with the work I have provided and the rubric we need a summary of each 5 PLO’s:
Scientist-Practioner Model
Ethics
Theoretical Orientation
Diversity & Multiculturalism
Intervention Design
Author: admin
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Title: Understanding the Key Concepts in Clinical Psychology: A Summary of Five PLOs
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“Early Risk Identification and Reduction in Healthcare Organizations: A Case Study Analysis”
Write 6-8 pages analyzing a specific issue that occurred in a health care organization. Apply risk management best practices to it for the purpose of early risk identification and risk reduction or elimination in the future.
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Title: Enhancing Criminal Investigations through the Adoption of Kaseware Law Enforcement RMS
In the Cyber Fraud Tech Briefing Activity, you identified two Record Management Systems (RMSs) that represent viable alternatives to the system described in the briefing. In this assignment, you use your loss control/prevention and technology skills to take a deeper dive into one of your chosen RMSs. Create a presentation for fellow officers and decision-makers that addresses each of the following, as they relate to your chosen technology (from last week’s activity). The goal is to include details that provide significant insight into areas such as its adoption, use, purpose, et cetera. The presentation should do the following:
Justify 4 important criteria for evaluating a criminal investigation technology for possible adoption.
Recommend an RMS suitable for adoption based upon the application of all identified criteria and the information sought in the Cyber Fraud Tech Briefing scenario.
Cite and describe a real-world example that effectively illustrates the use and outcomes of your chosen technology.
Explain 2 significant limitations or downsides of a chosen technology that could impact decision-making regarding its adoption, including supporting quantifiable metrics or data. You might consider areas such as cost, ethical use, training, maintenance, et cetera.
Presentation Submission Requirements
Use PowerPoint to create the equivalent of a 5-7-minute presentation if delivered orally.
PowerPoint: 8-10 slides. All slides should be supported by detailed speaker notes that address the required criteria without the aid of a voice-over or speaker.
This course requires the use of Strayer Writing Standards (SWS). The library is your home for SWS assistance, including citations and formatting. Please refer to the Library site for all support. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:
Examine technology and data tools for use in the criminal justice system that provides Data-informed decision-making.
Analyze the impact of technology on various aspects of the criminal justice system.
Evaluate ethical issues that criminal justice technologies pose to the law enforcement community and society.
One program I found was Kaseware Law Enforcement. If you find another RMS your welome to use it. I must have the minimum of Crime Mapping, Data Analytics, Database Queries with search parameter such as name, address, phone number, Social Media Data Minning, and Police Records Management System. -
Introduction to Virtualization and its Role in Cybersecurity Virtualization is a technology that allows for the creation of multiple virtual instances of servers and desktops on a single physical computer. This technology has evolved significantly since its inception in the 1960
Virtualization began in the 1960s, as a method for logically dividing the system resources provided by mainframe computers between different applications. Since then, the meaning of the term has broadened. Today, virtualization refers to the ability to create multiple independent instances of servers and desktops with disparate operating systems running on a single physical computer.
Research and write a 500- to 750-word report discussing virtualization and properly use vocabulary associated with cybersecurity. Address the following:
· Describe the fundamental concepts of the cybersecurity discipline and use them to provide system security.
· Describe the main components of confidentiality, integrity, availability, access, authentication, authorization, nonrepudiation, and privacy.
· Define and contrast the terms host and guest operating system.
· Define the term hypervisor and explain how you would examine attack indicators and attack timing.
· Compare and contrast the different types of hypervisors, how they are used, and the advantages and disadvantages of each.
· Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of a virtualized computing environment.
· Describe how virtualization can assist a cybersecurity analyst in exploring malware.
Support your report with at least 3 scholarly resources.
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 formatting guidelines, which can be found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center.
This assignment uses a rubric. Please review the rubric prior to beginning the assignment to become familiar with the expectations for successful completion.Requirements: 750 words -
“Promoting Gender Equality through Ethical Frameworks: A Project Proposal”
Hi! This paper is for my global ethics class, and the paper is a project proposal. The focus of the paper is Social Justice/Human Rights and the theme chosen is gender equality. Below I have added the project guide and rubric for this assignment, and a pdf of the chapter of the textbook that supports this theme. You don’t need to add any sources but if would be helpful if there was sources included.
