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  • 12 slides on homeless Veteran epidemic in U.S.

    Instructions are below, please do 12 slides talking about the veteran homeless epidemic in the U.S. e.g. how and why they end up there after doing their service and why it is hard to help some of them and are we doing enough to help them? 12 slides plus a intro and reference page. Thanks if you can make them look nice, I will do a voice over myself at the end, I just need the slides.

    PowerPoint Presentation: Part 1 (250) points : Develop a video presentation with slides plus audio detailing the unique experiences and challenges of a particular military or veteran sub-population associate with your placement. The presentation should include:

    • A demographic description of the population, including relevant information regarding age, gender, and sexual orientation, as applicable
    • A detailed discussion of this groups history within the Armed Forces
    • A detailed discussion of unique experiences and challenges experienced by this population, including perceptions of relative power, oppression, or stigma experienced within the military system
    • Presentations should include approximately 12-20 slides, not counting title slide and references. The presentation may be uploaded in PowerPoint or Mp4 format. Be sure to include audio You may include a video of yourself, if desired.
  • 12 slides on homeless Veteran epidemic in U.S.

    Instructions are below, please do 12 slides talking about the veteran homeless epidemic in the U.S. e.g. how and why they end up there after doing their service and why it is hard to help some of them and are we doing enough to help them? 12 slides plus a intro and reference page. Thanks if you can make them look nice, I will do a voice over myself at the end, I just need the slides.

    PowerPoint Presentation: Part 1 (250) points : Develop a video presentation with slides plus audio detailing the unique experiences and challenges of a particular military or veteran sub-population associate with your placement. The presentation should include:

    • A demographic description of the population, including relevant information regarding age, gender, and sexual orientation, as applicable
    • A detailed discussion of this groups history within the Armed Forces
    • A detailed discussion of unique experiences and challenges experienced by this population, including perceptions of relative power, oppression, or stigma experienced within the military system
    • Presentations should include approximately 12-20 slides, not counting title slide and references. The presentation may be uploaded in PowerPoint or Mp4 format. Be sure to include audio You may include a video of yourself, if desired.
  • 12 slides on homeless Veteran epidemic in U.S.

    Instructions are below, please do 12 slides talking about the veteran homeless epidemic in the U.S. e.g. how and why they end up there after doing their service and why it is hard to help some of them and are we doing enough to help them? 12 slides plus a intro and reference page. Thanks if you can make them look nice, I will do a voice over myself at the end, I just need the slides.

    PowerPoint Presentation: Part 1 (250) points : Develop a video presentation with slides plus audio detailing the unique experiences and challenges of a particular military or veteran sub-population associate with your placement. The presentation should include:

    • A demographic description of the population, including relevant information regarding age, gender, and sexual orientation, as applicable
    • A detailed discussion of this groups history within the Armed Forces
    • A detailed discussion of unique experiences and challenges experienced by this population, including perceptions of relative power, oppression, or stigma experienced within the military system
    • Presentations should include approximately 12-20 slides, not counting title slide and references. The presentation may be uploaded in PowerPoint or Mp4 format. Be sure to include audio You may include a video of yourself, if desired.
  • Global Leadership: Week 3 How to Improve

    Discussion Overview

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    This week we discuss curiosity in its many different forms to improve this important cultural agility competency. We have covered different types of curiosity, examined why they may benefit your leadership capabilities, and discussed tactics to improve your curiosity skills (Ch 3 in the textbook). We also discussed the changing role of the office (Fayard, Weeks, & Khan, 2021) as well as some hot-off-the-press findings on how interruptions and unexpected situations can improve employee creativity (Harrell, 2023). Each reading and related video material provided insights into specific strategies, tactics, and actions to become a more curious leader in a global setting.

    Questions & Instructions

    1. Can you think of a situation where your curiosity (or the curiosity of another person) improved your decision-making or the performance of your team?
    2. Reflecting on the readings and videos, which specific actions, tactics, or strategies do you find effective in cultivating curiosity as a leadership competency?

