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  • Title: Evaluating Client Success in a Social Services Agency: Finding the Ethical Balance In order to accurately and ethically represent “success” in the past two years for this agency, it is important to consider multiple factors and perspectives. While

    Imagine this scenario: your agency is being evaluated by a governing body. “Client success” is one key element being evaluated by the governing body. In your agency, out of 200 clients seen in the last two years, 85 (or 42.5%) dropped out within the first five weeks of participation. Of the remaining 115 clients, only 35% (40 clients) completed all of their goals, and 65% (75 clients) only completed some of their goals.
    In your initial post, address the following questions: What is the most accurate and ethical representation of “success” over the past two years for this agency to report to the governing body? Support your reasoning with references.
    In your response to your classmates, take the opposite viewpoint that they had, and discuss it, supporting your view with references.

  • Title: Evaluating Solutions for a Case Study Using Course Knowledge

    In this activity, you will be asked to read a case study, conduct your own research, and then select a probable solution for the case study based on what you have learned in this course so far. The purpose of this exercise is to use the information you’ve learned in this course to evaluate a scenario and determine a best case solution based on the selections given.
    Read through the case study and the accompanying resources. 
    Reflect on what you’ve learned in the course and how the information applies to the scenario. 
    Select which solution you think is best for the given scenario. 
    a. Which option you selected (Option B)
    b. A brief statement as to why you selected that option
    c. An outside source that supports your conclusion; this can be a reference to a book, website, journal article, etc.

  • Improving Readability and Clarity: Design Strategies for Non-Specialist Audiences What Causes Sleep? (Revised) Headings: – Introduction – The Role of Circadian Rhythms – The Importance of Sleep-Wake Home “The Importance of Sleep for Growth, Development, and Overall Health” Title: The Role of Sleep in Promoting Growth and Repair in Children and Teens

