Criminal evidence, law homework help

grandmother is babysitting for her 3-yr-old grandson while his parents are away. No one else is in the home when the grandmother put the child to bed for an afternoon nap. A short time later, while the grandmother is in the basement, she heard a crash and ran back upstairs. When she entered the child’s room, she saw the window drapes lying across the bed and on the floor. The grandmother said to the child, “Why did you pull the drapes down?” The child looked his grandmother in the eye and replied, “You didn’t see me do it, and you can’t prove that I did it.” List the evidence available to the grandmother that caused her to conclude that the child pulled the drapes down. Indicate whether this was direct or circumstantial evidence.

Explain at least two theories and identify how they impact compensation and the work environment.

Assume that, as the compensation professional, you are to present your reasoning, based on theory, for recommending certain compensation strategies. Explain at least two theories and identify how they impact compensation and the work environment.

For this assignment you will develop a 3-5 page, APA-formatted paper. As the compensation professional you will be writing the report for the owners of a new organization. In your paper cover the following:

  • Examine two theories that impact compensation.
  • Discuss how each of the theories can motivate employees.
  • Discuss specific types of compensation providing examples on how theory can influence employee performance.

Instructions:

  • Write a 3-5 page paper, or about 1500 words, not including the title and reference pages, which are required.
  • Your paper must be properly cited and formatted according to the CSU-Global Guide to Writing and APA.
  • Include a formal works cited page.
  • You must support your analysis with at least two scholarly references and can include resources from this course.
  • You cannot use Wikipedia or . For this assignment, a credible source is defined as:
    • A scholarly or peer-reviewed journal article.
    • A government-based website or publication.
    • A trade or industry journal article, publication, or website, including those from trade organizations such as SHRM.org and TD.org.
  • The paper must be formatted correctly using APA style.

International Business : foreign direct investment

A developing country wants to become more global, hoping to increase the pace of its economic growth and improve the quality of life for its people. It wants to achieve this by attracting foreign direct investment.

  • Choose a developing country, and discuss the pattern of foreign direct investment in that region and why it occurs.
  • How should the government intervene to ensure that the foreign direct investment is the best interest of its country?
  • What policy instruments should the government use to promote foreign direct investment?
  • Is it already part of regional integration? If not, should the country consider it? What would be the benefits and disadvantages?

Deliverable Length 1000-1200 words, APA format with intext citations

3 references min

Change Leadership for Differentiated Education Environment, writing homework help

How is My Research Relevant? A Work in Progress

Recall, action research focuses on enabling teachers, researchers and leaders to be continuous learners (Mills, 2014). By this, action research is considered a “work in progress” (Brydon-Miller, Greenwood, & Maguire, 2003, p. 10) and is considered a “common formative assessment” (Buczynski & Hansen, 2014, p. 352). The process of deliberate and repeated fine-tuning to the design is critical to successful implementation of action research. Therefore, part of the purpose of this assignment is to ensure relevancy of your research and to deepen the research endeavor. Your final project in this course involves preparing a comprehensive presentation of your findings. This assignment is the first step in putting your final project together. Through the collaborative conversations that occur during this week’s discussions, you will gain helpful information from classmates that may prompt a need for refining your research design as it evolves.

Remember, it is important that the data collection is aligned with the research question(s), which was required in the matrix from EDU671. Therefore, another purpose for this assignment is for you to use this assignment as an opportunity to revise and adjust the data collection portion of your study. Effective action research practice includes ongoing and deliberate thought in order to positively inform your study. Revisions are required as part of this action research process. Consequently, incorporating this information is essential to a comprehensive data collection process and presentation of findings that is due in Week Six. For this assignment, you summarize the necessary modifications you made to your action research between the proposal process from EDU671 to this second week as you begin implementation of your study. Please address each of the components listed below in the content expectations and write your paper to meet the written communication expectations below. If modifications were not needed to a particular component, share what was in place originally and label it with the words NO CHANGE.

Content Expectations

  • Research Focus (1 Points): Describe the current area of focus for the research including required revisions thus far.
  • Literature (2 Points): Synthesize the literature you have found in addition to your matrix developed in EDU 671 that supports your proposal.
  • Defining Variables (1 Points): Describe your defining variables in specific and operational terms.
  • Research Questions (.5 Points): State your research question(s) in a list format making sure that there is a clear relationship through clear and concise wording to the action research project.
  • Intervention/Innovation (2 Points): Analyze the intervention/innovation as it pertains to the connection of the action research project to the field of education, the specific community, non-educational, or individual personal issue in which you are studying.
  • Data Collection (.5 points): Describe the type of data collection tools to be used in the study.