    Examples:

    Example 1.

    1. Can you think of a situation where your curiosity (or the curiosity of another person) improved your decision-making or the performance of your team?

    During a university marketing class, my group worked on a campaign for a new product. Our initial idea followed a safe and familiar approach, similar to existing campaigns we had seen before. One group member, however, kept asking simple but disruptive What if? questions, such as What if we targeted a different demographic than the one suggested? and What if the products strongest appeal wasnt its main feature, but its environmental impact?.

    Those questions pushed us to step outside our assumptions. We ended up researching nontraditional data sources and talking to students outside our major to better understand how sustainability influenced purchasing decisions. This shift led us to reposition the product around its environmental value rather than its technical features. That curiosity changed the direction of our project, made the campaign more original, and ultimately improved our teams decision-making and overall performance, which was reflected in a stronger final presentation and a higher grade.

    2. Reflecting on the readings and videos, which specific actions, tactics, or strategies do you find effective in cultivating curiosity as a leadership competency?

    Ask More and Better Questions: As emphasized in the lecture, maybe moving from closed questions to open-ended, exploratory onessuch as How might we? or What are we assuming here? – will encourage deeper inquiry and challenges existing mental models.

    Reframe Interruptions as Opportunities: Drawing from Harrells research, leaders can view unexpected interruptions not as disruptions, but as potential sources of creative insight. By pausing to explore the context of the interruption, they may uncover information or perspectives that would otherwise be overlooked.

    Practice Deliberate Curiosity Daily: Inspired by Einsteins quote in the textbook, one simple tactic is to dedicate a small portion of each day to actively question or explore a mystery within your work or team dynamics. This habit fosters continuous learning and inquiry.

    Seek Diverse Perspectives Intentionally: In global leadership, proactively engaging team members from different backgrounds or functions expands the range of ideas and challenges groupthink. Deliberate inclusion of diverse viewpoints strengthens decision-making and encourages innovation.

    Examples 2.

    Question 1: Can you think of a situation where your curiosity (or the curiosity of another person) improved your decision-making or the performance of your team?
    Answer:
    In my role as an audit and compliance manager, I once led an Access Review where repeated control gaps were being flagged in the IT Dept. At first, the pattern appeared to be straightforward, and my approach was to tighten up the controls and escalate the findings. Instead of approaching it directly, I chose to approach the situation with curiosity and asked the local Systems Department of the IT Team to walk me through how the controls actually operated, rather than how they were getting documented.
    After having these conversations with the systems team lead, I learnt that the department operated in a high-interruption environment with ad hoc requests from multiple stakeholders, which made the entire situation of adhering to standard procedures very difficult. I also saw that team members at the junior level were hesitant to push back and ask clarifying questions when certain processes were unclear. With curiosity, I gained a deeper understanding of cultural and operational factors and how the compliance process worked, rather than directly taking actions with assumptions.
    This curiosity led me to be more effective in my decision-making ability. Rather than imposing strict controls that are likely to fail again, I redesigned the process that fits better with the systems team environment and clarified escalation paths and provided guidance that would help employees push back on those requests when needed. As a result of this, the compliance improved and the audit findings and gaps decreased and the relationship between audit functions and systems team became more collaborative. As mentioned by the author Caliguri in Chapter 3, that curiosity helps leaders expand their understanding of cultural differences and also in turn help them to make informed decisions in global and diversified organizations.

    Question 2: Reflecting on the readings and videos, which specific actions, tactics, or strategies are effective in cultivating curiosity as a leadership competency?
    Answer:
    Based on the readings and textbook, curiosity usually emerge as an intentional leadership practice that helps leaders to expand their understanding on cultural differences. As mentioned by the author Caliguri in chapter 3, if you want to expand your understanding of cultural differences, you need to slow down your interpretation and inquire about the situation; mainly by asking open ended questions, not being biased on judgements, and seeking alternative explanations. This will help leaders recognize how cultures shapes the behavior and expectations.
    Also mentioned in the article by Fayard, Weeks, and Khan (2021) that leaders can often cultivate curiosity by valuing informal interactions in physical or virtual unorganized spaces. Informal conversations have exchanges that often reveal how people think, work or how they interpret the situations differently. Leaders who are curious can gain great valuable insights from these conversations than having formal meetings.
    In the article by Harrell (2023), the author highlights that during interactions, an interruption or an unexpected situation can enhance creativity amongst leaders. It is more of a form of creativity rather than inefficiency. He suggests that disruptions should be treated as opportunities for leaders to openness and adaptability. By following these norms, the leaders will gain deeper understanding on how different employees experience the work environment in culturally diverse or global teams.

