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  • Title: Understanding Historical Consciousness: A Textual Analysis of Gaddis’ Metaphors and Principles

    Craft a Textual-analysis based paper that addresses the following two questions: 
    1) What is historical consciousness and how do its principles best translate into narrative?
    2) how are such narratives shaped by time and space, structure and process? 
    In your response, you may want to draw from Gaddis’ use of metaphors related to landscape, visual representation, and/or Cartography.
    Remember you goal is to illuminate and clarify Gaddis’ claims across the three chapters, and NOT TO PROVIDE YOUR OWN OPINIONS OF THEM. 
    Requirements: 
    You are required to work closely and thoroughly with material from all three chapters:
    Chapter One: “The Landscape Of History”
    Chapter Two: “Time and Space”
    Chapter Three: “Structure and Process”
    Be sure not only to quote directly from each chapter, but to additionally provide both context and analysis of the passages you’re working with. 
    Organization: 
    A successful paper will not only address the two questions from the prompt, but will do so in a well-framed, clearly organized response.
    Do not attempt to write a “five-paragraph theme” essay. Instead, your particular mode of explanation should determine your paper’s best structure.
    Working with the text text strictly according to chronologically is unlikely to be the best strategy. 
    Further guidelines: 
    Always discuss, analyze, and make arguments in the present tense. In terms of writing style, aim for clarity, brevity, and depth.
    Cite each quoted passage from Gaddis’ book by including the page number, as in the following example: “The historian has got to strike a balance, and that means recognizing a trade-off between literal and abstract representation.”
    Do not draw from any outside examples or refer to any outside texts. I any of the ideas or language are determined to come from and outside source, this will be considered plagiarism.

  • “Exploring the Human Experience Through Short Stories”

    Stories are:
    Story for an hour
    Rose for emily
    On the road
    Miss brill
    A soldier home
    A&P
    To build a fire
    A man who was almost a man

  • Title: Exploring Consequentialist Ethical Theories: A Comparative Analysis of Egoism and Utilitarianism

    Journal on Consequentialist Ethical theory
    1. Explain what is Consequentialist ethical theory? Why is this also called Teleological Ethics? What is the central basis for right or wrong in this theory? (WATCH: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a1dcsaWTxCU)
    2. Compare Ethical egoism and Utilitarianism as consequentialist ethical theories?
    3. Explain the human grounding or foundation of Ethical egoism in the perspective of Thomas Hobbes?
    4. Compare Thomas Hobbes and Ayn Rand’s solution to handling the conflict of self-interest in society? Which do you think is the most useful solution in solving conflicts? (WATCH: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=odHfSRC9JWo)
    5. Explain Ayn Rand’s concept of rationality as a solution to resolving conflicts of interests including the individual’s obligations to himself and others? (WATCH: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uBVM1_4JI3Y)
    6. Explain the human grounding or foundation of utilitarian ethical theory in the perspective of Jeremy Bentham and his principle of utility?
    7. Discuss the principle of utility in utilitarianism? Why is this theory “hedonistic” theory?
    8. Describe the difference between ACT UTILITARIANISM and RULE UTILITARIANISM? Describe which of the kinds that can provide short term and long term solution in providing the satisfaction of interest of society? Show examples in your explanation. (WATCH: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0zrsG6slIg)
    9. Show similarity and differences in Jeremy Bentham utilitarianism and John stuart Mill’s utilitarianism.
    10. Explain one critique to Ethical egoism and one critique to utilitarianism.