    This week we’ve explored how professional and technical writers can use design, layout, and typography strategies to make documents easy to read and useful for their audience. For this week’s Concept Worksheet, you’ll apply these strategies to an existing text with the end goal of making it more readable, clear, and useful for a non-specialist audience. This worksheet is similar to the Audience Adaptation Assignment you completed in Week 3, but the focus in that assignment was on adapting the language for non-specialists. The focus here is entirely on strategies for layout, design, formatting, and typography. Using the understanding you’ve gained from Chapters 4.3-4.5 of our textbook, apply three or more of the following strategies to the text below: Headings Lists Figures Notices Tables Highlighting Margins, indentation, and alignment Fonts and color Last, write an explanation of at least 200 words explaining what changes you made to the text and how you think those changes might benefit a non-specialist audience. Your document should be 12pt, Times New Roman font, 1-inch margins, and double spaced.
    What Causes Sleep? There are two internal biological mechanisms that work together to regulate wakefulness and sleep referred to as circadian rhythms and sleep-wake homeostasis. Circadian rhythms direct a wide variety of body functions including wakefulness, core temperature, metabolism, and the release of hormones. They control the timing of sleep, causing a person to feel sleepy at night and creating a tendency to wake in the morning without an alarm. Circadian rhythms are based roughly on a 24-hour clock and use environmental cues, such as light and temperature to determine the time of day. Sleep-wake homeostasis keeps track of a person’s need for sleep. A pressure to sleep builds with every hour that a person is awake, reaching a peak in the evening when most people fall asleep. The homeostatic sleep drive also regulates sleep intensity, causing a person to sleep longer and more deeply after a period of sleep deprivation. Adenosine is linked to this drive for sleep. While awake, the level of adenosine in the brain continues to rise, with increased levels signaling a shift toward sleep. While sleeping, the body breaks down adenosine. When it gets dark, the body also releases a hormone called melatonin. Melatonin signals the body that it’s time to prepare for sleep and creates a feeling of drowsiness. The amount of melatonin in the bloodstream peaks as the evening wears on. A third hormone, cortisol, is released in the early morning hours and naturally prepares the body to wake up. Factors that influence a person’s sleep and wakefulness include medical conditions, medications, stress, sleep environment, and foods and fluids consumed, but the greatest influence is exposure to light. Specialized cells in the retina process light and provide messages to the brain to align the body clock with periods of day or night. Exposure to bright artificial light in the late evening can disrupt this process, making it hard to fall asleep. Examples of bright artificial light include the light from a TV screen, computer, or smartphone. Exposure to light can also make it difficult to return to sleep after being awakened. Night shift workers often have trouble falling asleep when they go to bed and may have trouble staying awake at work because their natural circadian rhythm and sleep-wake cycle are disrupted. Jet lag also disrupts circadian rhythms. When flying to a different time zone, a mismatch is created between a person’s internal clock and the actual time of day. The rhythm and timing of the body clock change with age. For example, teenagers fall asleep later at night than younger children and adults because melatonin is released and peaks later in the 24-hour cycle for teens. As a result, it’s natural for many teens to prefer later bedtimes at night and sleep later in the morning than adults. Individuals also need more sleep early in life, when they’re growing and developing. For example, newborns may sleep more than 16 hours a day, and preschool-aged children need to take naps. Young children tend to sleep more in the early evening, whereas older adults tend to go to bed earlier and wake up earlier. Sleep Phases and Stages. When sleeping, individuals cycle through two phases of sleep: rapid eye movement (REM) and non-REM sleep. A full sleep cycle takes 80 to 100 minutes to complete, and most people typically cycle through four to six cycles per night. It is common to wake up briefly between cycles. Restoration takes place mostly during slow wave, non-REM sleep, during which the body’s temperature, heart rate, and brain oxygen consumption decrease. Brain activity decreases, so this stage is also referred to as slow-wave sleep and is observed during sleep studies. Non-REM sleep has these three stages:
    Stage 1: The transition between wakefulness and sleep. Stage 2: The initiation of the sleep phase. Stage 3: The deep sleep or slow-wave sleep stage is based on a pattern that appears during measurements of brain activity. Individuals spend the most amount of sleep time in this stage during the early part of the night. (Note that the previously considered 4th stage of non-REM sleep is now included within Stage 3). During REM sleep, a person’s heart rate and respiratory rate increase. Eyes twitch as they rapidly move back and forth, and the brain is active. Brain activity measured during REM sleep is similar to activity during waking hours. Dreaming occurs during REM sleep, and muscles normally become limp to prevent acting out one’s dreams. People typically experience more REM sleep as the night progresses. However, hot and cold environments can affect a person’s REM sleep because the body does not regulate temperature well during REM sleep. The patterns and types of sleep change as people mature. For example, newborns spend more time in REM sleep. The amount of slow-wave sleep peaks in early childhood and then drops sharply in the teenage years. Slow-wave sleep continues to decrease through adulthood, and older people may not have any slow-wave sleep at all. Why Is sleep important? Sleep plays a vital role in good health and well-being. Getting enough quality sleep at the right times protects mental health and physical health. Lack of sleep affects daytime performance, quality of life, and safety. The way a person feels while awake depends on what happens while they are sleeping. During sleep, the body is working to support healthy brain function and maintain physical health. In children and teens, sleep also helps support growth and development. Healthy Brain Function and Emotional Well-Being. Sleep helps the brain work properly. While sleeping, the brain is forming new pathways to help a person learn and remember information. Studies show that a good night’s sleep improves learning and problem-solving skills. Sleep also helps a person pay attention, make decisions, and be creative. Conversely, sleep deficiency alters activity in some parts of the brain, causing difficulty in making decisions, solving problems, controlling emotions and behavior, and coping with change. Sleep deficiency has also been linked to depression, suicide, and risk-taking behavior. Physical Health. Sleep also plays an important role in physical health. For example, sleep is involved in healing and repairing the heart and blood vessels. Ongoing sleep deficiency is linked to an increased risk of heart disease, kidney disease, high blood pressure, diabetes, and stroke. Sleep helps maintain a healthy balance of the hormones that cause hunger (ghrelin) or a feeling of fullness (leptin). When a person doesn’t get enough sleep, the level of ghrelin increases and the level of leptin decreases, causing a person to feel hungry when sleep deprived. The way the body responds to insulin is also affected, causing increased blood sugar. Sleep supports healthy growth and development. Deep sleep triggers the body to release hormones that promote normal growth in children and teens. These hormones also boost muscle mass and help repair cells and tissues. -Text adapted from Nursing Fundamentals under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which allows remixing, transforming, and building upon the original. Reference Open Resources for Nursing (Open RN). (n.d.). Sleep and Rest, Basic Concepts. In K. Ernstmeyer & E. Christman (Eds.), Nursing Fundamentals. Chippewa Valley Technical College. https://wtcs.pressbooks.pub/nursingfundamentals/

