English 102 Exercise

Please complete the exercise .

Copy the following questions and short answer topics onto a blank document. Answer as indicated adding space as needed but maintaining the current order. Make sure your work is complete; because this is a test, barring technical failure, only one submission may be made.

A: General Backgrounds

1. In the simplest way possible in one sentence, define communication. (2 pts.)

2. List and succinctly describe the three forms or modes of communication. (9 pts.)

3. Define rhetoric. (2 pts.)

4. List the seven rhetorical modes. (7 pts.)

5. List the three rules of rational discourse and succinctly explain their importance. (6 pts.)

6. Define Standard English. What three elements does a proper sentence require? (4 pts.)

B: Identifying Foundational Concepts – Truth, Evidence, & Argument

1. Define “truth” in its formal sense, tell how this differs from “ordinary language,” explain its relation to belief and knowledge, and describe the three categories of belief regarding the ultimate source of truth noting which is the standard in formal academic work. 20 pts.

2. What is the subjective/objective problem and how does it relate to essay writing? (Succinctly discuss landscape and inscape and invention in essay writing related to a writer’s ethical obligation.) 10 pts.

3. Succinctly describe Michael Shermer’s use of the terms agenticity and patternicity. With brief examples, do you agree or disagree? 5 pts.

C: Foundational Concepts/Definitions

1. Academic argument depends on Legitimate Propositions. Why? Define the concept. 9 pts.

Succinctly define the following terms in the best brief way; 1 point each.

2. Frontloading:

3. Excerpt:

4. Topic:

5. Thesis:

6. Plagiarism:

7. Euphemism:

8. Anecdote:

9. Jargon:

10. Redundancy:

11. MLA:

12. Documentation:

D: Argument Theory

1. Succinctly explain the three matters and four appeals in Classical or Aristotelian Argument . 15 pts.

2. Explain the foundational principle of Rogerian Argument Theory. Does it guarantee agreement? 5 pts.

3. What are the two foundational concepts of Toulmin Argument Theory and how do both or either one differ from the way argument is usually conceived in ordinary language? 5 pts.

E. Concepts: upload a term or letter to Blackboard; 1 pt. each.

1. Anything that exists only as an idea is said to be __________________.

2. Anything that exists in matter/energy is said to be __________________.

3. A short amusing or instructive story about a real incident or person: ____ . a) joke

b) excerpt c) except d) anecdote e) antidote f) analemma g) none of these

4. Secondary sources are never as trustworthy as primary sources. [ ] T [ ] F

5. Propaganda is never based on truth. [ ] T [ ] F

6. The history of a word:____ a) entomology b) enterology c) analogy d) none of these

7. Anything that stands for or means more than it is:__________________.

8. Regional speech:____. a) dialog b) dialect c) diorama d) diarrhea e) diatryma

9. To rephrase as briefly as possible without changing meaning: _________________

10. To put into different words to help clarify: _________________________

11. The best explanation we have currently for a set of facts: ________________

12. Facts are fixed, absolute items of knowledge: [ ] T [ ] F

13. Ambiguity: _____ a) can be understood in more than one way b) the misuse of MLA rules of style c) unintentional vagueness d) humor at the expense of another

14. A direct witness is best described as: _____ a) a tertiary source b) a final source

c) a proper source d) a peripatetic source e) a primary source f) none of these

15. A passage taken from a work, usually short but longer than an ordinary quote: _____

a) excerpt b) except c) anecdote d) antidote e) analemma f) all of these

Sandy and Grace, are discussing their differences of opinion about the value of clinical uses of genetic and genomic patient information, case study help