This is a link to help with question three of the assignment:
https://aese.psu.edu/teachag/curriculum/modules/bioethics/modules/copy2_of_introductory/4-scenarios/what-are-ethical-frameworks
This is a link of a video my professor added that relates to this theme as well:
Thank you so much! -
Physician Query Assignment Title: Query for Clarification of Diagnosis and Treatment Plan
Physician Query Assignment
Please pick one of these scenarios below and write a physician query. For examples on how to write a physician query please see AHIMA article at: http://journal.ahima.org/2013/02/01/physician-query-examples/
Scenario #1
A patient is admitted for a right hip fracture. The H&P notes that the patient has a history of chronic congestive heart failure. A recent echocardiogram showed left ventricular ejection fraction (EF) of 25%. The patient’s home medications include metoprolol XL, lisinopril, and Lasix.
Scenario #2
A patient is admitted with chest pain radiating through to his middle back. The provider orders multiple tests to rule out cardiac diagnoses which are all ruled out. On day 2 of the stay, the provider orders the head of the bed to be raised, no coffee or fatty foods, and a 20 mg dose of omeprazole daily. On day 4, the patients symptoms subside and he is discharged home. There is no diagnosis documented by the provider.
Scenario #3
Patient is admitted with pneumonia. The admitting H&P exam reveals WBC of 14,000; a respiratory rate of 24; a temperature of 102 F; heart rate of 120; hypotension; and altered mental status. The patient is administered an IV antibiotic and IV fluid resuscitation.
Scenario #4
In the impression of the pathology report ovarian cancer is documented; however, only ovarian mass is documented in the final discharge statement by the provider. -
Task 1- Food Log and Task 2- Analysis Task 1- Food Log and Task 2- Analysis
TASK 1- FOOD LOG
You will keep a 3-day food log, where you will record the meals and snacks, along with their nutrients, that you ate throughout each day. You can choose to track this using Cronometer or the provided Word document.
Actions
This week’s focus: water, sodium, potassium, Vitamin A, Vitamin C, Vitamin D, calcium, and iron.
You may record carbohydrates, fat, and protein; however, they are not required for this week. Please see the Everything You Need to Know About- DIETARY ANALYSIS ASSIGNMENTS page for more specific details on this process. TASK 2- ANALYSIS
Please answer the following questions in complete sentences:
In regard to last week’s ‘challenge’-Did you try your protein/fat swaps or additions? If so, how did it go?
In regard to water-Did you meet the recommendations for water intake? What are considerations that a person needs to make when determining water needs?
What drinks do you mainly drink to meet fluid needs? Do you think that those are healthy choices (caffeine, alcohol, sugar)?
In regard to micronutrients-What is your fruit and vegetable consumption like? Are you meeting recommendations? What are ways that you can increase your consumption?
What were your averages for salt, potassium, Vitamin A, Vitamin C, Vitamin D, calcium, and iron? Were these values above, below, or at the recommended values? Did these averages surprise you?
Were you taking a multivitamin prior to this course? After seeing these values, do you think you will continue taking the multivitamin or will you start taking a multivitamin? Why or why not?
Looking forward-What are foods that you can start eating in order to increase the above micronutrients (except salt!) in your diet?
What are ways that you can cut back on salt in your diet?
Submission and Grading
This assignment is due on Saturday, May 18th by 11:59 PM. Task 1 needs to be submitted as a pages document, Word document, or PDF file. Task 2 can be submitted as a text entry or file upload. This assignment is worth a total of 40 points. Each task is worth 20 points, and will be assessed based on the level of completeness. Submissions are graded anonymously. -
“The Reality of Online Education: Students Speak Out Against Tech Utopianism” “The Profound Loss of Human Interaction: Students’ Dislike of Online Learning” “The Importance of Human Connections in the College Classroom: Student Perspectives on Online Learning”
Acrisis, as the saying goes, is a terrible thing to waste, and the tech utopians have wasted little time in promoting the move to online teaching as a permanent solution to higher ed’s problems.