Written Communication Expectations

  • Page Requirement (.5 points): Two-to-three pages, not including title and references pages.
  • APA Formatting (.5 points): Use APA formatting consistently throughout the assignment.
  • Syntax and Mechanics (.5 points): Display meticulous comprehension and organization of syntax and mechanics, such as spelling and grammar.
  • Source Requirement (.5 points): Include a minimum of two scholarly sources in addition to the course textbook, providing compelling evidence to support ideas. All sources on the references page need to be used and cited correctly within the body of the assignment.

Next Steps: Review and Submit the Assignment
Review your assignment with the Grading Rubric to be sure you have achieved the distinguished levels of performance for each criterion. Next, submit the assignment to the course room for evaluation no later than Day 7.

SYG 2000, Interview a child about gender, sociology homework help

Please choose one from those 2 Options below.

SYG 2000

Paper 1 Options

Please do one (1) of the following:

1) Interview a child about gender-

-What do they think are the differences between girls and boys, men & women?

-How do they know?

-What are boys like?Girls?

-Who gets to marry whom?Why?

Use information from the text chapter on Socialization and tie in your interview to the material in the text. Make the text material explicit. In other words, what is it about the socialization process presented in the text that influences or corresponds to how children view gender?

The paper should be a minimum of 500 words of text with a word count listed at the bottom.

Points will be deducted for papers that are sloppily written and for those that are less than the required length.

Feel free to use some direct quotes from your interviewee, but do not write it in a strict question/answer format.Write it as a true essay in paragraph form.

OR

2) In a public/social setting, like on campus, at a party, in a waiting room, etc., conduct a participant observation.Your job is to find gender, examining the situation ethnomethodologically- i.e., in terms of practices.

-Where is it?

-How do you know it when you see it?

-How is gender being socialized in these settings, reaffirmed, and regulated (enforced)?

Use information from the text chapter on Research Methods (Chapter 2) and tie in your observations to the material in the text. Make the text material explicit. In other words, make sure your efforts to locate gender in social settings are guided by the chapter material.

The paper should be a minimum of 500 words of text with a word count listed at the bottom.

Points will be deducted for papers that are sloppily written and for those that are less than the required length.

Human Resource Management.

As a future leader in government administration, it is essential that you understand the fundamental concepts, principles, and processes related to human resource management. Over the past several weeks, you have explored many of these human resource management concepts.

For this Assignment, you will be completing Part 2 of the Final Project.

The Assignment:

  • Submit a 3- to 4-page outline of your final project paper.
  • List 10–12 peer reviewed scholarly references selected from the Walden Library databases which are no more than five years old. These should relate to the human resource management concepts from the course. Be sure that these references address the government or non-profit organization that you in Week 2. (You will be using these references to complete the final part of the Final Project due in Week 10.

privatization and outsourcing , legal environment , diversity, recruitment and the workforce. this needs to be added to the first part i shared.

News Articles AFAM 311

N1 – News Articles # 1

News articles that are about an issue (e.g., housing, employment, education, poverty, language, laws, etc) being experienced by one entire specific racial or ethnic group, who are residents of the United States, and published within the past 4-weeks. Students are to post a (a) copy of the news article, (b) brief summary of the news article identifying the one specific racial/ethnic group reported about, (c) the specific issue faced by the group reported on in the news article, (d) identify and name a theory from chapter 2 of text that could explain the event, (e) state how the theory explains the event and (f) state two constructive, meaningful, and critical thought provoking questions that remain unanswered (to create on-going course discussion) after student’s reading of the news article, to the Discussion Forum.

AN EXAMPLE :

A) 25 years later, city schools facing similar problems from the past

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette logo

MOLLY BORN

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

XXXXx@ddco.com

9:47 PM

APR 29, 2017

On a warm, late summer evening in 1992, a requiem of sorts played out at the Pittsburgh Public Schools offices in Oakland.

A group of parents and educators, called the Advocates for African American Students, held a mock funeral along Bellefield Avenue — casket, visitor guest book and all— and circled the administration building in protest of the newly named superintendent Louise Brennen. Then-school board member Jean Fink, who voted for Ms. Brennen, recalled whizzing by the scene on the back of her husband’s Harley. “I just went by on a motorcycle and didn’t stop.”