Case Study

Two health sciences graduate students, Sandy and Grace, are discussing their differences of opinion about the value of clinical uses of genetic and genomic patient information. Sandy: It’s always the same story—the supposed trade-off between the benefits to society and the sacrificed rights of the individual! Just remember the case of Henrietta Lacks. HELA cells [cancer cells taken from Henrietta before she died] have been invaluable to medical sci- ence; they led to the polio vaccine and other medical “miracles.” But Henrietta was never told what was going to be done with her cells; she never gave her permission—and, by the way, neither did her close relatives and family know or give their permission. It’s a clear case of science overstepping its bounds to the detriment of the individual. Grace: Sandy, you yourself know that the scientific research’s benefit to society really means the medical care benefit to the individual. Don’t you remember the recent case that took place here in our own hospital—the case of Jean, a 17-year-old who was visiting at the home of a friend when she fell down, struck her head, and suffered seri- ous injuries? She was raced to the ER where she required emergency surgery, and neither her parents nor relatives could be reached before the procedure. The mother of Jean’s friend provided the hospital with Jean’s name and home address, which allowed the ER personnel to associate Jean with her parents in the system. Using the hospital’s healthcare information system, the surgeon entered an order for the protocol that she was planning to use to treat Jean. Among the details included in the protocol was the use of halothane [a type of anesthe- sia]. Jean had never been the subject of genetic testing, but her father had a genetic test, which found a mutation in the ryanodine recep- tor [RYR1] gene. When people with this mutation are exposed to halothane, they can experience malignant hyperthermia, an often-fatal reaction in which the core body temperature can reach 106oF. The hospital’s information system used the demographic person– person relationship between the father and his daughter, and embed- ded pharmacogenomics decision support capabilities, to infer that Jean was at 50 percent risk of also possessing this rare mutation. The system flashed an interactive alert to the surgeon, who was unaware of this genetic association. The surgeon responded to the alert by activating   an alternative surgical plan that did not include the use of halothane. It was only by taking advantage of the genetic information about Jean’s father that a potentially catastrophic clinical event was averted! Sandy: But you make my case for me. The potential of abuse of the genetic data is magnified by the existence and use of sophisticated healthcare information systems. There’s no mystery about the poten- tial for abuse. Jean’s father was the one who had the test, not Jean. Yet the information produced by the test was also about Jean. Sure, revealing that information happened to help Jean, but the principle is that the information was about Jean as much as it was about her father. And Jean never gave her permission for that information to be used or revealed! It’s her body and her genome, not her father’s, right? So it’s her right to privacy that was violated. Grace: It might be her body, Sandy, but given the genetic data and information, we are bound by our Hippocratic oath.1 That includes “do no harm” [primum nil nocere, in latin]. In practice and in effect, Jean’s life was ours to save. What other choice did we have? Sandy: What about consent and protecting her privacy? And what about Jean’s father? Did he give permission to release the information from his genetic test to be used in ways other than for his diagno- sis and treatment? How is that different from the Havasupai Indi- ans’ lost-blood case? Arizona State University researchers asked the Havasupai if they would provide blood for studies to discover clues about the tribe’s incredible rate of diabetes, presumably to help the Havasupai. Then the researchers used the collected blood for other purposes. They used the extracted DNA for studies on mental illness. The initial diabetes studies seem to have led nowhere, but even if that effort helped save lives, it would have been lives saved without the Havasupai’s consent. Grace: Sandy, for goodness sake, it was only blood! Sandy: Not at all, Grace, not at all. Note 1. Hippocratic oath (translated by and reprinted from North 2009): I swear by Apollo, the healer, Asclepius, Hygieia, and Panacea, and I take to witness all the gods, all the goddesses, to keep ( according to my ability and my judgment, the following Oath and agreement: To consider dear to me, as my parents, him who taught me this art; to live in common with him and, if necessary, to share my goods with him; To look upon his children as my own brothers, to teach them this art. I will prescribe regimens for the good of my patients according to my ability and my judgment and never do harm to anyone. I will not give a lethal drug to anyone if I am asked, nor will I advise such a plan; and similarly I will not give a woman a pessary to cause an abortion. But I will preserve the purity of my life and my arts. I will not cut for stone, even for patients in whom the disease is manifest; I will leave this operation to be performed by practitioners, specialists in this art. In every house where I come I will enter only for  for the good of my patients, keeping myself far from all intentional ill-doing and all seduction and especially from the pleasures of love with women or with men, be they free or slaves. All that may come to my knowl- edge in the exercise of my profession or in daily commerce with men, which ought not to be spread abroad, I will keep secret and will never reveal. If I keep this oath faithfully, may I enjoy my life and practice my art, respected by all men and in all times; but if I swerve from it or violate it, may the reverse be my lot.

