spelling
        2. Defuse Questions
          1. During the Anthony James case, describe a time when you felt knowledgeable and confident in your skills.
          2. List and describe something new you learned related to client care.
          3. If you could go back and ask Anthony and his caregiver one more question right now, what would it be and why?
          4. How can you apply what you learned in this case to your nursing practice?
        3. Post-Simulation Questions
          1. Discuss the importance of balancing the psychological aspects of end-of-life care, such as pain management and symptom control, with the psychosocial and emotional needs of the client and family when developing and implementing a plan of care for clients at the end of their life.
          2. Discuss how you can ensure that established protocols, like pain management, are effectively tailored to each clients unique needs and preferences to provide client-centered care.
          3. Provide the full APA reference for the scholarly source.
      • Include the following sections (detailed criteria listed below and in the grading rubric). Answer the questions under each section with explanation and detail.

    Requirements: Not too long

  • L2

    1. Choose a country other than the United States and investigate what recent fiscal policy actions have been implemented in the particular countrys economy. (Remember that fiscal policy consists of changes to government spending and/or taxes in order to affect the economy.) When researching, focus on fiscal policy actions taken within the last decade. 2. Then in a written response of a minimum of 150 words do the following: 1. Describe in your own words what specific fiscal policy action the government took and why they may have taken the action. 2. Connect the fiscal policy action you described to the aggregate demand/aggregate supply (AD/AS) model. 3. Given what youve learned in class, show the effect this policy would have on the economys AD/AS graph (you should show how the AD curve would shift to the left or to the right). 4. How would the economys price level and GDP be affected? Part 2 1. Choose any idea, concept, or issue covered in class from any point in the semester. 2. Compose a written response containing a minimum of 150 words where you explain what you have learned related to the idea, concept, or issue you choose, as well as why you see it as being useful and valuable information to know. 3. Possible questions to help you in your thinking include: 1. How does the idea, concept, or issue you have learned make you more informed about current events? 2. How might you apply the knowledge to understanding the real world? 3. How might the knowledge be useful in your everyday life, studies, or career?
  • U5

    The United States not only won WWII but also never faced direct military invasion or any devastation at home (after Pearl Harbor), unlike the rest of the industrialized world. Many unique horrors befell allied and enemy states alike, including the wholesale bombing of major cities, mass loss of civilian life, nuclear bomb attack, Holocaust, or other such wartime tragedies that left so many nations in physical, demographic, and economic ruin. Many Europeans and Japanese (and others) were left to survive in the rubble, sometimes struggling with difficulty to feed themselves. Belarus alone (a nation located between Russia and Germany) lost fully one-fourth of its entire population. The United States came out the biggest winner of the war, with a roaring economy, its farmland and factories unscathed, and controlling approximately 40% of the worlds GDP at its peak in 1960. Americans experienced unprecedented growth in the post-war years, leading to a booming middle class (and a literal baby boom of births), higher standards of living, new sprawling suburban areas with affordable housing, expanded consumer power, mass enrollment in affordable colleges and universities, and significant supports from the GI Bill for veterans. In the United States by the end of the 1950s, about 75% of households owned at least one automobile, a huge new consumer development and, arguably, a new element of the American dream. Mass car ownership resulted from consumer freedoms afforded by both post-war wealth and protection of workers freedom to grow unions and enjoy blue-collar jobs with high pay, benefits, and pensions. Those days seem long gone, and not all Americans benefited equally from these decades of plenty. The Civil Right Movement fought for freedoms and rights still denied African Americans, struggled against enforced segregation policies in the South, and some regions of the country would take more time to develop; however, the centrality of the automobile to American life would only grow, as would the highway systems needed for drivers to enjoy new freedoms to travel independently of railroads. And in this era, there was plenty of federal dollars to invest in building out this interstate highway infrastructure, which in turn provided more jobs and united the country to a greater degree. Task The main goal of this assignment is to begin to appreciate sudden post-war prosperity through the lens of the booming auto industry and investment in the 1950s Interstate Highway System, while also working on basic U.S. geography (knowing where places are on a map, like states, cities, and major natural features). This task will be, in effect, a Travelogue. The Interstate Highway System: The two interactive websites provided below show the highways and railroads in 1920, when far fewer people owned cars, and then in 1958, when the major interstate highway system appeared. While Americans would still have traveled very long distances mostly on trains in these two time periods (and by plane in the 50s), we will imagine and creatively describe four (4) road trips two in our Model T Fords of the 1920s and two in fabulous new cars of the 1950s. How to create your four travelogues: Open and study the interactive maps at the respective websites provided and also review a basic map of the United States so you can note the location of the various states, cities, and natural features of the country. (Many students either never mastered this basic geography or have forgotten much of it since last geography was required in K-12 classes.) You will write for four imaginary travelogues of road trips you plan, and write in a casual voice (all creativity encouraged), as though you are keeping a diary or writing letters to a friend or family member. Each link was placed incase its not accessible. * Interactive map of highways and railroads in 1920 ( ) * Interactive map of highways in 1958 ( ) Again, you will share four (4) separate pretend journeys, two in the 1920s and two in the 1950s, and the trips involve driving first from Georgia to Los Angeles and then from Georgia to New York City. Refer to the Sample Road Trips as an example of the travelogues you will create. To launch your four journeys, begin anywhere in the state of Georgia (perhaps where you live now, or you can just choose Atlanta). Trace out and then describe the road trip expedition by following the maps from your location in Georgia to Los Angeles, CA and then from Georgia to New York City, NY (or even Quebec, if you wish to be ambitious) for each era. The journeys will be based on highways available in 1920 and then in 1958, as per maps provided. What routes do you take? Do you take the fastest route or a more scenic journey? What states and sites do you see on the way? Writing in first person, you must share all of the following in your travelogue/letters: * Every highway on which you travel (e.g. Southern National or I75) * Every state through which you travel, one by one (e.g. Georgia to Alabama, onwards) * Highlight a few cities of your choosing in which to stop to visit or rest along the way * In addition, and importantly, on the journey to New York, you must pass through our capitol, Washington D.C., and on your journey to Los Angeles, share when you cross over the Mississippi River. Grading Criteria * Submission contains four road trips presented as letters or travelogues, following instructions, and including all highways used, states visited, a few cities, Washington DC (on the journey north), the Mississippi River (on the journey west), and a few sentences of commentary on what you learned or re-learned about U.S. geography or something you newly appreciated, learned, or otherwise gained from this exercise. * No work may utilize AI technology or writing apps. Part 2 In a minimum of 250 words, share what you learned while completing this task or what you found interesting. Focus on history, geography, and/or big ideas. Did you already know all the related geography? Did you newly realize the exact location of the capitol or newly appreciate the location of any city or the river? Could you easily tell how the new highway system demonstrated new post-war prosperity? Can you relate any aspect of the history or travelogues to our running theme of freedom? These questions are not to be answered one by one but are meant help you think through what you might like to share

    Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): Sample Road Trips.docx

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  • Argument Analysis Initial Post

    https://ethics.mattcleaver.com/topics

    1. (10 points) Choose an ethical or moral topic. Explain just a bit of background about your topic. Maybe even link to a relevant news article about the topic. I suggest looking in these places if you need inspiration:
    • Last week’s .
    • The list of
    • I compiled.
    • Check your social media feeds. There is almost always someone sharing a news article and making a moral judgment about something.
    1. (20 points) State a specific, prescriptive, moral position. A moral position should be a morally prescriptive statement that someone can either agree or disagree with.
    • Your moral position should be moral, specific, and prescriptive.
    • Moral: it should state a moral position, not a legal or religious position.
    • Specific: it should be a specific moral issue, not a general moral topic. General moral topics would be something like “racism” or “hate” or “greed.” Rather than stating a position about these general topics, state a position about a specific instance of these things, such as:
    • “It is morally bad to perform traffic stops based on racial profiling.”
    • “It is morally good to defend the free speech rights of hate groups.”
    • “It is morally bad for businesses to raise prices on essential goods during a natural disaster, such as a hurricane.”
    • Prescriptive: it should state that something is good, bad, or permissible, not just talk about a topic.
    • It could take something like the following form:
    • “It is morally [good/bad/permissible] to [fill-in-the-blank-action].”
    • “[Fill-in-the-blank-action] is morally [good/bad/permissible].”
    • Morally good actions are actions that we want people to perform. For example, “It is morally good for individuals to donate money to charity.”
    • Morally bad actions are actions we do not want people to perform. For example, “It is morally bad for a spouse to have an affair.”
    • Morally permissible actions are actions that we think are acceptable, but that we don’t want to either encourage or discourage people from performing. For example, “It is morally permissible for individuals to drink reasonable levels of alcohol.”
    • Note: your moral position should be one that people disagree about. There should be people who both agree and disagree with your moral position.
    1. (60 points) For your chosen moral position, try to construct two opposing valid arguments: one in agreement with and one in disagreement with your moral position. Lay out the arguments as I did in the lectures (), with a series of premises, and then a conclusion that follows from those premises.
    • Note: you are not picking or defending which side you think is “right.” You are simply laying out both sides of the argument.
    1. (10 points) Grammar and formatting. In general, your tone can be conversational (rather than rigid and academic), but you must use proper grammar. This assignment does not require specific academic formatting (such as MLA or APA), but you should use conventional formatting: black text, normal-size font, left-aligned text, and proper separation between sections.

    Submission Format

    • You must submit your initial post as a text entry or as an uploaded document, below.
    • Immediately after you submit your assignment, here, you must also copy and paste your initial post in the discussion that is the next item in the module.

    Due dates

    • See the due date within Canvas

    Example Initial Post

    (The following is an example submission that fulfills all of the above requirements of the assignment)

    (1. Introduce the topic) 1. Abortion is a divisive topic, and many states are passing restrictive bans on abortion (“

    “). The heart of the debate revolves around whose rights deserve to be given the most weight: the mother or the fetus. It seems like you can’t have both.

    (2. State a moral position) 2. Position: Abortion after six weeks of gestation is morally bad.

    (3. Try to construct two valid arguments, one that agrees, and one that disagrees)

    3. Agree

    • Premise 1: A human fetus has a heartbeat at six weeks of gestation.
    • Premise 2: Stopping a beating human heart is murder.
    • Premise 3: Murder is morally bad.
    • Conclusion: Therefore, abortion after six weeks of gestation is morally bad. (note: the conclusion of your argument in agreement should be the same as your moral position in part 2)

    Disagree

    • Premise 1: It is morally bad to restrict an individual from making decisions relating to their own body.
    • Premise 2: Getting an abortion is a decision relating to an individual’s own body.
    • Conclusion: Therefore, it is morally bad to restrict an individual from getting an abortion.

    Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): Argument Analysis Checklist.pdf

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