Category: uncategorised

  • Research Paper

    Here’s my topic: (Resolving Conflict Between Management and Employees During Organizational Change)

    • Conflict: Resistance to change (Restructuring, layoffs etc..)

    RESEARCH PAPER INSTRUCTIONS

    You are to select a conflict and explain how a leader using conflict resolution skills could resolve the problem. Be sure to do more than to just describe the situation. Suggest possible solutions. The paper could address any type of conflict: international, business or workplace, personal or organizational. You should use authoritative sources for your paper, preferably academic sources. You will probably want to use Galileo from the library.

    The paper should be typed, double-spaced, and free of typing, grammar, spelling, and punctuation errors. You should use the APA citation style. Wikipedia should not be used to do the research, and no more than 50% of the sources may be from websites. (Not including the online articles from the Library.)

    Any websites used must be reliable, such as that of the U.S. State Department, a university webpage, etc.

    The paper must include at least five sources and be at least five pages long. (Not counting the cover page.)

    Students will be graded on the basis of a number of factors including thoroughness, research, accuracy, clarity, correct grammar, punctuation, spelling, and overall presentation. I have attached the rubric that I use for grading.

    The paper should be submitted under Assignments in D2L. All assignments will be evaluated by Turn-it-in. The use of any sources without properly citing them will be considered plagiarism, and the paper will be given a score of zero.

    To use proper citation, see (choose one of the citation sources like Purdue Online Writing Lab/ OWL) and

    Do not hesitate to contact me if you are not certain if your topic is appropriate. It can involve something with which you are personally involved, but you do not have to tell me that is the case unless you want to.

    GRADING OF RESEARCH PAPER

    Name _________________________________________

    CRITERIA

    POINTS

    SCORE

    Grammar, punctuation, spelling

    10

    Description of issue

    10

    Proper citation

    20

    Research sources

    20

    Thoroughness, accuracy, clarity

    10

    Length

    5

    Analysis, result

    25

    TOTAL

    100

  • Essay ENG 1020

    Conduct a formal rhetorical analysis of The Greatest Generation: The Great Depression and the American South” by Jeffrey DeRoven (the essay is below). Investigate the articles use of rhetorical appeals, the presence of fallacies, and the rhetorical situation as they relate to the effectiveness of the document– from a rhetorical and argumentative perspective. Your final copy should be 5-6 pages in length; please, remember that this is a FORMAL paper! Adhere to MLA formatting (please review MLA format on the Purdue OWLs website or MLA website and familiarize yourself with this format), use only the article (no additional sources, please!) on your Works Cited sheet, and do not use I in this paper! Instead of I think… or I see… use One can see…, Readers might believe…, or Others might think….

    You will read and annotate the article, fully understanding that it pretends to be a REPORT (a writing genre) but is also an ARGUMENT. In your 5-page paper (you can have four pages of writing and one “Works Cited” page, if you choose, or 5 pages of writing and one “Works Cited” page– and the only source on the “Works Cited” page is the DeRoven essay!), you will discuss the articles thesis (main point), purpose, audience, and stance. You will also discuss why the writer chose to write a report rather than a flat-out argument or commentary. You will discuss DeRoven’s use of logos, pathos, and ethos; you will discuss the writing strategies used in the article (comparison-contrast, definition, narration, and whatever else you find); and you will point out DeRoven’s use of logical fallacies. Finally, you will give your opinion on the argument. This will be tricky because, while it’s YOUR OPINION, it can’t sound like it came from you– this is a formal paper, so you can’t use “I” anywhere. You need to write stuff like, “While one can see…” and “A reader might not agree with this point because….”

    In terms of MLA format, here it is, simplified: Your paper will be typed, double-spaced the entire way through, in 14-point Times Roman font (I prefer 14-point, even though it’s not officially MLA format, because I’m old and it’s easier for me to read!), and aligned left with 1-inch margins all the way around. You will indent/tab at the beginning of each new paragraph. The introductory paragraph will be about 100-200 words long; the body paragraphs will be between 200-250 words long. The conclusion will be about 100 words. You will directly quote from the article to support your own points; you will summarize portions of the article to support your own points. Later this week, we will go over the structure of this paper IN DETAIL, so don’t start writing just yet!