Case Study

The use of genetic information in health care presents many challenges, one of which is the protection of patient privacy. Given enough genetic information, a precise identification of a person can be made.  Read the Health Informatics: A Systems Perspective Chapter 12 case study on pages 256-258 and address the following:  

  • Explain if you agree with the perspective of Sandy or Grace? Articulate the reasons why.
  • Compare and contrast the differences between the case of Henrietta Jacks, Jean and the Havasupai?
  • Explain how genomic databases can be used to accomplish meaningful research while protecting patient privacy.
  • Identify two US genomic institutes that focus on genomic medicine. 
    • Compare and contrast their mission and vision.
    • Compare and contrast their major focus areas of research.
    • Did the site indicate if patient samples will be sequenced and the data combined with each participant’s medical record to allow researchers and research partners to investigate new approaches to disease prevention, diagnosis and treatment?
    • If asked to consent to your genomic information being used in research, explain if you would consent or decline? Include your rationale for consenting or declining.

Your Paper: 

  • Must be two to four, double-spaced pages in length, excluding the title and reference pages, and formatted according to APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.
  • Must Include a title page with the following:
    • Title of paper
    • Student’s name
    • Course name and number
    • Instructor’s name
    • Date submitted
  • Must begin with an introductory paragraph that has a succinct thesis statement.
  • Must include a minimum of three references, (excluding the textbook), on a separate reference page, formatted according to APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.

SOCW6311: Response to 2 Students- Work Environments, Self-Care, and Professional Wellness (Wk4)

Due 3/21/2019

Respond by to at least two of your colleagues’ postings. Be sure to respond to a colleague who chose at least one different setting than you did. Respond in one or more of the following ways: (Be very detailed in response, use 3 APA references) You have references for the assignment from initial post or your can use other APA references.

  • Share an insight from having read your colleague’s posting.
  • Validate an idea with your own experience.
  • Expand on your colleague’s posting.

Response to Nicole K

One Organizational Practice that Promotes Self-Care and One that Does Not

I worked as a case worker in a mental health facility for about 2 years and the agency did very little to promote self-care and wellness. As a case worker, the department would discuss numbers/productivity at every meeting and within all emails, as this saying was stamped next to the supervisor’s e-signature, “productivity= paycheck. It’s needed in proficient work.” At this agency, each case worker was required to hit around 96% productivity each month, regardless of holidays, days off taken and length of month. If a worker went over the 96% (which was highly unlikely), then he/she would receive $11 for each percent over and this was called their incentive program. In theory this sounds great, but working hourly and not being able to receive overtime made reaching the “incentive status” difficult. I was able to reach it one month and discovered that I had worked over 40 hours unpaid from home throughout the month just to complete documentation.

At this same agency, one practice they implemented was giving us 5 mental health days for the year. These mental health days could not be used like normal PTO (vacations) or sick days (doctor’s appointments or stay home with the flu). These days were only to be used after speaking with a supervisor and describing what was going on. There were stipulations for these days and five is not nearly enough for the entire year, but I believe this was a great practice to implement while I was working there and I took full advantage.