    Example 3:

    One situation where my curiosity improved the performance of my team was when I began training in my current role. To set the scene, the department I was hired into had not hired anyone new if a very long time. They were not prepared with proper training materials, nor was I assigned to sit with anyone in particular to learn my role. Only a couple of weeks in, I found myself doing very minimal tasks on my own because the workload was overwhelming, requiring the attention of everyone in the department. The minimal tasks I was working got boring very quickly and I became curious to know more about the documents I was reviewing and how it related to what I’d eventually be doing on a daily basis. I would open up document packets and just go through them, looking over the way they looked, what information was on them, relating them back to the information in the system, and taking notes in the process. I’d ask my leadership questions on things I did not understand, and would even reach out to people in other areas of the department that I knew had a hand in the process to get more clarity on the bigger picture of our work. I eventually was directed to some internal websites and material that provided more information to research and use as a guide. Throughout the following weeks, I continued my process until I was finally doing the work I was hired to do. By this point, I had a general understanding of what my purpose in the department was, how to execute tasks successfully, and reliable contacts I could communicate with when I got stuck. This led to me being able to work independently very quickly, and I was able to assist my peers in clearing the overwhelming workload in just a couple months. My curiosity and action helped our team become more efficient and catch up on the workload much quicker than leadership originally anticipated.

    2. In chapter three of Build Your Cultural Agility, Caligiuri discusses ways to build your confidence, which I believe is a critical part of cultivating curiosity as a leadership competency. I find this approach to be effective because everything we do and seek comes from an internal place that we must understand first before our actions can follow. While external behaviors can be adjusted a bit more quickly, internal mindsets take much more time and practice to change because the way we think is typically a result of conditioning and life experiences. To build confidence, Caligiuri emphasizes limiting negative self-talk and adopting a growth mindset. The saying “the only thing holding me back is me” applies here as self-doubt can prevent one from asking questions, seeking new perspectives, or embracing unfamiliar situations. These two strategies are the most important, yet most difficult, to master when fostering curiosity but, when practiced intentionally, it can strengthen your overall cultural agility.

    Requirements: Two Paragraphs

  • Critical literary analysis

    -Obsession with Perfection and Beauty Standards ENG 1123 Dr. H.D. Johnson Fall 2025 2nd Miniterm Paper 1: Critical Literary Analysis Required Length: 800-1000 words (excluding the Works Cited page) Required Sources: 3 (The selected story and two secondary critical sources). Note: DO NOT EXCEED two secondary critical sources. Additionally, you cannot use any secondary sources I have assigned as readings. Style: MLA, 9th ed. (MLA 9th ed. should be used for all aspects of the paper, including general format, source borrowings, and the Works Cited page. Font should be set to Times New Roman, 12 pt. The text should be double-spaced throughout the document.) Due Date: 11/9/25 Prompt: Using two secondary critical sources, write an essay that addresses a significant social topic explored in one (not multiple) of the short stories assigned this semester (This includes the “optional” short story readings). NOTE: A “secondary critical source” is an essay about the specific story or a specific theme in literature. Such sources are written by an expert and are published in peer-reviewed journals. A secondary critical source is not a scientific paper written about the issue. Short Stories and Suggested Social Issues “The Minister’s Black Veil” Judgment and Hypocrisy Mental Health and Isolation Community Dynamics Gossip, Innuendo, and Reputation Destruction “The Birth-Mark” Obsession with Perfection and Beauty Standards Ethics of Scientific Experimentation Relationship Dynamics Social/Gendered Expectations of a Woman’s Appearance “The Yellow Wallpaper” Traditional Gender Roles Repression and Personal Freedom Mental Health Social/Gendered Attitudes Toward Healthcare “The Story of an Hour” Marital Expectations Traditional Gender Roles Repression and Personal Freedom Identity *Note: This is by no means an exhaustive list, and you a free to formulate your own consideration of a pertinent social issue emergent in one of the stories. Additional Resources:
  • Critical literary analysis