    Please remember that it works THIS way for all Writing Projects: You write the paper, send it to be reviewed, make corrections to your paper based on your paper’s review, and finally submit the Writing Project and the review to me (you’ll get an email regarding your review from Brainfuse, the Writing Centers, or English Tutoring– simply forward that email to me for your 50 points). In general, student writing is MUCH better, receiving HIGHER GRADES, after students have made corrections to their Writing Projects based upon the Pear Deck/Writing Center/ English Tutoring reviews.

    Grading Rubric for WP #1

    Total Points: 150

    Content/Development (Logical flow of information, enough specifics, and details: -5 for each C/D error): 90 points

    Sentence Structures (Grammar, punctuation, spelling: -1 for each SS error): 50 points

    MLA Format (1-inch margins, double spacing, in-text citations: -1 for each error, -10 for missing “Works Cited” sheet): 10 points

    All that said, here’s background and material on rhetorical modes, Greek thinking, and logical fallacies. You will need this background for your paper. Now, I could be wrong in my assumption, but if you took ENG 1010 (or a comparable course), you should’ve read about rhetorical patterns and rhetorical analyses. The rhetorical patterns are also called the rhetorical modes; they date back to ancient Greece, with Socrates and his method and all that. Skill in rhetoric/argument/writing/speaking was held as a high art form in ancient Greece; in fact, it was a commonly held belief that one who mastered those skills in debate and writing was also worthy of political office and power. Playwrights were often given seats on political councils and boards. Being skilled in rhetoric meant understanding the modes and using them well.

    There are 9 rhetorical modes: Narration, Description, Exemplification, Process Analysis, Comparison-Contrast, Cause-Effect, Division-Classification, Definition, and Argumentation-Persuasion. Norton refers to most of them as “strategies,” but that is incorrect. These modes are most effective when used together, as in the writing genres/microgenres (types of writing) we are looking at this semester. In effect, these are formats for the information you present; for example, a paragraph using narration (a true story about you or someone else which you use to make a point) will contain conflict and resolution and a POINT, all presented in chronological order. Another type of paragraph in the same essay might use definition (the denotative meaning of a word as explored by the writer, or the writer’s own definition for a common term), and still another might use comparison (showing how 2 or more things are SIMILAR, which is different from contrast– showing how 2 or more things are DIFFERENT from each other). Used all together in an essay/article/profile/memoir/research paper, they can create a powerful piece of writing.

    The ancient Greeks saw argument as everything, and everything could be seen as argument. For example, in our own lives, we argue things everyday: your favorite pizza topping, whose turn it is to take out the garbage, what shows are best, which streaming service is best, the best vacation you ever had all of these things are persuasive in nature, if you think about it. If you tell me that the best vacation you ever had consisted of you sleeping in a hammock for one week straight on an island off Michigans Upper Peninsula, and you really TRIED not to do anything but sleep, I might look at you like youre weird because, to me, that sounds BORING! However, if you begin explaining this vacation by telling the story of how youre putting yourself through school while working 40 hours per week at one job and 25 hours per week at another, while at the same time raising 2 school-age kids as a single parent, and you got an opportunity to stay on a Michigan island for free for one week while your kids were at school well, then, that changes things. Anyone could then understand why you would say that was the best vacation you ever had! It might not be anyone elses dream vacation, but you have made it really clear why it was yours.

    In Ancient Greece, argument was also seen as a three-legged stool, consisting of logos (using intellect, logic, facts, statistics, reasoning to convince), pathos (using emotions, word choices, beliefs, identity to convince), and ethos (using authority or expertise to convince). One had to be strong in all aspects in order to win an argument, convincing audience members of the correctness of his rhetoric and beliefs. The final determiner of the winner of a debate was the determination of what are known as logical fallacies. These are gaps in logic that sound true, that sound like they make sense, but in reality, dont.

    Heres a list of some common logical fallacies. They have actual names, and you’ll need to use those names in WP #1:

    Logical Fallacies

    Ad Hominem: A personal attack on an opponent that draws attention away from real issues.

    Appeal to Tradition: An argument that says something should or shouldnt be done because it has ALWAYS or NEVER been done a certain way in the past.