Impact of Both Practices

The productivity incentive impacted my personal and professional life negatively. Like I stated earlier, I was working unpaid on my personal time and it impacted my daily functioning. At the time, I was planning my wedding and I would stay up until 2am-3am finishing my notes after a cake tasting or tour of a venue. Professionally, I remember my supervisor would tell me that if I did not make close to productivity or go over 3 months in a row, I was going to be put on an “assistance plan”. I was very upset and made the argument that none of my 57 clients complained about me or felt dis-satisfied and I should not be on this plan. I became burnt out in this job, I isolated myself at work, was frustrated 95% of the time, could not sleep and became paranoid that everyone knew I was not making my numbers.

According to Hernandez, Engstrom and Gangsei (2010), the work involved in this field is grounds for developing vicarious trauma, compassion fatigue and burn out. Hernandez et al. (2010) reported that shielding workers from trauma is impossible, but creating a safe haven with supports has been found to decrease the development of these concepts or to help work through the symptoms. This negative practice which inhibits an employee to practice self-care may perpetuate the development of vicarious trauma. Supervisions and staff meetings consisted of talking about numbers rather than client cases, caseload stresses and personal/professional struggles.

An outcome from the positive self-care practice at this agency impacted my personal and professional life in a positive way. I felt that I was allowed to take time for myself and think about what was going on. I was happy that the agency recognized the hard work we did and allowed for days to be for our mental health. Professionally, I felt that this policy/practice was a great way to show staff that their efforts were not unrecognized even though many felt that way. This practice may not stop the development of vicarious trauma because it does not promote seeking assistance, but it may help to prevent its’ development. Sansbury, Graves and Scott (2015) reported, “self-care creates the environment that not only benefits the client but also the individual clinician and the organization. Both the client and clinician can achieve clearer thinking and emotional stability” (p. 120). Therefore, the promotion of self-care in this practice may help employees struggling in their professional life. In contrast, using a mental health day does not mean the individual will actually use the entire day to be deep in thought/meditation. Many employees would sleep in and then run errands most of the day, not giving themselves that mental break from personal stressors. It is the responsibility of the employee to use his/her mental health day as a self-care day, to process or work through any professional/personal stressors so that he/she may return to work with a clear mind.

References

Hernandez, P., Engstrom, D., & Gangsei, D. (2010). Exploring the impact of trauma on

therapists: Vicarious resilience and related concepts in training. Journal of Systemic Therapies, 29(1), 67–83.

Sansbury, B. S., Graves, K., & Scott, W. (2015). Managing traumatic stress responses among

clinicians: Individual and organizational tools for self-care. Trauma, 17(2), 114-122. doi:10.1177/1460408614551978

**********************************************************************

Response to Anna

Personal Experiences Regarding Organizational Practices

At almost every position I have been the only social worker, providing little support for the role. This is likely from my work at corporations, medical clinics, nursing homes, and rehabilitation settings. However, at one position at a health insurance company, I worked with other mental health colleagues. Not only was taking crisis calls with the EAP part of our job, but so was setting up CIRS, or critical incident debriefings when traumatic events occurred throughout the nation. The Virginia Tech shootings, bank robberies, were just a few of the incidents we handled. Strangely the one that had an impact on me, was when hospital staff had been traumatized. A family snuck in a butcher knife in a food basket for their family member who was dying of cancer, so she could kill herself. The staff intervened grabbing the knife, preventing injury but were very upset by the incident.

One practice that inhibits self-care and wellness from an organizational perspective is when an organization does nothing to support their employees who handle trauma. In fact, at the Health insurance company master’s level clinicians would walk off the job without notice due to being berated with no foundation. Every few months management would target another employee, cycling through the employee pool. I became one of the senior employees working there three years, due to the high turnaround.

Conversely, my first job out of my master’s program was at a government mental health program in South Carolina. It was a school-based mental health program for grades K-12. While this was one of the most difficult positions for me, I had a supervisor who staffed meetings to process our cases. We could openly talk about what was challenging to us, and she would guide us in our care plans for the patients. My supervisor would arrange for staff development trainings as well. According to Sansbury, Graves, and Scott (2015), it is critical for organizations to provide staff development and ongoing trainings to offset compassion fatigue and VT. Furthermore, concepts such as the SMART program that focuses on self-care techniques seem to also promote resiliency in staff who work with trauma. It has been shown that working with trauma can have a profound impact on helping professionals (Morrissette, 2004). That is why having organization systems in place to offset those effects is so critical.