Tal Frankfurt, a technology consultant and contributor to Forbes magazine, proposed that the emergency replacement of traditional classrooms with virtual ones should “be viewed as a sort of ‘bypass’ button’” for the usual snail’s pace of educational change. We’re all online now, Frankfurt says — let’s stay there. After all, virtual learning is better because it enables “students to reach greater heights and not be limited by a predetermined set of circumstances.”
Nor is Frankfurt alone. In a recent op ed in The New York Times, Hans Taparia writes that online education, previously considered a “hobby,” could be the silver bullet that rescues higher ed from the financial ravages of the coronavirus pandemic.
Politicians have also climbed on board the train. Jeb Bush announced that online is “the future of learning,” and Governor Andrew Cuomo, with Bill Gates (of course) standing next to him, wondered why we need all these buildings when we have technology? “The old model” of a classroom, the governor opined, is over and done with. It’s time to “reimagine” education with computers and laptops “at the forefront.” While both deal with K-12, the proposal to replace “all these buildings, all these physical classrooms” with virtual spaces applies equally well to higher ed.
But what do students have to say about the differences between online and traditional teaching? Do they look forward to online education as “the future”?
The argument over the relative merits of online versus face-to-face education always runs into this crucial roadblock: students (presuming they pass) do not take the same course twice. Once you take Shakespeare 302, or Chem 101, or Econ 102, you move on.
But thanks to the sudden switch to online teaching in the middle of the semester, students can compare the digital with the analog versions of their classes. What’s more, since each student takes three to five (sometimes more) courses, they experienced multiple modalities of online education, from Zoom meetings to fully asynchronous courses taught via videos and podcasts. For the first time, a student can say, “I took the course both ways, and here’s what I think.” While it’s true that for many, the transition was rushed, don’t underestimate how many profs put together viable online classes that ranged from Zoom to fully synchronous (more on that term below) classes with all the bells and whistles.
To find out their responses, I asked my students to write an evaluation of their experiences with online education. While almost all are English majors, they are the definition of diverse: traditional, nontraditional, male, female, LGBTQ, first-generation college student, not first generation, single parent, person of color, different religions, foreign (one student hailed from Germany), some with a learning disability, and veterans. No doubt I’ve missed a few categories. All, however, are “digital natives,” the generation who are addicted to their phones and screens. So there is no assumed bias against or unfamiliarity with the digital world.
But for all their differences in age, gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation, citizenship and intellectual preparedness, they universally agreed on their evaluation of online learning: they hated it. There is no comparison, they said over and over again, between the two. One student said that she felt like she wasn’t getting 10 percent of the regular class. Another wrote, “I haven’t learned anything since we went online.” (For the record, I asked for and received permission to quote their responses.) “It seemed too easy,” wrote a third. “I did not feel challenged like I had been in the first half of the semester, and I felt the quality of learning had gone way down.” “I watched the lectures posted, but I wasn’t learning the material,” wrote another. All told, moving online caused “a profound sense of loss.”
Part of the problem originated in the enforced idleness caused by the pandemic. With in-person classes canceled, jobs evaporating and shelter-in-place orders, the structure by which many organized their day had disappeared, leaving many students feeling lost and adrift. As one student put, “[I] now lived in a world of uncertainty, with no clear end in sight.” Pre-pandemic, the necessity of showing up at a particular time at a particular place shaped their days and “established an environment in which my focus was tailored completely to my education.” Without the “consistency” of having to show up on, say, Tuesday and Thursday, 11 o’clock, many reported that it was easy to let classes slide and not take them as seriously as before. Plus, for some, there are the distractions of having to live at home, sharing space and computer time with parents and siblings, not to forget pets.
Taking online classes also means that the distractions of the web are right before their eyes. “The major benefit of in-class learning is that the classroom leaves out distractions,” writes one student, but now, “I have the biggest source of gaming, shopping and socializing right in my face.”
However, there is a more profound reason for their dislike of online learning, and ironically, it is online education’s chief selling point.
