400 word essay response

Option #1

COERCION AND THE SEX INDUSTRY

Since it goes without saying that adult performers in the pornography industry almost always freely contract their services, why would some feminists be so anxious to claim that in this matter appearances are deceptive: that they have in fact been coerced? You often hear the same claim made about another arm of sex commerce: prostitution. What about that?

Option #2

Censorship

Ordinarily opponents of censorship direct their attention against the government patrolling political speech through its formidable legal apparatus. But, nowadays, there may be more to fear from individuals and informal groups patrolling unpopular opinions and punishing them without reliance on the police power of the state. What about this? A CEO or chairman of the board of a restaurant chain remarks in an interview that he/she thinks that gay marriage ought not be legal. Would it be morally permissible – not legally, which would be a different issue entirely – to organize a national boycott against that company? Or to bring pressure on the corporation to fire the CEO in favor of some person with ideas more congenial to protestors? What is there to be said on either side of this issue?

Choose only one option ******

5 Page Analytical Essay

In your five-page analytical essay, you will corroborate or refute a main argument of my book (see list below). State the argument clearly, using brief quotations if possible and page references from The Rise of Western Power.

Present solid arguments and evidence from at least four outside sources (the textbook does not count as an outside source). For your outside sources, use only scholarly works, such as articles from our library search engine, and books by university presses. Cite full bibliographical references (see Essay Mechanics below).

Fill out the and send to your TA for feedback and guidance the Analytical Essay Worksheet(You will receive one point toward your analytical essay score after you completely fill out the worksheet and can receive a second point for thoroughly revising it under the supervision of your teaching assistant.)

Consider showing drafts of your work to either your TA or me for comments and suggestions (drafts will be accepted only until the Friday before the final week of class).

How to Research Your Topic

Let’s say that you have decided to test the following contention of the book: “Fear of speculative philosophy stifled Islamic intellectual development after al-Ghazali.” Do a series of searches using Google, such as “stifled Islamic intellectual development al-Ghazali” and “Islamic philosophical stagnation al-Ghazali” and “philosophical stagnation al-Ghazali, etc.” In each case, be sure to click on the option “more” and select from the drop-down menu “books.” Take a close look at all of the entries that seem promising based on the brief summaries. Some books, for which there is only a “snippet view” will be worth checking out of the library. You will also have to check out of the library those books that Google Books does not allow you to view adequately. If any particular book is unavailable at our library, be sure to try I-Share (books usually arrive within a week).

Search similar phrases in our library search engine. You can undertake the same kind of searches for any of the major arguments of the textbook. Finding the appropriate phrases to search can be a little tricky, so be sure to play around with potential phrasing.

See also the Research Methods in History page developed by our librarians. For other library resources, click here.

Here are the contentions:

Major Contentions of The Rise of Western Power

The statements listed below are often paraphrases of statements in the textbook. Once you select the statement that interests you the most, you need to find the precise wording in the book itself, place it inside quotation marks, and to provide a corresponding page number reference in your analytical essay.

Prologue

Europeans’ willingness to learn from others and to try new things is the main cause of the West’s rise.

Chapter 1

Innovation—conceiving and bringing to life brilliant ideas—can largely explain the rise of civilization and the successes of human cultures.

Fear of speculative philosophy stifled Islamic intellectual development after al-Ghazali.

The greatest Chinese inventions transformed the world but not China.

India’s contribution to world history may almost have equaled China’s.

Only near-perfect geographical, cultural, and historical conditions made possible the explosion of innovation achieved in Europe.

Chapter 2

A social revolution in its own right, feudal society marked the triumph of social over state power.

Starting in medieval Europe, labor was more respected than in other world cultures.

Autonomy of cities and guilds increased freedom of talented people, which led to innovation.

Europeans could “act far more effectively, as members of a group,” than could other peoples of the world.

Neither the Chinese, nor the Indians, nor the Muslims, nor any other people systematically and extensively used labor-saving devices as much as the medieval and early modern Europeans.