  • Title: Leadership Strengths and Weaknesses Analysis and Improvement Plan

    ***PLEASE SEE ATTACHMENTS FOR DETAILED RUBRIC & INSTRUCTIONS, AS WELL AS SOURCES TO USE***
    A.  Provide a PDF copy of your “Signature Themes” report after completing the CliftonStrengths assessment. (ATTACHED)
    1.  Reflect on the results of the five categorical strengths from your CliftonStrengths assessment, including what those results might indicate about your leadership.
    B.  Evaluate your leadership, using one of the scholarly leadership theories below, by doing the following:
    •   transformational leadership
    •   transactional leadership
    •   situational leadership
    •   participative leadership
    •   servant leadership
    •   behavioral leadership
    •   trait theory of leadership
    1.  Evaluate three strengths of your leadership, using the chosen scholarly leadership theory, including how each strength relates to the theory. Support the evaluation of your strengths with at least one scholarly source.
    2.  Evaluate three weaknesses of your leadership, using the chosen scholarly leadership theory, including how each weakness relates to the theory. Support the evaluation of your weaknesses with at least one scholarly source.
    3.  Recommend three actionable items to improve the effectiveness of your leadership, including how each actionable item relates to the chosen scholarly leadership theory. Support the recommendations of actionable items with at least one scholarly source.
    Note: A scholarly source could be a reputable journal, a published book, or any source from a university faculty member or business leader. Scholarly sources also include any article or book in the online WGU library.
    C.  Discuss two short-term goals that will help improve your leadership. Adhere to the SMART criteria for each goal: specific, measurable, achievable, realistic, and time-bound.
    1.  Discuss at least two specific actions you will take to reach each of the SMART goals discussed in part C.
    D.  Acknowledge sources, using in-text citations and references, for content that is quoted, paraphrased, or summarized.
    E.  Demonstrate professional communication in the content and presentation of your submission.

  • “Revising the Genesis of the Problem: Incorporating Professor’s Feedback”

    Use the attached file “genesis of the problem”  to edit as the comments from professor detail in the file.   Attached is the full draft for context.

  • “Engaging Business Presentation: Taking Your Audience Beyond the Executive Summary”

    Your presentation should be engaging and easy to follow.
    It should take your audience to the next step of understanding beyond your executive summary, but it does not need to cover your plan in the depth of your written business plan. Your slides should introduce your topics and subtopics, but they should not be so wordy that the slides become the presentation.
    If possible and appropriate, include graphics that will engage the viewers and add to their understanding.
    Examples might be pictures of your product, graphs illustrating your timelines, and charts of your financial figures.
    The presentation should be about 10-15 minutes in length.
    To ensure that you meet this requirement, you should practice making your presentation out loud and, preferably, in front of at least one other person.
    Your presentation should include your speaking notes.
    The best way to accomplish this is to add your narrative to the slides, assuming you are using a package like PowerPoint that permits this. If you choose this option, be certain that the audio is incorporated into slides. If it is not, the audio will not accompany the presentation file when you submit it.
    Another way is to make a video of you doing your presentation live. If you choose either of these options, practice your presentation several times so that it sounds lively and is engaging.
    Alternatively, you may add your speaking notes to the notes section of your presentation package or submit a text file with your notes for each slide.
    Review the rubric for this assignment.
    Evaluation and Feedback

  • Title: “The Negative Effects of Sleep Loss and Tracking Your Sleep Patterns”

    Instructions
    Here are the several negative effects of sleep loss:
    Linked with depression
    Linked to aging appearance in skin
    Increases forgetfulness
    Linked to weight gain
    Linked with risk factors for death, such as cardiovascular disease
    Impairs judgment about sleep habits
    Associated with increase in traffic accidents
    Impairs attention
    Kills sex drive.
    Chart your sleep for a week. Keep track of:
    number of hours
    bed time
    waking time
    sleep disturbances (did you wake up? How often? Could you get back to sleep?)
    dreams (good, bad, neutral, or reoccurring)
    What is your average hours of sleep?
    Do you feel that this is enough?
    What changes would you needs to make to improve your sleep?