  • “The Evolution of Surgical Technologists and Sepsis Care: Advancements in Sterile Technique and Complex Surgeries in the Last Decade”

    explanation of the transformation of sugical technologists and sepsis care comparing the last decade and the advancements made. connecting advancemnts in sterile technique and safer more complex surgeries.  in APA 7th edition  

  • “Preparing Jack & Lily’s 2019 Form 1040 and Calculating Their Tax Liability”

    Use the information below to
    prepare Jack & Lily’s 2019 Form 1040 and compute their tax liability.
    Be sure to complete
    all sections and answer all questions provided in the template. I have attached the template and the tax information for Jack and Lily

  • Title: Navigating the Complexities of Business Leadership: Three Essays on the Challenges and Opportunities Ahead Essay 1: The Ever-Changing Landscape of Business Leadership As the world becomes increasingly interconnected and technology advances at a rapid pace, the

    Write 3 essays with the topics below including 300-500 words in each essay for howard university honors program …
    1) What is the biggest challenge facing the CEO of today?*
    2) What is the role of ethics in business?*
    3)MWhat is the next innovation emerging in today’s business environment, why is it significant and how should you be prepared to respond?

  • “Empowering Communities through Education and Support: A Narrative of Grant Deliverables” From February 15, 2024 to May 31, 2024, our organization has made significant progress in fulfilling the deliverables outlined in our grant

    Please provide a narrative for the deliverables on your grant agreement. Your narrative should describe your progress/activities completed from February 15, 2024 to May 31, 2024.
    1. Host three (3) community educational events that includes information about the mental and physical health impacts of tobacco/vape use and its association with chronic disease.
    • Please discuss successes
    • Please discuss any challenges to program implementation… getting product as in the lung display.
    • Do you see opportunities to alter your work plan to improve outcomes? Yes please provide some great ways. If yes, please explain.
    • Please highlight a success story from your project that can be shared… Please be creative with this section 2. Support thirty (30) individuals to enroll in and complete an evidence-based chronic disease prevention/ management program: Living Well Chronic Disease Self-Management Program and Living Well Diabetes Self-Management Program
    • Please discuss successes
    • Please discuss any challenges to program implementation
    • Do you see opportunities to alter your work plan to improve outcomes? YES …Please provide some great waysIf yes, please explain.
    • Please highlight a success story from your project that can be shared–Please be creative with this section
    Please be sure to answer all question and provide details using the following information Site 1 AARC: Health Fair: 32 signed up over 100 attended Site 2: Leona Dorsey: ? signed up over ? attended Site 3: Franklin Square Middle School : ? signed up Please use all the details from from the final report and add all of the missing details please don’t hesitate to research the locations.

  • “Revised Note Corrections”

    please just fix the note ones also do not change the whole paray only fix the thing that my teacher noted on it. Also, whatever you fixed please highlighted.

  • Creating a Vision for the Future of Local Journalism Creating a Vision for the Future: Transforming Local Journalism Title: “Reviving a Community Newspaper: The Vision and Challenges of Nick Gibbons”