Medieval Europe was perhaps the first society to build an economy on nonhuman power.

An autonomous culture of timekeeping controlled by individuals and authorities at every level of society emerged first and for a long time only in Europe.

While remaining socially inferior to men, women enjoyed more liberties in the West than in other cultures.

In Europe, women scholars, scientists, philosophers, and writers slowly grew more numerous beginning in the Middle Ages, whereas in China and the Islamic world the number declined after the ninth or tenth centuries.

No other civilization expressed itself in such radically different artistic styles during an extended period of time.

Chapter 3

Benedictine monks were the first elites in history who did not scorn manual labor.

Of the great world religions, none has more sophisticated philosophic underpinnings than Christianity.

Christianity experienced powerful movements for renewal throughout its history, far more frequently and consequentially than any other major religion.

The role of the law in the West distinguished it from all other civilizations.

Universities in medieval Europe enjoyed more autonomy and were thus intellectually more innovative than institutions of higher learning in other civilizations.

An entirely new—and uniquely Western—mechanism for solidifying kingship were the assemblies of estates, parliaments, diets, and other like bodies that emerged all over Europe in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.

The struggle between Church and State divided loyalties in Europe and pushed the West towards a separation of Church and State and in the long run encouraged the rise of constitutional forms of government.

A balanced political division of spiritual and secular forces never occurred in the other great civilizations.

Chapter 4

Of all the regions of the world during the medieval era, Europe witnessed the most ferocious combat.

The move toward infantry empowered the commons in Switzerland, England, and Holland by giving rise to representative institutions.

Europeans fought more fiercely and shed more blood than other peoples.

Non-Europeans tended to take prisoners in order the enslave them.

Castles created a unique balance of power in Europe by allowing small states to survive and therefore enabling political fragmentation.

European political fragmentation created hothouse conditions for innovation and almost constant warfare.

Chapter 5

In the Middle Ages, Europe was beginning to prove itself more capable of coordinating extensive and intensive activity within a politically and religiously fragmented context than was any other civilization.

Medieval and early modern Europeans were far more interested in the wider world than peoples of other major cultures.

The Crusades proved that Europe was more capable of coordinating large activities within a politically and religiously fragmented context than any other civilization

The Europeans’ discovery of the New World, their mercantile dynamism, business acumen, and extraordinary innovativeness made possible the emergence of a world economy in the sixteenth century.

Europeans exchanged ideas, traveled, shared inspirations, conversed widely, worked together, and forged collaborative bonds and institutions far more than peoples in other cultures in the early modern period.

It seems that curiosity about the entire wider world gradually became a peculiarly European phenomenon.

Chapter 6

Europe beginning in the early modern period was characterized by greater sociability and other cultures.

Only libraries in the Mediterranean world attained any sustained, massive scale. And only in Europe did such efforts reach a tipping point beyond which accumulation built upon accumulation.

People in Western societies came together more readily than in other societies to solve problems of all kinds.

Europeans displayed an insatiable appetite for the exotic and the novel.

The history of Western civilization is far better documented than that of any other culture.

Early modern Europeans access to a far greater range of printed matter than any other people in history thanks to the printing revolution.

Moveable-type printing transformed the world of learning and information—as well as of practice and action—more radically than any other.

Chapter 7

The Reformation empowered ordinary people more than any other social or political movement until modern times.

The Reformation’s most profound contribution to the development of Western civilization was not religious renewal, but the end of all central authority in Europe.

If political fragmentation helps account for the dynamism, innovativeness, transformative power, and material success of Europe before 1500, then it seems likely that the continuation of these features was made possible in part by the cultural and theological fragmentation brought about by the Reformation.

Chapter 8

Modern science emerged in early modern Europe from a high intensity of exploration and information sharing by a vast and interconnected intellectual community drawing on millennia of scientific understanding.

By the mid-1300s, intellectual ferment, rigorous scholarship, diversity of approaches, and a fever to explore distinguished Europe from all other possible rivals in the world.