  • “The Enigma of a Violent Woman: A Critical Analysis of Kilty and Frigon’s Examination of Karla Homolka”

    provide a brief summary and critical analysis of the book The Enigma of a Violent Woman – A Critical Examination of the Case of Karla Homolka by Jennifer Kilty and Sylvie Frigon.  The minimum length for your review is 4 full pages of text – not including your reference page and title page. Note that subtitles, running heads, referencing and spacing between paragraphs does not count as written text. There is no maximum length for your review. If you do not meet the minimum page requirement for your review, you will receive a mark of 0. If you have errors within the first two sentences of your review, you will receive a mark of 0.
    Grading for book review: 20% (15% for content and 5% for style). When writing your book review, you might want to take into consideration the following tips:
    It should present what Kilty and Frigon wanted to accomplish by writing The Enigma of a Violent Woman.  Why did they write the book?  Why should we care about this book?
    – It should give a summary of the main themes/content/ideas presented in the book.
    – It should outline the strengths/weaknesses of the book.  Did anything stand out while you read the book?  
    – Remember to provide support/evidence for all of the claims made in your review from The Enigma of a Violent Woman book.
    – Perhaps you might want to think about how this book potentially contributes to the body of knowledge about serial killers, women who kill and/or the cultural/media fascination with murder/violence.
    – Discuss what you have learned/describe what your take away was from reading this book.
    – Discuss whether Kilty and Frigon accomplished their goal/purpose with writing this book.
    *Note that these tips are not meant to be exhaustive.  You may want to add other key elements to aid in your overall assessment of Kilty and Frigon’s book.*

  • Research Method and Design Selection for Dissertation Study on the Relationship between Mental Illness and Criminal Behavior Title: “Quantitative Research Method and Design Selection for Studying the Relationship between Mental Illness and Criminal Behavior in a Homeland Security Context”

    ***Do not accept this assignment if you cannot commit to completing every assignment for this course.***
    The writer I choose for this assignment will essentially be the same writer for the duration of this course. This course is building the first chapter of my dissertation, and as a result, it needs consistency. Please keep all previous assignments accessible; you will need them to complete the next assignment.
    This assignment is the first chapter of my dissertation. So, each assignment in this course is built on the previous assignment. I will be building the literature review on this topic, which will be the final assignment for this course.
    Degree: Criminal Justice 
    Concentration: Homeland Security
    Dissertation Topic.
    ***The relationship between mental illness and criminal behavior.***
    To what extent does mental illness contribute to criminal behavior? How do various mental health disorders influence the types of crimes committed?
    **moving forward, I will be focusing on quantitative study only**
    Assignment: Begin this activity by reflecting on your revised problem and purpose statements. Select a method and design appropriate for a doctoral dissertation study.  Quantitative studies must demonstrate both internal and external validity (e.g., large, random samples, statistical power, and representativeness). Qualitative studies must demonstrate validity within the context of the specific qualitative design (e.g., credibility, dependability, transferability, trustworthiness). Replication studies are not permitted. Your summary must address all of the following items.
    Access SAGE Research Methods for a refresher on research terminology.
    Continue your work on the template provided in Week 2 of the course and construct a 1 page rationale for your research method and design selection. Be sure to include the following discussions:
    Provide a brief summary of the methodology and the type of data that will be collected. Describe and substantiate the appropriateness of the method to respond to the stated problem and purpose.
    Provide a brief summary of the research design that substantiates its appropriateness to respond to the stated problem and purpose and includes a description of the data collection procedure and type of analysis.
    Note how the proposed method and design accomplish the study goals, why the design is the optimum choice for the proposed research.
    Provide appropriate foundational research method support for the proposed study design; cite seminal scholarly sources.
    Explain the particular data-gathering techniques and data analysis processes.  Sample size of the study population should be identified and must be appropriate and justified based on the nature of the study design. Quantitative analyses must include justified sample size determination. A brief overview of the study design, variables/constructs, instruments, and analyses is provided based on current literature describing why the proposed method and design were chosen to address the study’s research question(s).
    Indicate why the selected research methodology and design are the best choices for the study by explaining how they align with the problem and purpose statements as well as the research questions. 

  • “Advocating for Improved Mental Health Care Access in New Jersey through Legislation”

    Nurses often become motivated to change aspects within the larger health care system based on their real-world experience. As such, many nurses take on an advocacy role to influence a change in regulations, policies, and laws that govern the larger health care system.
    For this assignment, identify a problem or concern in your state, (NEW JERSEY, UNITED STATES), community, or organization that has the capacity for advocacy through legislation. Research the issue and use the “Advocacy Through Legislation” template, attached, to complete this assignment.
    You are required to cite a minimum of three sources to complete this assignment. Sources must be published within the last 5 years, appropriate for the assignment criteria, and relevant to nursing practice. 
    While APA style is not required for the body of this assignment, solid academic writing is expected, and documentation of sources should be presented using APA 7TH ED GUIDELINES.
    This assignment uses a rubric. Please review the rubric prior to beginning the assignment to become familiar with the expectations for successful completion.