    Appeal to Authority: An argument based on higher authority or sources without giving specifics.

    Bandwagon: An argument for going along with the crowd.” It’s what I think of as teenage logic (and I can say that because my daughter is 17, and I deal with this actual gap in logic on a regular basis)–“Everyone is doing it, so I should be allowed to, too.”

    Begging the Question: A statement that assumes something is true, but it must be PROVEN to be true.

    Circular Reasoning: The argument that uses a term and its meaning to simply prove each other (“Playing video games is bad because it’s bad for you”). It fails to have specifics to back it up.

    Equivocation: The use of term with two different senses or meanings; the opponent assumes a meaning you arent aware of, but neglects to tell you.

    False Analogy: The assumption that because two things are alike in some ways, they must be alike in all others as well.

    False Authority: The assumption that, because one is an expert in one field, one must be an expert in others as well.

    False Cause (Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc): The assumption that because one event follows another, the first is the cause of the second.

    False Dilemma (Either/Or): The assertion that there are only TWO courses of action with regard to a problem, even though there may be (and usually ARE) many more choices available.

    Guilt by Association: An unfair attempt to make someone responsible for the actions of another.

    Hasty Generalization: A generalization based upon too little evidence. I think of this as old people logic (and I can say that because my parents are still alive and OLD, and they say this kind of stuff a lot–“All kids today are lazy (the generalization) because they have tattoos and pierced noses (the illogical).”

    Irrelevant Conclusion: The logic of a statement leads to the wrong conclusion; a way of dodging the real issue at hand.

    Non Sequitur: A statement in which the conclusion is illogical; the whole thing becomes nonsense.

    Oversimplification: Any major or relevant considerations are left out about a particular issue, implying there is only a single cause or solution for a complex problem.

    Red Herring: Dodging the real issue by replacing it with a lesser issue.

    Slippery Slope: The assumption that if one thing occurs, no matter what that one thing is, it will be the first step in a downward spiral to anarchy.

    See attachment

    Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): ENG1020DeRovenEssaywithCitation (3) (2).docx

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

  • Ethics and Marketing

    1. Choose one topic from the following list of options:
    • Ethical Challenges in Influencer Marketing: Investigate the ethical challenges associated with influencer marketing, such as authenticity, disclosure, and the influence on vulnerable demographics.
    • Ethics in Product Labeling and Advertising Claims: Examine the ethical implications of misleading product labeling and the responsibility of marketers in ensuring accurate information to consumers.
    • The Role of Stakeholders in Environmental Sustainability: Analyze how stakeholders (e.g., employees, investors, communities) influence and are influenced by a company’s approach to environmental sustainability.
    • Greenwashing: Ethical Issues and Solutions: Examine the practice of greenwashing, where companies exaggerate or falsely claim environmental sustainability efforts, and propose ways to combat this unethical practice.
    1. Write a 2-page paper on your chosen topic, and be sure to include references.
  • Health policy analysis paper

    Each student will select a policy related to healthcare that was implemented as a result of regulatory or legislative requirements to describe and analyze the policy using the following criteria of the rubric. This is a formal student paper with expectation of 5 or more reference sources with appropriate in-text citations to support each component of the rubric. This paper will be 6-8 pages, excluding title page and references. Remember that the assignment says “policy” but you can think outside the box. You can use an “Act”, “policy”, “program”, “Bill”, etc. references can not be more than 5 years old
  • Personal Ethics Credo

    Think about and write down your personal credo statements, including a reference summary explaining why you chose those statements.

    • Here’s an example of what one of your personal credo statements should look like: We all know the golden rule, I will treat others how I want to be treated. This is a good credo statement, but you may want to take it further.
    • Here’s another example: I will treat other people how they want to be treated. My interaction with others is important. I want people to feel comfortable with me and I want to make every interaction better for the person I interacted with. Therefore, I will strive to understand every individual and adjust accordingly.
    • There are many examples of possible credo statements, including standing up for your beliefs, showing gratitude every day, always doing what you say you will do, and so on.

    There is no mandatory number nor limit to the number of personal credo statements you develop. Be thorough, but dont overwhelm yourself. Remember that this will be the foundation for how you want to live overall and will serve as a checklist you can reference in the future.