The world’s other great civilizations lacked the freewheeling criticism and inquiry, the diversity of patrons and funding sources, and the avid thirst for knowledge and delight in novelty that characterized Europe in the late medieval and Renaissance periods.

Europeans from the high Middle Ages engaged in quantifying nearly every conceivable object. In no other societies had the power of numbers and measurement so pervaded the culture, so empowered artisans and professionals, and so increased efficiency and output.

No other culture matched the European intellectual ferment, institutionalized scholarly research, and profusion of means for sharing the fruits of research.

Muslim scholars and researchers from Persia to Iberia made almost numberless contributions to the advancement of science and learning until the twelfth century and then all but stopped.

Ibn al-Shatir and other Muslim thinkers helped a scientific renaissance in medieval Christendom but not in the Islamic world.

In early modern Europe, human knowledge expanded more systematically, intensively, and expansively than ever before in history.

Early modern Europe was a society dynamically questioning all things, systematizing all things, investigating all things, and therefore constantly advancing human knowledge and understanding.

There were scientific advancements in other civilizations, but only Europeans embraced it and heavily applied it to their civilization.

Nothing even remotely as comprehensive had ever appeared anywhere in the world as the encyclopedia edited by Denis Diderot (1751-1772) in 35 volumes with 71,818 articles—all alphabetized—and 3,129 illustrations.

People of the West in the 1700s—now meaning Europeans and Americans—grew more and more practically skilled and knowledgeable and therefore more powerful and ultimately more rich.

Chapter 9

Legal protections of property and business owners throughout Europe began to emerge in the Middle Ages.

The rise of the West stemmed in part from Europeans’ desire for comestible substances with no nutritional value—from pepper to tobacco.

Early modern Europeans had a willingness to try new things, bordering on recklessness.

From at least the sixteenth century, especially in northwestern Europe, people began to marry later than people in other cultures, roughly age 24 for women and 26 for men.

Sometimes a lack of resources can bring out the inventiveness of a people, however, just as an abundance of them can stifle innovation and impede economic progress.

The physical control of territory was clearly unnecessary to British prosperity. Presumably just opening connections and creating a network of close international relations between Britain and far-flung regions of the globe stimulated economic development.

Once one factors in the costs of administration and defense in the colonies borne by London, the net benefits to society as a whole were minuscule.

The range and accuracy of financial information available in Holland and Great Britain in the 1600s-1700s, along with much greater access to capital, made it difficult for financiers and entrepreneurs in other parts of the world to compete with the major banks and trading companies of Amsterdam and London.

Chapter 10

More than in any other region of the world, Europe enjoyed favorable circumstances for the emergence of liberty and political pluralism. Foremost and fundamentally, political fragmentation made it impossible for any ruler to dominate the continent.

More than in any other society of the world—then or before—individuals and collectives limited the power of princes.

Folk councils and local alliances gathered for decision-making throughout the world then and before, but none outside Europe evolved into enduring institutional forms.

The Islamic and Chinese societies were far more austere than European societies, with very few intermediary bodies standing between the ruler and the ruled.

The fragmentation of political authority in Europe made it impossible, at least by the standards of the great authoritarian empires like the Chinese and Ottoman, for rulers to impose intellectual and political conformity, to levy crushing taxes, or to stifle innovation.

St. Thomas Aquinas, the main pillar of Roman Catholic theological thought for hundreds of years, defended rebellion against tyranny. One can scarcely imagine such an intellectual position in the other great civilizations.

A series of political revolutions starting in the late Middle Ages established political participation, pluralism, and freedom as Western hallmarks.

Chapter 11

Whereas thousands of Europeans visited China for business, exploration, scientific and cultural pursuits, or missionary work in 1500-1800, only two or three hundred Chinese, mostly Christian converts, traveled to Europe, typically to Rome or Naples.

The development of patent law in Venice from 1474, apparently the first in world history, played an important role in stimulating inventiveness, by increasing the precision of technical description and preserving details of technological advances.