The major advantage of online learning is asynchronicity, or, “anytime, anywhere learning.”
Lectures do not take place at a specified time, but are recorded as videos or podcasts. Assignments are done on a computer, often graded by a computer. Not being tied to a classroom also means no limitations on enrollment. Class size is no longer limited by room size but can grow to accommodate any number of students.
What this means in practice is that the student takes the class alone. There is no immediate interaction between the professor and the students, no immediate interaction among the students. It’s just a student sitting in front of a screen, and that’s what my students disliked the most: “we basically have to teach ourselves. It’s like paying tuition to watch YouTube videos.”
More than one complained they were not getting their money’s worth: “I do not pay the hefty tuition for online classes”; “I feel for all the students paying thousands and thousands of dollars to attend SDSU when in reality they are stuck behind a computer screen.” A third was more specific: a prerecorded video “is by far the least efficient and beneficial [mode of learning]. Prerecorded videos give students no room to ask questions or engage in class discussion.”
Ironically, students reaffirmed Plato’s criticism of writing over face-to-face discussion. If you ask an inanimate object, in this case, a piece of writing or a painting, a question, Socrates says, you don’t get an answer. Instead, it goes on “telling you just the same thing forever.” Ask a video a question, or a podcast, and you will not get a response. You can’t engage it in dialogue, and as Socrates says, it’s in dialogue — teasing out of ideas, challenging them, argument and counterargument — that genuine education happens.
That key point gets reiterated in every response: students missed human interaction. The central difference is that during a regular semester, “the lessons are in person, and not on a screen. This is important because it helps me and other people pay attention when the teacher is in the same room as us. You get more out of what they are saying when you can see their body language, and it’s more a personal experience.”
The transition from face-to-face to online removed the opportunity to learn “from other students,” and breaking into smaller groups or commenting on each other’s writing was no substitute for the real thing. In a traditional classroom, “there is this level of intimacy that just cannot develop in an online setting. The college experience is truly about making human connections. Schools, one student insightfully noted, “are like small towns. There is so much more than just classrooms, and to have classes go online, that takes away so much from the student experience.”
The farther a class got from face-to-face, the less students liked it, and the less they got out of it. Conversely, the closer a class got to approximating the traditional classroom, the better. Students preferred Zoom classes (for all their drawbacks) for two reasons.
First, turning classes into Zoom meetings that started and ended at the same time as the regular class helped “restore some type of balance and structure” to their lives. One student said that she “was grateful for the normalcy that the recurring class meetings” gave her.
But more profoundly, Zoom restored, if in a lesser form, the conversations, the back-and-forth, the human interactions of the traditional classroom. Because students can talk to each other and the professor in real time, “it feels more personal. I found myself more willing to answer and participate.” This student summed it up best:
Some of the best courses I have taken during my time in college have been the ones that are small, and where the professor and students develop a sense of trust with one another. This trust can only be attained by person-to-person contact. There is this level of intimacy that just cannot develop in an online setting. The college experience is truly about making human connections.
God knows, Zoom is not perfect. The sound can be terrible, and there are serious privacy issues. But for all its problems, Zoom helps restore the “human connections” missing from virtual classes, which is why several students said that everyone’s camera should be on during the session. The point is not just to hear, but to see, each other.
Many teachers fear that when the pandemic recedes and normality returns, administrators will try to keep as many classes online as they can. After all, as Bush and Cuomo say, online is supposed to be the future.
But the opposite will likely happen, because most students don’t like online classes. Having gone virtual once, and experienced different modalities, there is no desire, no groundswell, to make the change permanent. If anything, both students and faculty want to get back to the traditional classroom as quickly as possible, now that they have experienced both. To be sure, online teaching has its place, especially for students who could not otherwise attend college, and given the health risks, it’s how we need to teach until there’s either a cure or a vaccine for COVID-19.