    Action Items

    1. List your personal ethics credo statements according to the guidelines above and explain your rationale behind each of your statements.
    2. Submit your Personal Ethics Credo. Your work will automatically be checked by Turnitin.
  • Studypool Professional

    Bee venom is a valuable natural product widely used in pharmaceutical, cosmetic, and biomedical applications due to its anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, and therapeutic properties. The extraction process involves placing an electrical bee venom collector at the hive entrance, where mild electrical stimulation induces worker bees to release venom onto a glass collection plate without losing their stingers.

    Requirements:

  • Modernisasi

    tentang perkembangan jaman

    Requirements:

  • Week 2 Discussion Peer Response

    Guided Response: Review several of your classmates posts and respond to at least two of your peers using Socratic questions and discourse to continue a critical analysis of themes by Day 7 of the week. You are encouraged to post your required replies early in the week to promote more meaningful and interactive discourse in this discussion. Your responses must be at least 300 words.

    In your responses,

    • Select one key point from your peers discussion (preferably selecting one peer who addressed the same discipline and another who addressed the other discipline).
    • Expand on the summarized point by connecting it to theoretical and contemporary research on the topic, posing ethical concerns that may arise, and respectfully asking questions to develop a critical discourse.
    • Cite a minimum of 2 peer-reviewed resources to support the ideas, claims, and questions provided in your response.
    • SEE ATTACHMENT FOR MY ORIGINAL DISCUSSION POST

    First Classmate Post:

    For this discussion, I chose to use chat GPT. I decided to go with developmental and here is the question: Can you engage in a Socratic discussion with me on how early attachment relates to later self-regulation? You may question my reasoning, request operational definitions and evidence, offer counterexamples, and keep responses concise so we can iterate quickly.

    Summary of a Socratic Discussion on Attachment and Self-Regulation

    We began by distinguishing attachment security (expectations of caregiver availability), caregiver sensitivity (accurate, prompt, appropriate responding), and child temperament. Attachment was primarily assessed via the Strange Situation and its extensions; self-regulation outcomes included emotion regulation and effortful control measured by delay tasks, computerized inhibitory control, and multiformat ratings. We agreed that infant security predicts later self-regulation and social competence with small to moderate effects, while acknowledging heterogeneity by sample, measurement, and covariate control. Proposed mechanisms included caregiverchild coregulation scaffolding executive functions, internal working models that guide help seeking, and stress response calibration indexed by cortisol reactivity and recovery. Counter arguments focused on genetic and evocative gene environment factors; adoption/twin work and randomized sensitivity coaching interventions suggest caregiving plays a causal role beyond heredity. Boundary conditions included cultural caregiving norms that shape Strange Situation meaning, socioeconomic stress that constrains sensitivity, and distinct risks associated with disorganized attachment. For application, we discussed brief interventions that provide in the moment feedback to enhance sensitivity and evidence that such programs can improve infant minded interventions show promise; and future work should clarify durability and for whom effects are strongest. We began by distinguishing attachment security (expectations of caregiver availability), caregiver sensitivity (accurate, prompt, appropriate responding), and child temperament. Attachment was primarily assessed via the Strange Situation and its extensions; self-regulation outcomes included emotion regulation and effortful control measured by delay tasks, computerized inhibitory control, and multiformat ratings. We agreed that infant security predicts later self-regulation and social competence with small to moderate effects, while acknowledging heterogeneity by sample, measurement, and covariate control. Proposed mechanisms included caregiverchild coregulation scaffolding executive functions, internal working models that guide help seeking, and stress response calibration indexed by cortisol reactivity and recovery. Counterarguments focused on genetic and evocative geneenvironment factors; adoption/twin work and randomized sensitivity coaching interventions suggest caregiving plays a causal role beyond heredity. Boundary conditions included cultural caregiving norms that shape Strange Situation meaning, socioeconomic stress that constrains sensitivity, and distinct risks associated with disorganized attachment. For application, we discussed brief interventions that provide in the moment feedback to enhance sensitivity and evidence that such programs can improve infant biobehavioral regulation; ethical considerations emphasized avoiding deficit narratives and ensuring culturally responsive delivery. We proposed a preregistered randomized trial comparing sensitivity coaching to an active control, testing mediation from sensitivity gains to toddler regulation at 6 months with multi-method outcomes and equitable recruitment. Key takeaways: attachment is a meaningful but modest predictor of later regulation; mechanisms are theoretically coherent and partly biological; culturally adapted, equity minded interventions show promise; and future work should clarify durability and for whom effects are strongest.