The elegy, said Wanda Henderson, then the group’s co-chair, “symbolized the end of multicultural education, access to educational opportunities for black students and strong effective leadership.”

She and other Advocates took formal action, too, filing a racial discrimination complaint that year with the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission against Pittsburgh Public. They cited inequities between white and black students from academic achievement to discipline to resources, capped by the selection of Ms. Brennen over who they said was a more qualified black candidate.

A quarter-century later, the district is faced with some of the same challenges. A report this year revealed that “the weight of the district’s disciplinary actions appears to fall disproportionately on students of color.”

“We’ve been saying the same stuff for 25 years,” Ms. Henderson said, “but now it seems like other people are acknowledging the situation. Some may look at that as progress, but I look as it as we’ve been doing this 25 years, so we have lost almost a generation of kids.”

A complaint is filed

In 1992, the board of the Pittsburgh Public Schools named the three finalists it was considering to replace retiring superintendent Richard C. Wallace. The Advocates — organized by the late Barbara A. Sizemore, distinguished professor at Duquesne University’s School of Education — backed Loretta C. Webb, who is black. But the board selected Ms. Brennen, who is white.

The complaint filed with the human relations commission contended that Ms. Webb, with a doctorate and five years as deputy superintendent, was more qualified than Ms. Brennen, with a master’s and two years in that same role. Board president Barbara Burns at the time denied that race was a factor in the board’s selection, and for her part, Ms. Webb said then, “It’s too bad this has to turn into a white-black thing.”

But the filing also sought to prove a pattern of discrimination in the school system, one the Advocates said went beyond the board passing over Ms. Webb.

“It was very apparent the systemic racism that existed within the district and inequity that our students were faced with,” said Tamanika Howze, one of the original Advocates and a current member of the district’s equity advisory panel.

Ms. Fink said her vote for Ms. Brennen had nothing to do with Ms. Webb’s race. But she acknowledged that some kids were falling through the cracks. “Some teachers didn’t make an effort to reach” some black children, she said. “I saw that just from volunteering in my own kids’ schools.”

In the complaint, the Advocates claimed that besides CAPA 6-12, no high school saw black student performance as a group “approach the national norm” — and nearly three-quarters of black children at certain middle schools failed to reach the national norms in reading and math.

According to 1992 district data cited in the Advocates’ filing, black male students accounted for 72 percent of the 19,093 total suspensions. A third of black boys and 18 percent of black girls were suspended at least once during the school year, compared to 15 percent of all other boys and 7 percent of all other girls. The student group with the highest incidents of suspension were middle-school black boys: 46 percent were suspended at least once during the school year.

If some of this sounds familiar, it’s because it is: One analysis commissioned by the district this school year found that black students are falling behind academically in PPS, regardless of their economic status.

Then a study from the Council of the Great City Schools, a consortium of the nation’s 70 largest urban school districts, revealed that student achievement trends showed little to no improvement in the last decade. Further, its executive director Michael Casserly noted an “extraordinarily high” suspension rate compared with other cities — and disciplinary actions that disproportionately affect students of color.

Superintendent Anthony Hamlet discovered such inequities during weekly reviews of suspension data this year. “This kid did the same thing as this kid. This kid is black and he got 10 days, this kid is white and he got 5 days. What’s the difference? It’s not acceptable,” he said.

The district totaled more than 8,200 out-of-school suspensions in the 2015-16 school year, according to district data presented earlier this year by the Education Rights Network. Seventeen percent of students were suspended at least once, excluding Pre-K. Black students between kindergarten and fifth grade were suspended four times more than white students. Black students made up 54 percent of total K-5 enrollment but 79 percent of all students suspended at least once in that group.

Setting terms

The school board appealed the Advocates’ complaint. The human relations commission found evidence to support the group’s charges, but the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court dismissed the complaint relating to Ms. Brennen in 1996, agreeing with the district that only Ms. Webb, the candidate they passed over, had the legal standing to file such a claim.

The case was idle for years. Some Advocates moved on as their children aged out of the system. “They were just waiting for us to die off so there wouldn’t be a complaint,” Ms. Henderson said.

But in 2005, the school board voted to settle the case, and an agreement was finalized the next year. The district admitted no wrongdoing, but agreed to more than 70 terms, including hiring a coordinator for the district’s equity initiatives, creating an equity advisory panel to monitor compliance and putting experienced teachers in predominately minority schools. The district said it has already incorporated many of the steps into superintendent Mark Roosevelt “Excellence for All” achievement plan.