By the 1700s, knowledge was advancing faster than ever before in history in the West. Knowledge continued to advance in the other great civilizations but in more compartmentalized ways.

Europe’s brightest minds grew ever more practically oriented during the three centuries leading to the Enlightenment.

Educated and practically minded people advanced human knowledge and understanding in tandem across Europe yet nowhere so much as in Great Britain in the eighteenth century.

In eighteenth century Britain, for the first time in history, human beings were reaching a point of incessant, constantly accelerating, and mutually reinforcing scientific and technological advancement.

Ingenuity, cross-fertilization of scientific and technical expertise, favorable social and economic conditions, and dynamic entrepreneurship caused Britain’s industrial transformation rather than the juxtaposition of coal and iron ore deposits or the exploitation of colonies.

Chapter 12

The Homestead Act of 1862 devolved more land and ultimately more wealth to more ordinary people more quickly than ever before or since in human history.

The story of Western innovation and advancement has consisted in an ever-increasing mastery of knowledge and information. Europeans and then Americans and other peoples of the West acquired, stored, organized, shared, and exploited more knowledge about the world, nature, man, and abstract ideas than any other civilization or culture in history, vastly more. They used this mental prowess to gain mastery over the physical realm, to increase their wealth and power, and to raise the standard of living of most people in the West and then also in the wider world.

Europe’s colonies almost never paid for themselves, enriching only some individuals or companies, and did not magically give access to commodities unavailable through open trading.

The West’s raw physical power, apparent scientific mastery of nature, efficient and dynamic economy, and myriad technological advantages provoked a broader moral crisis involving aggressive ideologies justifying and lauding violence and struggle as central to human existence.

World War I was a philosophically absurd conflict.

The twentieth-century totalitarian dictatorships stemmed from rebellions against Western values: individual freedom, democracy, political and economic decentralization, the rule of law, and the free and open pursuit of every form of knowledge and self-expression.

Communism and Nazism exhibited striking similarities: charismatic leaders with absolute power advocating revolutionary transformation, fervent supporters ready to use violent repression, no civil rights, all-embracing political parties.

Fascist parties flourished best in those countries with the weakest institutions of self-government and civil society.

The West rose by liberating human creativity and initiative. The Communist and Nazi dictatorships, by contrast, sought to mobilize entire populations toward centrally determined plans and goals.

The USSR produced almost no goods or services salable on the international market. Yet its leadership was ideologically committed to competition for world preeminence. Thus, it became oriented above all toward military supremacy.

A Communist system could survive and prosper by imitating Western economic methods like China but not by adopting Western political practices and values like the USSR. In the long run, though, unconstrained contacts with non-Communist peoples and ways of life threatened the existence of Communism.

The peoples of the West were not inherently more creative, but they built up and lived in societies affording them far greater latitude for creativity—for trying new things, for innovating.

Chapter 14

The middle class was the primary agent of innovation in the modern West.

Americans created a society with the greatest grassroots social, political, and economic activism in history.

A genius of modern Western society lay in sanctioning the participation of tens of millions of people in resolving social problems and opening channels for the free exchange of ideas.

The greater participation of women in the social, political, economic, and cultural life of the West contributed to its success in modern times.

The average person in Western societies by the second half of the 20th century came to enjoy material amenities available only to the rich in previous times and places.

Europeans were the first peoples in history who rejected slavery root and branch for philosophical reasons.

The concept and enforcement of human rights was a Western innovation.

The ideal of universal brotherhood, which stemmed from a fusion of Christian faith and rational Enlightenment thinking, engendered in the West a commitment to rejecting every form of discrimination.

Openness, pluralism, a thirst for knowledge and sharing information, a commitment to rationality and the rule of law, respect for persons, and individual initiative are precisely the values that enabled the West to rise.

The European thirst for knowledge about humankind, attitude of self-criticism, and religious tolerance starting after the religious wars gave birth during the Enlightenment to a passionate promotion by some intellectuals of the equality of all persons and even peoples, no matter their religious, ethnic, gender, and racial distinctions.