    The summary that was provided is quite comprehensive and accurately captures the key themes and insights from the Socratic discussion on attachment and self-regulation.

    Second Classmate Post:

    For this discussion I chose to use the AI, Gemini provided by Google. I do not have much experience with Ai programs other than Grammarly. My sister is trying to get my certified in the programs as it would help my career path but I am against AI in a lot of ways and prefer to do things the old way. Oh well.

    Moving into the discussion, I asked to do a topic on social psychology and the utility of friendship, though we did touch a bit on both fields (social and developmental). Here is the summary provided by Gemini:

    Our dialogue has been a journey from the idealistic roots of friendship to the sobering realities of modern survival. Here is a summary of the “Socratic Anatomy” we performed on the concept of friendship in a utility-driven world:

    1. The Utility Trap

    We began by questioning if friendship ceases when its “usefulness” ends. You proposed a “Backseat Model”: when a friends practical utility vanishes, they aren’t abandoned, but they lose priority. This created a paradoxif we stop sharing our daily lives and quick responses with someone, the “care” we claim to have becomes invisible and eventually “blind,” as we can no longer see when that friend is in crisis.

    1. The Mirror of Identity

    We explored if “useless” friends (like those from our past) serve a psychological function by acting as mirrors. You argued that reminding us of who we were is itself a utility. However, this led us to wonder if we are actually befriending the person or simply the validation they provide us.

    1. The Death of the “Inherent Self”

    A turning point occurred when we discussed whether a human can exist independently of their traits. You observed that in modern society, the “Self” has been replaced by a “Portfolio.” We are no longer seen as inherent beings, but as a collection of functions. To lose your utility is, in the eyes of the world, to cease to exist.

    1. The System and the “1%”

    We identified the source of this pressure as a top-down imposition from the “1%,” whose focus on productivity trickles down to the “sheep.” This creates a survivalist culture where we treat others as assets because we are afraid of being discarded ourselves.

    1. The Empty Vault

    Finally, we reached the most poignant conclusion:

    • The Sacrifice: We choose to be “useful parts of a hollow system” because it offers the comfort of survival.
    • The Loss: We admitted that the “treasure”true, unconditional, non-utilitarian lovewas likely lost long ago.
    • The Result: We are not truly safe, but we conform to avoid “erasure,” even if it means we are merely guarding an empty vault.

    Our discussion revealed a tragic truth: while we all desire to be cherished for who we are, we live by a set of rules that only values us for what we do. We are survivors in a world where the “point” has been traded for “productivity.”

    Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): LLM Socratic Discussion Summary.docx

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  • Peplau and Orem Power Point

    Peplau and Orem PowerPoint

    Create a 14 20 slide PowerPoint that addresses each of the following points/questions. Be sure to completely answer all the questions for each bullet point. Use clear headings that allow your professor to know which bullet you are addressing on the slides in your presentation. Support your content with at least three (3) outside sources and the textbook using APA citations throughout your presentation. Make sure to cite the sources using the APA writing style for the presentation. Include a slide for your reference at the end. Follow best practices for PowerPoint presentations related to text size, color, images, effects, wordiness, and multimedia enhancements. Review the rubric criteria for this assignment.

    This week you will create a two-part PowerPoint to discuss the following:

    • Part one: Peplau was the first nursing theorist to identify the nurse-patient relationship as being central to all nursing care and essential in nursing practice. Answer the following questions:
    • Peplaus Phases: Describe all the phases of the Nurse-Patient relationship as defined by Peplau.
    • Practice Example: Think of a current practice example to align with Peplaus phases and explain.
    • Part two: Provide a discussion of Orems Self-Care Deficit Theory. Identify and explain the three related parts. Identify a current nursing practice example where Orems theory would be relevant. Use at least one evidence-based research article to support your practice example.
  • class activity

    Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): assignment.docx

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