    Northouse, P. (2020) Introduction to Leadership: Concepts and Practice. Fifth edition. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications 
    NOTE: Read Chapter 7 before posting to this forum. Submit your answer by 11:50 pm on due date.
    Your post should be no less than one page (as measured by Microsoft Word, Times New Roman, 12 point font.) You must answer all questions. When submitting a word document, you must provide a proper heading including your name, date, course title (LHRD 3723), and assignment.
    THIS IS A GRADED ACTIVITY.
    You will be graded on the following criteria:
    Proper page heading including your name, date, course title (LHRD 3723), and assignment.
    Proper use of sentence structure, grammar and punctuation 
    Accuracy of the answer provided
    Page count requirement
    Creating a Vision
    Nick Gibbons was described by his classmates at Columbia University’s prestigious School of Journalism as a “hard-core newshound with ink running in his blood.” After working as a beat reporter for 10 years, Nick became city editor of a newspaper in a midsized Midwest town of about 100,000, overseeing a large staff of local reporters and writers.
    So when the president of the large media group that owned his newspaper asked Nick to come to its headquarters for a meeting, he was excited. Until he heard what was said. The company was going to stop printing daily newspapers, instead publishing digital editions. Nick’s newspaper would only be printed three days a week; the other days the news would be delivered in an electronic edition. As a result, 75% of the newspaper’s workforce would lose their jobs. As the president witnessed Nick’s shock and dismay, he said, “Nick, we think you are the only editor at your newspaper that can make this happen.”
    On the three-hour drive home, Nick realized that change at the newspaper was inevitable. Newspapers had been losing subscribers and revenue for a decade as readers turned to the Internet to get their news. Digital versions of newspapers were cheaper to produce and deliver. Although he did not like the idea of going digital, Nick knew in his heart that he still believed strongly in the importance of reporting the news and informing the community, no matter the format.
    To succeed in taking the newspaper to a digital format, Nick was going to have to change an entrenched culture and belief system about newspapers, not only within his staff but among the public as well. To do this, he had to start from the ground up, creating something entirely new. This would require bringing aboard people who were energized about the future and not mourning the past.
    His plan employed a three-prong approach. First, he informed the entire newspaper staff that they would lose their current jobs in three months and they would have to reapply for new jobs within the newspaper. The first required qualification was a willingness to “forge the future for local journalism and make a contribution to this movement.” If you can’t let go of the past, he told his coworkers, then you can’t move forward. In the end, almost 80% of the new positions were filled by former staffers whom Nick believed to be the “best and brightest” people the newspaper had.
    Second, Nick moved the company’s offices out of the building it had been in for 120 years to a smaller, very public space on the first floor of a downtown building. The offices were located on a corner completely sided by windows, the inner workings of the newspaper on display to passersby. Nick wanted the newspaper’s operations to be very visible so that it didn’t seem like it had just “disappeared.”
    Nick’s third approach was what he called a “high forgiveness factor.” What they were creating was new and untried, and he knew there would be plenty of missteps along the way. He stressed to his new staffers that he didn’t expect perfection, just dedication and determination. For example, one of those missteps was the elimination of the newspaper’s exhaustive list of local events, which resulted in a huge community outcry. To correct this, staffers determined they could satisfy the community’s frustrations by creating a dedicated website for a local events calendar with event organizers submitting the information electronically. A staff member would oversee college interns in editing the submissions and updating the website.
    When the newspaper announced its change to a digital format, the reaction was harsh: Readers canceled subscriptions, and advertisers dropped away like flies. It’s been four years since the change, and the newspaper is slowly gaining back readers and experiencing more visits to its website. The sales staff is starting to be successful teaching advertisers how to create digital ads that can reach the right audiences by using behavioral targeting and social media.
    QUESTIONS
    What is Nick Gibbons’ vision in this case study? How is it similar to or different from the vision of the owners of the paper? Discuss the unique challenges a leader faces when required to implement a vision of his or her superiors.
    Why do you think Nick wanted to open the workings of the paper up to the public? How is this related to his vision?
    Visions usually require changing people’s values. What desired changes in values are highlighted by this case study?
    How well did Nick Gibbons articulate his vision for the paper? If you were in Nick’s shoes, how would you articulate your vision in this case?

  • “Identifying and Addressing Internal Validity Issues in a Factorial Design Study”

    RUBRIC
    Correctly identifies a study with an internal validity issue
    2.5 pts
    Full Marks
    0 pts
    No Marks
    2.5 pts
    Provides way to handle the internal validity issue
    2.5 pts
    Full Marks
    0 pts
    No Marks
    2.5 pts
    Correctly identifies the other study with an internal validity issue
    2.5 pts
    Full Marks
    0 pts
    No Marks
    2.5 pts
    Provides way to handle second internal validity issue
    2.5 pts
    Full Marks
    0 pts
    No Marks
    2.5 pts
    Identifies Factorial Design Scenario 1
    1 pts
    Full Marks
    0 pts
    No Marks
    1 pts
    Lists two research questions
    2 pts
    Full Marks
    0 pts
    No Marks
    2 pts
    Interprets 3 Graphs
    3 pts
    Full Marks
    0 pts
    No Marks
    3 pts
    Scenario 2 Design Notation
    1 pts
    Full Marks
    0 pts
    No Marks
    1 pts
    Interprets 2 Graphs