Outcomes

Regarding the health insurance company that did not provide any support to the EAP specialists and CIRS coordinators, I left the position due to the lack of support. The position was very stressful in that hundreds of thousands of calls came in from across the nation for counseling and CIRS, some of those were crisis calls. The case with the CIRS that bothered me, while the outcome was that no one was hurt. I recall having these flashbacks of the knife in the food basket, and how desperate this family must have been to resort to that. I did process through it on my own, but it was difficult. This position was a telecommuting job so it was more isolative, making it impossible to connect easily with colleagues at work.

At the school-based mental health position, we had a lot of opportunities to process our cases and any traumatic events as well. I am thankful for that support to this day. Since it was my first job out of graduate school, I did not realize how uncommon this kind of support would be for me in my future career development. I do believe it help me be resilient, along with my colleagues. We also met weekly with the staff psychiatrist to staff our caseloads which was helpful as well. These experiences countered vicarious trauma and compassion fatigue, in my opinion.

References

Morrissette, P. J. (2004). The pain of helping: Psychological injury of helping professionals. New York, NY: Taylor & Francis.

Sansbury, B. S., Graves, K., & Scott, W. (2015). Managing traumatic stress responses among clinicians: Individual and organizational tools for self-care. Trauma, 17(2), 114-122.

history essay

1.How did the barbarians who overran the western Roman Empire in the 5th century shape the social, economic, and political structures in Europe and western Asia?

2. What factors enabled the Christian Church to expand and thrive during the early Middle Ages?

3. What made possible the spread of Islam, and what forms of government were established to rule Muslim lands?

4. How did the Aztecs both build on the achievements of earlier Mesoamerican cultures and develop new traditions to create their large empire?

5. How did the Heian form of government contribute to the cultural flowering of Japan in the period?

6. How did Chinggis Khan and his successors conquer much of Eurasia, and how did the Mongol conquests change the regions affected?

Introduction to Terrorism

Using the information from the map by Longman Atlas of World Issues, detail the states where WMD are located, types of WMD, and the possibility of utilizing WMD.

Please respond to all of the following prompts:

In the lecture titled, Longman Atlas of World Issues “Mass Destruction” pages. 28 and 29.

  1. Research the main issues with weapons of mass destruction. Report to the group which weapons are no longer a threat and which weapons pose the greatest threat.                                                
  2. Please click here to visit Everest’s online library.  The online library features various databases, ebooks, program resources, study guides, and other student resources including tutoring, career, and job search information.  The Library and Information Resources Network (LIRN) is accessible under the “Databases” tab.  If at any time you are prompted to enter a password to access LIRN, it is 11911.                                                
  3. Out of your research from Longman Atlas of World Issues “Mass Destruction,” pages. 28 and 29. Which country has the most WMD, radar, satellites, and largest missile defense?

Trends, Globalization and international free trade

Two Different Assignments: Please follow instructions for each assignment and no plagiarism.

Writing Assignment 1:

Select two American cities one of which has generally benefitted from the recent trends in the changes to cities and one which has generally not benefitted. What explains the difference between the results experienced by these two cities?

2 to 3+ pages, typed, not including cover and sources page. It is always quality over quantity.

Must Reference: Textbook (Chapter 1: ATTACHED)
Kantor, Paul and Judd, Dennis R. (2013). American Urban Politics in a Global Age (7th ed).
ISBN-13: 978-0205251759

Please take note, written work need to be citing academic sources. In example, your textbook, other textbooks, academic journals, etc. Sources such as Wikipedia, ask.com, EHow, yahoo answers, blogs, etc., are not allowed and should not be trusted as academic sources.