    -Obsession with Perfection and Beauty Standards ENG 1123 Dr. H.D. Johnson Fall 2025 2nd Miniterm Paper 1: Critical Literary Analysis Required Length: 800-1000 words (excluding the Works Cited page) Required Sources: 3 (The selected story and two secondary critical sources). Note: DO NOT EXCEED two secondary critical sources. Additionally, you cannot use any secondary sources I have assigned as readings. Style: MLA, 9th ed. (MLA 9th ed. should be used for all aspects of the paper, including general format, source borrowings, and the Works Cited page. Font should be set to Times New Roman, 12 pt. The text should be double-spaced throughout the document.) Due Date: 11/9/25 Prompt: Using two secondary critical sources, write an essay that addresses a significant social topic explored in one (not multiple) of the short stories assigned this semester (This includes the “optional” short story readings). NOTE: A “secondary critical source” is an essay about the specific story or a specific theme in literature. Such sources are written by an expert and are published in peer-reviewed journals. A secondary critical source is not a scientific paper written about the issue. Short Stories and Suggested Social Issues “The Minister’s Black Veil” Judgment and Hypocrisy Mental Health and Isolation Community Dynamics Gossip, Innuendo, and Reputation Destruction “The Birth-Mark” Obsession with Perfection and Beauty Standards Ethics of Scientific Experimentation Relationship Dynamics Social/Gendered Expectations of a Woman’s Appearance “The Yellow Wallpaper” Traditional Gender Roles Repression and Personal Freedom Mental Health Social/Gendered Attitudes Toward Healthcare “The Story of an Hour” Marital Expectations Traditional Gender Roles Repression and Personal Freedom Identity *Note: This is by no means an exhaustive list, and you a free to formulate your own consideration of a pertinent social issue emergent in one of the stories. Additional Resources:
  • English Question

    Purpose

    The purpose of this assignment is to get you thinking critically about how your past experiences with literacy and language impact your current values, beliefs, attitudes, and practices around literacy and language. It is based on the threshold concept that Writing is impacted by identities and prior experiences.

    Often, to move forward with writing, we need to understand better whats been impacting us. For this assignment, we aim to look to the past to understand the present and make way for the future, as the goal of ENC 1101 is to prepare you for future writing. We will be doing so by using concepts of writing studies scholars to re-see our history through one or more of the following threshold concepts:

    • Writing is impacted by identities and prior experiences.
    • Writing is a process and all writers have more to learn;
    • Good writing is contextual
    • People collaborate to get things done in writing [

    Task

    In this assignment, you will describe a few key moments of your own literacy history and analyze your experiences using two or more of the literacy/language concepts covered in our readings. You will use this analysis to make a specific, arguable, and thematic claim that answers the question HOW have your PAST literacy experiences impacted your PRESENT reading and writing values, beliefs, attitudes, and practices?

    For this essay, I am asking you to do four things:

    1. Describe three or four important literacy events from your past or recent present; these moments should help illustrate a common theme about who you are as a reader and writer today
    2. Analyze your literacy moments using two or more course threshold concepts
    3. Support your analysis by connecting examples and quotes from these course concepts (i.e., the readings, specifically Brandt, Fishman, or the student examples from Stylus) to your descriptions
    4. State your current values, beliefs, attitudes, and practices of reading and writing and explain how the literacy events youve described above have shaped your current reading and writing identity

    Your main claim or thesis statement should be an answer to this question HOW have your PAST literacy experiences impacted your PRESENT reading and writing values, beliefs, attitudes, and practices? Use your descriptions of literacy events and analysis/ connections to course concepts to support this claim.