Time ran out twice on the pact. In 2012, the commission said the district made gains but “is not prepared to conclude that the district has achieved sufficient progress with respect to elimination of the academic achievement gap and other measures outlined in the agreement to justify termination of the agreement.”

In October 2015, the board again approved extending it until August 2020.

Ms. Henderson said the creation of the district’s equity office, equity policy and the We Promise program, which aims to help black males to boost their grades and attendance so they can be eligible for Pittsburgh Promise scholarships, constitutes progress. The district also is nearing the end of a two-year pilot program for “restorative practices,” an approach that aims to reduce suspensions by getting to the root cause of problems and helping students find ways to make things right while staying in school.

New office, new hope

District leaders are confident that the creation of a new Office of Transformation will be a major effort in addressing racial disparities in the final years of the agreement. The office will monitor and give academic support to 16 of the district’s low-performing schools, essentially reopening the school improvement office that closed in the early 1990s amid budget cuts, said school board president Regina Holley.

She noted that the suspensions rates are high in other urban school districts too. “And they’re higher for children of color. People are just now starting to say, ‘Stop. What can we do in order to support all of our learners?’ ”

Mr. Hamlet said he hasn’t named a leader of the transformation office or developed its budget yet. But he noted that that the district failing schools currently get no direct support beyond federal School Improvement Grant dollars.

The school board also is expected to vote soon on a revised student conduct code that likely will eliminate suspensions for kids in grades K-2.

Viola Burgess, the first director of the equity office who retired in 2015, couldn’t be reached for this story, but emphasized in an earlier interview that the topic is not a standalone issue for that team. “Every department has to look at inequities.”

Angela Allie, the district’s currently director of equity, agrees and said she’ll focus on working closely with other offices within the district, such as the one focusing on curriculum and instruction to ensure it’s adopting culturally responsive teaching materials. PPS also is designing its own “professional learning module” to help teachers learn how to teach such content.

Celeta R. Hickman, a teaching artist and member of the equity advisory panel, said she would especially like to see “strident culturally responsive” teaching across all schools, in the spirit of the one Ms. Sizemore implemented at the now-closed Beltzhoover Elementary.

The human relations commission, the equity panel and the district are working together to determine what counts as substantial progress toward the agreement, Ms. Allie said. (Ms. Hickman said the Advocates developed a “report card” of sorts.)

Racial disparities “are a source of shame” in education, including at PPS, Ms. Allie continued. The 2020 agreement deadline “should be daunting. I think to some extent, it can motivate people to get the work done. It requires outputs and not just a shift in thinking.”

Now one of the last original members of the Advocates, Ms. Henderson said she’s hopeful for change.

“This is quarter of a century I’ve spent on this. I’m not happy every day [but] I’m optimistic because the conversation is in the forefront.”

Molly Born: mborn@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1944.

————————————————————————————————–

B)This Article is based on the idea that African american students are at a disadvantage because they are not being advocated for in the education system. The article opens with a discussion about about the disadvantage of the education system in the Pittsburgh education board. This issue arose with the replacement of a superintendent for the school district. the election ran down to two candidates, one being a Caucasian and the other being African American, both female. The African American woman was more qualified for the position and was still beat out by the Caucasian Candidate. the discussion continued into the differences seen in the school system of the minority groups “colored” being more likely to fall behind due to suspensions and lack of teaching etiquette for the African American students who are being unfairly punished. There is also mention of a promise scholarship which will be aimed at “Black Males” to help improve grades and slow the progress of the racial disparities in the school system in Pittsburgh.

C) The specific issue being raised in the disparity for African American children in the Pittsburgh school system being unfairly punished for behavior leading to suspension, that will ultimately lead to days away from school and further fallback of the education of the minority group in the educational platform.

D)I believe that this article can be directed towards the Power-Conflict theory, subcategory -systemic racism.

E) This theory brings to the forefront the ideas of discriminatory practices, stereotypes, and white prejudice as well as institutional exploitation of colored American minorities. The section on the mechanisms of oppression stand out the most with this article, where even though it may not be intentional, hierarchies are being practiced within the school system with matched actions by students leading to longer suspension times for African American students then the white student. This leads to time away from school and leading the child into falling behind in school work, and education. Thus the dominant group, whites, are being exploitative of their power in judging the colored students and administrators based solely on the color of their skin and not by their actions or abilities.