Writing Assignment 2:

Globalization and international free trade have come under strong criticism recently. Summarize the main opinions on both sides of this question. Which position do you feel holds more sway?

2 to 3+ pages, typed, not including cover and sources page. It is always quality over quantity.

Must Reference: Textbook (Chapter 2: ATTACHED)
Kantor, Paul and Judd, Dennis R. (2013). American Urban Politics in a Global Age (7th ed).
ISBN-13: 978-0205251759

Please take note, written work need to be citing academic sources. In example, your textbook, other textbooks, academic journals, etc. Sources such as Wikipedia, ask.com, EHow, yahoo answers, blogs, etc., are not allowed and should not be trusted as academic sources.

***MUST FOLLOW: Written Assignment Rubric***

Criteria:

Exemplary

Purpose

The writer’s central purpose or argument is readily apparent to the reader; clear thesis sentence. Content

Balanced presentation of relevant and legitimate information that clearly supports a central purpose or argument and shows a thoughtful, in-depth analysis of a significant topic; content is specific, accurate, interesting and appropriate.

Organization

The ideas are arranged logically to support the purpose or argument. Ideas flow smoothly from one to another and are clearly linked to each other. The reader can follow the line of reasoning.

APA

APA format is used accurately and consistently in the paper and on the “References” section; follows APA guidelines with regard to mechanics, sentence structure, and word choice.

Grammar & Spelling

All grammar and spelling are correct.

recorrect my assignment

this is how week one assignmnet should look.  

UDL Lesson Plan

Subject: English

Grade: First Grade

Common Core State Standard(s):Common Core State Standards

·Use a combination of drawing, dictating, and writing to compose informative/explanatory texts in which they name what they are writing about and supply some information about the topic.

·With guidance and support from adults, explore a variety of digital tools to produce and publish writing, including in collaboration with peers.

·Confirm understanding of a text read aloud or information presented orally or through other media by asking and answering questions about key details and requesting clarification if something is not understood.

·Add drawings or other visual displays to descriptions as desired to provide additional detail.

Objective (*Three components are observable verb, learning outcome, and measurement. *Aligned to state standard and evidence of mastery):

·Students will learn comperhension by recalling details.

·Will correctly define 9/10 vocabulary words by writing the definition of each.

  • Following along, reading, and summarizing simple stories with pictures

Teaching Procedures (to include introduction of the lesson, and step-by-step procedures for the activites to promote student inquiry and checking for students’ understanding over the course of the activites)

Gather the Corduroy books that I plan to use for the lesson (A Pocket for Corduroy by Don Freeman)along with a stuffed bear to use when students are ready to begin writing and piecing their own adventure stories together. This particular lesson will focus on the book, A Pocket forCorduroy. The students will attentively listen to the story and will be asked to create their own stories electronically. Corduroy will allow the students to gain a personal connection by having close interactions with a stuffed bear and develop their own adventures with Corduroy. I will alsoprovide envelopes for children to use as pockets. Tell them to draw a picture of something to place in their pocket. On the outside of the envelope, children write clues about what is inside. The rest of the class reads the clues and tries to guess what the pocket contains.

UDL Technology Integration (describe one UDL component and explain how it will be integrated into the lesson):

In this particular lesson there is a flexibility and openness that is available to allow the students to demonstrate their knowledge and skills of the content. There are not any strict guidelines for how the student presents their electronic adventure, based on the Corduroy story. 

The assignment is organized in multiple points for choice of presentation:

·Free choice of resource materials,

·Free choice of access (text, digital, audio),

·Free choice of response style.

Instructional Technology (describe one instructional technology device and explain how it will have class-wide incorporation into the lesson)

I would also implement AAC devices. These devices will be particularly geared towards students who struggle with hearing or some type of communication loose. The AAC devices will support the students in communicating themselves, and since one of the assisgnments require the students to develop an electronic picture this would be a great way to help them. The AAC device will be used in the form of a picture board, so all the students will be able to participate in the activities and properly get their point across while doing it. 