But online learning is not the future. Never was. Never will be. It’s just not what students want. -
“Measuring Social Distance: Creating a Bogardus Social Distance Scale”
Bogardus Social Distance Scale)
1. What is the definition of a Bogardus Social Distance Scale?
2. Create a Bogardus Social Distance Scale using
Let’s recap:
Create a key Statement, followed by 7 questions. Place a value on each question of 1 to 7
Example: (This is just an Example of a scale) Chapter 3 is based on Discrimination)
Have a key statement, followed by seven questions with different scale
a series of questions that
captures a person’s feelings toward the member of a particular group.
values from 1 to 7 or more. Here, 1 means maximum intimacy or
acceptance, and 7 is minimum intimacy or acceptance.
Statement 1: Select the option that best describes your feeling towards the climate change initiatives based on the following statements
Statement 2: Select the option that best describes your feeling toward your team
Statement 3: Select the option that best describes your feeling toward immigrants
Statement 4: Select the option that best describes your feeling towards a member of the ruling governm -
Capstone Project Proposal: Improving Handwashing Practices at Hillcrest Post Acute Nursing Home to Address Nursing Burnout in Petaluma, CA
FOR THE TOPIC, I WAS THINKING ABOUT HANDWASHING PRACTICE AT NURSING HOME
LOCATION:HILLCREST POST ACUTE, PETALUMA, CA.
NURSING BURNOUT
WHAT ELSE IS GOOD OR SOMETHING WE CAN ELABORATE LATER OR RESEARCH ON?
ANY NURSING RELATED TOPIC SUGGESTION ARE WELCOME. I WILL DISCUSS IT. THE LOCATION HAS TO BE IN NORTHERN CALIFORNIA.
THIS ASSIGNMENT IS JUST THE TEMPLATE. THERE’S MORE ASSIGNMENT IN THE FUTURE LIKE THE LITERATURE REVIEW, BUDGET ETC.. AND OFCOURSE THE FINAL CAPSTONE PROPOSAL.
ARE YOU AWARE OF THE PICOT?
P=POPULATION?
I=INTERVENTION TO ADDRESS THE PROBLEM
C=COMPARISON (CURRENT PRACTICE)
O=OUTCOME9OVERALL GOAL OF THE PROJECT)
T=WHAT IS THE TIME FRAME?
Complete the Capstone Project Template Draft
Use this template to complete the assignment BSN355 Capstone Project Proposal Template Download BSN355 Capstone Project Proposal Template. (See below for the Template)
What is the project question? In other words, what are you ultimately trying to figure out?
What is the title of your project?
Who will benefit from your project?
Where are the people located that will benefit from your project?
What date do you plan on implementing your project?
How long will your project take from beginning to end?
Budget requirements of your project (How much money will it take to implement your project?)
Why did you decide to do this project?
What do you hope to achieve by doing this project?
What do you need to do to help you complete this project?
Will your project have long term effect? If so. What are they? If none. Why not?
Will the project be sustainable? If so. How will you sustain the project?
How will your project be evaluated?
Are there any risks associated with the project?
Is there anything that may prevent your project form succeeding? If so, what?
This draft copy may be changed throughout the semester as you develop your project proposal.
final copy will be submitted in week 13.
FINAL PROJECT OVERVIEW
The Capstone Project is a large scale project where you will choose a topic that relates to nursing, where you are working, or where you would like to work. The results of the project will be presented in the last semester of the BSN program in the last capstone course.
BSN 355 is where you will choose a project topic and write a proposal. There are several components used in the course that you will be expected to fill out and combine as part of your capstone. Remember this is just the start of your project. You will need to work on your capstone project in the second and third semester in order to be successful.
Directions:
Using the information already compiled in previous assignments, create a proposal of at least 8 pages (not including the Title page and Reference page) which includes:
A Title Page including a title for your project
A Literature Review supporting the need for the project
At least 5 or more peer reviewed articles supporting the proposal
Objectives and strategies for achievement of the Capstone project
Background for the proposal including supportive resources indicated throughout the course e.g. budgeting, outcomes, evaluations.
Formatting using APA style.
APA 7th edition format of the American Psychological Association (APA) is the official style used by Nightingale College. This style and format used to cite sources can be referenced from http://www.apastyle.orgLinks to an external site.