F) What other actions need to be addressed in the school systems in our communities that affect the minority groups

How can we change the American school system to include more programs aimed at minority groups to close the gap in educational deficits?

Using global suppliers vs local suppliers

A case analysis must be written in APA format and include the proper cover and reference list. The Case Analysis should be 500-700 words. Please use double spacing (as required by APA) and an APA approved font (12 point). The Case Analysis must include at least three references. Reference support should be included in the evaluation of possible solutions as well as the recommendations and/or implementation sections. The Case Analysis MUST include the following heading and follow this prescribed format:

Title Page (APA formatted)

I. Major Facts (Heading)

(State here the major facts as you see them. Make statements clear and concise for your own understanding as well as for the understanding of the other students and the instructor.)

II. Major Problem (Heading)

(State here the major problem as you see it. Emphasize the present major problem. You may wish to phrase your statement in the form of a question. In a few cases, there may be more than one major problem. A good problem statement will be concise, usually only one sentence.)

III. Possible Solutions (Heading)

A. (List here the possible solutions to the major problem. Let your imagination come up with alternative ways to solve the problem.

B. Do not limit yourself to only one or two possible solutions. These solutions should be distinct from each other. You must include a minimum of three possible solutions.

C. However, you may wish to include portions of one solution in another solution, as long as each solution stands alone. Only in this manner will your subsequent choice be definitive.

D. Note advantages and disadvantages of each possible solution as well expected outcomes. This is an areas where outside support will help.

IV. Choice and Rationale (Heading)

(State here your choice, A or B or ___ and the detailed reasons for your choice. You may also state your reasons for not choosing the other alternative solutions.) Explain the hopeful outcome of this alternative.

V. Implementation (Heading)

Prepare a plan to implement your choice (recommendation).

Reference Page (APA formatted) – every source listed should be cited within the text.

Venezuela under Hugo Chávez and Beyond

  • Under Chávez’s leadership, what kind of economic system was put in place in Venezuela? How would you characterize the political system?
  • How do you think that Chávez’s unilateral changes to contracts with foreign oil companies will affect future investment by foreigners in Venezuela?
  • How will the high level of public corruption in Venezuela affect future growth rates?
  • During the Chávez years, many foreign multinationals exited Venezuela or reduced their exposure there. What do you think the impact of this has been on Venezuela? What needs to be done to reverse the trend?

By 2016, Venezuela’s economy appeared to be on the brink of total collapse. What do you think needs to be done to reverse this?

Technical Reports, writing assignment help

For this assignment, you will be utilizing your preparation plan from this week’s Discussion Board and the outline from Unit 1 to guide your development of the procedures manual. Use this plan to get organized and break down each of the sections you will be writing the content for. Use the design elements that you identified in the Discussion Board to guide your overall formatting.

You will need to complete all of the chapters in your procedures manual, including the following:

  • Procedure manual title page with a logo
  • Table of contents
  • Introduction
  • Chapters for procedures overview, formal procedure statement, explanation of procedure and when and where it is used, examples, authorized contacts, and so on
  • Glossary or index
  • References

Deliverables:

The overall project deliverables are as follows:

  • Update the procedures manual document title page with new date and project name.
  • Update previously completed sections based on instructor feedback.
  • Complete the sections under “New Content” below, and copy it under the sections in the procedures manual document called “Procedures Manual Preparation Plan” and “Procedures Manual.”
    • New Content
      • Procedures manual preparation plan
        • Update the preparation plan with any feedback from your instructor and peer feedback from the Discussion Board
      • Procedures manual
  • Develop a visually appealing title page with a logo.
  • Develop chapters for each section identified in the procedures manual outline.
  • Write content for each section.
  • Apply common design elements throughout the manual.

Be sure to update your table of contents before submission.

Name the document “yourname_ITDI373_IP3.doc.”

Final Project Deliverables Thus Far

  • Procedures manual document shell (in MS Word format)
    • Title Page
      • Course number and name
      • Project name
      • Your name
      • Date
    • Table of contents (autogenerated)
      • Separate page
      • Maximum of 3 levels deep
      • Fields updated so that the TOC it is up-to-date before submitting your project
    • Section headings
      1. Project Outline
      2. Procedures Manual Outline
      3. Procedures Manual Proposal
      4. Procedures Manual Brochure
      5. Procedures Manual Preparation Plan
      6. Procedures Manual