For this activity, I would like to implement a “Smart Board.” The smart board would be beneficial across the board. Everyone in the classroom would benefit from this device that allows students and teachers to be interactive. The board will allow the students to give unqiue presentations that would ultimatly keep others interested. 

Formative Assessment (Describe the closure of the lesson and the final assessment used to provide evidence that students have met the learning objectives. Be sure to provide choice related to interest and multiple, flexible means for completion that support learning preferences. Include an explicit description of the criteria for quality work):

I think classroom discussions are a great way to observe what the students may or may not know. It’s also a great way for everyone to be involved and bounce ideas off of one another. This lesson calls for open-ended questions that will challenge the students thinking process. The ultimate goal is to help increase the student’s critical thinking skills. The student’s responses will be closely examined, while taking anecdotal notes.

Teacher Self-Assessment (Even lessons that fail to produce the intended results are an excellent opportunity for reflection, adjustment, and growth. What problems do you anticipate with the lesson?  What did you learn about instructional technology and UDL from creating this unit? What would you change about the lesson based on its impact on student outcomes?)

The problems that I anticipate with this lesson are students having a difficult time grasping on to the concept of developing their own adventures using technology. Although, technology is widely used and advancing I feel like many students will have a difficult time getting started. The questions I would ask myself are, “How can I get them to understand their story is different from the story we have read?” “What things could I do to help my students comprehend the lesson? Is there a better way that this lesson could’ve been presented? How? 

Resources (you may list and describe any resources that will be used over the course of the lesson)

Dolan, R. P., & Hall, T. E., (2001). Universal Design for Learning: Implications for large-scale assessment. IDA Perspectives, 27(4), 22-25.

here is the week 1 assignment 1 documents recorrect it

Student outcomes.docx

) places you would recruit for a customer service assistant, writing homework help

1. Imagine you are the HR manager at a company. You need to hire three (3) new people. One employee will work at the front desk as a customer service assistant, and the other two (2) will work on the production line. Give at least five (5) places you would recruit for each position and explain why each place would be a viable option.

Write a one (1) page paper in which you:

  1. Select at least five (5) places you would recruit for a customer service assistant and at least five (5) places you would recruit for production line workers.
  2. Explain why each place you selected would be a viable option for recruiting employees.

2. Using your thesis statement and research, present the problem that needs to be addressed with your proposed solution. Note: Your solution, advantages, and challenges, will be in Parts 2 and 3.

Write a three to four (3-4) page paper in which you:

  1. Provide an appropriate title and an interesting opening paragraph to appeal to your stated audience (appeal with logic, ethics, or emotion). 
  2. Include a defensible, relevant thesis statement in the first paragraph. (Revised from Assignment 2)
  3. Describe the history and status of the issue and provide an overview of the problem(s) that need to be addressed. This should be one or two (1-2) paragraphs.
  4. Explain the first problem (economic, social, political, environmental, complexity, inequity, ethical/moral, etc.) and provide support for your claims. This should be one or two (1-2) paragraphs.
  5. Explain the second problem (economic, social, political, environmental, complexity, inequity, ethical/moral, etc.). and provide support for your claims. This should be one or two (1-2) paragraphs.
  6. Explain the third problem (economic, social, political, environmental, complexity, inequity, ethical/moral, etc.) and provide support for your claims. This should be one or two (1-2) paragraphs.
  7. Provide a concluding paragraph that summarizes the stated problems and promises a solution. 
  8. Develop a coherently structured paper with an introduction, body, and conclusion.
  9. Use effective transitional words, phrases, and sentences throughout the paper.
  10. Support claims with at least three (3) quality, relevant references.

Assignment: A Letter to the Board of Directors

For this Assignment, review the information in the scenario posted in the entry titled Week 3 Assignment. You will utilize the information in this week’s Resources and media to make a recommendation in regard to a capital expenditure.