    For your examples from your own experiences, you might choose:

    • a specific event that was somehow important in your development as a writer and reader
    • a series of related events
    • or a phase or period of your life in which certain people, places, or things figured prominently.

    Critically, you should connect these past experiences to concepts of literacy and threshold concepts by using textual support our readings this semester. Consult the examples from Stylus for good ways to blend narrative and academic writing.

    Format and other Information

    • 4 full pages minimum (though it can be longer), not including Works Cited or any appendices you may include, 12-point Times New Roman font, double spaced, 1-inch margins, typed, doc or docx and mention NSYNC at least once in the essay.
    • Name and page number in upper-right header; have an appropriate title.
    • Final essay must follow MLA or APA format

    Criteria

    Rubric for Literacy Narrative
    Criteria Claim & So What Literacy Examples Textual Support Rhetorical Strategies Additional Requirements (Citing, Formatting, Mechanics)
    “A” Level-Exceeds Expectations
    “B” level-Meets Expectations; Good
    “C” level- Meets Expectations; fair
    D level Does not meet expectations; needs improvement
    “F” level-Does not meet expectations

    Rubric

    Literacy Narrative (1)

    Literacy Narrative (1)

    Criteria Ratings Pts

    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeTheme and Claim

    30 ptsFull MarksShows keen insight and a clear thesis that argues a specific claim. All aspects of the paper work together to move from introduction, to evidence, to conclusion, with theme kept at the forefront.20 ptsAbove AverageExcels in some areas but deficient in others; manages to almost perfectly complete the assignment, but has minor drawbacks.

    15 ptsMet ExpectationsCompletes the assignment, but does little else to inspire critical thought or consideration of claim.0 ptsNo MarksFails to meet specific criteria of the assignment.

    30 pts

    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeStrategic Storytelling

    30 ptsFull MarksStory is cohesive and does not dwell too long on meaningless aspects. Details are descriptive and meaningful, and real thought is put into organization and arrangement of details to tie in to overall claim of the paper.20 ptsAbove AverageExcels in telling a clear story, but may be deficient in areas such as organization, conclusion, or other areas that prevent it from achieving full marks.

    10 ptsBelow ExpectationsFails to meet the basic requirements; does not relate a coherent story, or fails to tie said story to course concepts in a meaningful way0 ptsNo MarksFails to complete the assignment even partially.

    30 pts

    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeTextual Support

    20 ptsFull MarksMakes use of at least 2 texts from the course in a meaningful way, blending them with the story and thesis.10 ptsMet ExpectationsUses 2 sources, but does not perhaps excel in their use. Sources may just be in the paper but not productive, or the paper may lack meaningful integration, or used at least 1 source very well, but forgot to use 2.

    0 ptsNo Marks

    20 pts

    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeCiting/Formatting

    20 ptsFull MarksPaper has flawless APA/MLA, or at least contains errors so small they are not worth noting. Must have proper paper formatting, in-text citations, and a discrete Works Cited or Reference page with correct citation formatting.10 ptsMet ExpectationsShows basic understanding of MLA/APA requirements, but contains numerous errors that prevent full marks. Common issues include paper formatting, presentation, spacing of paragraphs, lack of Works Cited/References, or improper formatting of citations.

    0 ptsNo Marks

    20 pts

    Requirements:

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    Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): INSTRUCTIONS (40).pdf

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  • Mini Vignette

    Kayla Lopez is the new student at Smiley Elementary School. The office staff has placed her in your class. They have notified you that because of her last name, she might be an ELL and that she is not to be tested for Gifted and Talented if she speaks with an accent. Describe how you would address your colleagues. Please make sure that your arguments/perspectives are based on legal statues that you have read about.
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    Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): Poster presentation instructions.pdf, Sample of what it should look like.pdf, Research_Proposal-Sample (1) (2) (1).pdf

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