The Assignment:

  • Part 1: Prepare a spreadsheet using Excel or a similar program in which you compute the following for each proposed location.
    • Accounting rate of return on investment
    • Payback
    • Net present value
    • Internal rate of return
  • Part 2: Utilizing Word or another word processing software program, prepare a written report for the Board of Directors. The intended audience is clear from the salutation and the language used throughout the report.
    • Include a detailed and thorough explanation of the conclusion you reached regarding the feasibility of each proposal supported by the calculations prepared in Part 1.
    • Explain at least five non-financial items (e.g., culture, language, etc.), which may impact the perceived desirability of each location.
    • Select the one location you recommend the Board invest in. Explain your rationale in precise and detailed language.

Zimmerman, J. L. (2011). Accounting for decision making and control (7th ed.). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.

  • Chapter 3, “Opportunity Cost of Capital and Capital Budgeting” (pp. 85-115)

Likierman, A. (2009, October). The five traps of performance measurement. Harvard Business Review, 87(10), 96–101.

Raynor, M. E., & Ahmed, M. (2013, April). Three rules for making a company truly great: A quest for reliable data on organizational excellence yields surprisingly simple guidelines. Harvard Business Review, 91(4), 108–117.

Laureate Education (Producer). (2012). Using Excel to make accounting computations [Video file]. Baltimore, MD: Author.

Intentional Business

Introduction:

Your new business has taken off and has become a great success.  Now it is time to market your product internationally; but first, you must learn everything you can about the economic development of your country to see if your product will make a nice profit in the  country of your choice.

The task:

•There is a lot to be done before you can take your business global!

•You will:

–choose a name for your company

–choose a product to market

–choose a country to market your new product

–find facts about your country to present to the board members of your business

–create a PowerPoint or video of your findings

•Country Facts

–Map

–Location

–Ethnic Groups

–Flag

–Type of Government

–President/Leader

–Population

–Land area

–Imports/Exports

–Weather

–Overall Life Expectancy

–Religions/Languages

–Natural Resources

–Labor Force

–Exchange Rate

–Inflation

•Cultural Practices

–Dos and Don’ts of business

–Holidays

–You may include anything else you feel relevant

•You will select a name for your business.

•You will develop a product to market

•You will choose a country to expand your business internationally

•You will conduct research on the Internet/magazine/encyclopedia to learn about your country

•You will present your findings in a Powerpoint/Impress file or video

Internet Resources:

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/

http://www.worldtravelguide.net/destinations

• http://www.infoplease.com/atlas/

http://www.factmonster.com/

http://travel.nationalgeographic.com/travel/countries/

Criteria

Advanced (4)

Proficient (3)

Needs Improvement (2)

Warning (1-0)

Score

Planning

Students went above and beyond what was expected in:

·Choice of materials

·Measurements

·Use of space

·Time Management

All components were well executed in:

·Choice of materials

·Measurements

·Use of space

·Time Management

Most components were well executed in:

·Choice of materials

·Measurements

·Use of space

·Time Management

Few components were met in:

·Choice of materials

·Measurements

·Use of space

·Time Management

Visual Appearance/Impact:

Exceeds all expectations. Stands out in:

·Neatness

·Logical Order

·Effective to purpose

Met all expectations.  Original design in:

·Neatness

·Logical Order

·Effective to purpose

Most components well executed in:

·Neatness

·Logical Order

·Effective to purpose

Expectations not met in:

·Neatness

·Logical Order

·Effective to purpose

Content:

Meets 90-100% of requirements:

·All required components used.

·Research (if required)

·Appropriate, accurate, and complete info

Met 80-89% of requirements in:

·All required components used.

·Research (if required)

·Appropriate, accurate, and complete info

Met 65-79% of requirements in:

·All required components used.

·Research (if required)

·Appropriate, accurate, and complete info

Below 65% of requirements met in:

·All required components used.

·Research (if required)

·Appropriate, accurate, and complete info