Conclusions

The great civilizations flourished because they developed important skills or mastered powerful knowledge. They declined or entered stasis by failing to continue to adapt.

Societies that encourage to the greatest extent the pursuit of learning, information-sharing, human interaction, reflection, publication, scientific investigation, and scholarly inquiry will almost certainly achieve more innovation, a higher standard of living, and a greater concentration of power than similar societies that do not.

The rise of the West has been an information revolution coming to fuller and fuller fruition for one thousand years.

In no other civilization has the capacity for both cooperative undertakings and individual self-expression been more fully realized.

For a half-millennium after the year 1000, Europeans absorbed priceless treasures of learning and wisdom from the great Eurasian civilizations. Then for the next few hundred years, nearly all the world’s most significant technological innovations came from the West.

More than other civilizations, the West invested humans with rights and liberties, evolved an ethics of toleration, emphasized the rule of law, developed institutions of political participation and self-government, endowed individuals and communities with spiritual authority, created institutions and procedures for building up and sharing information, and a host of other means of empowerment.

Creating Goals for the Blueprint for Professional & Personal Growth Part

Write a detailed action plan for at least three goals. One of the goals should be the one you submitted for the Week 7 Shared Practice. These action plans should include the following:

  • Your three specific goals for professional and personal development with an explanation as to why you selected each goal. For each goal, be sure to provide concrete and specific examples of why the goal is important,; the extent to which each goal enables you to be an agent for positive social change; the personal or professional value you expect from achieving each goal, and how the goal relates to the resources you reviewed in the course until now.
  • At least two objectives for each goal you have identified. Provide a rationale that explains how your objectives support the goal.
  • At least two measurable milestones for each objective you identified as well as the time lines for ensuring progress for each milestone.
  • A reasonable time line for ensuring progress toward your stated goals, with an explanation as to why your time line is reasonable. (Hint: Revisit the interactive media piece Action Plan and use the “Action Plan Worksheet” to help you develop the action plan for each goal.)

I have attached the first goal that I submitted, of course it needs to be built upon (Per the instructions)

Annotated Bib.

Hello I have another job that goes with the other one you did for me its below it goes with the references page you did..The references page is great just need additional information to go with it ( The research Proposal you did I score an 85 the Media Ethics were left out if you wont to add that its fine if not its ok to ) I can send a sample page of what it suppose to look like . I can post job annotated bibliography and invite you.


5) Annotated Bibliography (at least FIVE sources) (10%)

The Annotated Bibliography serves as the foundation for the literature review in the FINAL Paper and should include at least of FIVE sources related to the student’s proposed topic related to the study of MEDIA ETHICS.

1. summary 2.eluauation 3.applicabiiity

Describe an e-commerce website features

Based on that post, After reviewing the Ecommerce Basics, choose an e-commerce website and describe the features of the site done well and features done poorly. Eight unique features of e-commerce technology, in your response. The eight unique features include ubiquity, global reach, universal standards, richness, interactivity, information density, personalization, and social technology.

1. For this week’s discussion board, I decided to use eBay.com, this website is quite popular all around the world, mostly, eBay is popular because of its auction bidding, also, it provides B2C, B2B, and C2C transactions as an E-Commerce Basics link described.

Moreover, if we compare this website the eight unique features of e-commerce technology from table 1.2, eBay is available everywhere as soon as the Internet is accessible, also eBay has its own application for mobile devices to make it easier to use. However, eBay is more developed and extended in North America areas, for example, international customers may not have more benefits as Americans have. These might include fast two-day shipping or delivery, or costs for shipping might be high. eBay is accessible all around the world, and people can order many things from eBay, on the other hand, for instance, some products, especially that are from the United States areas might not be available for shipment to Central Asia countries. Because of that many people from Central Asia might not know about eBay. I can say that eBay complies with universal standards, eBay is one of the major e-commerce companies all around the world, they keep their technological standards up to date.

Next, eBay is an online shopping platform that helps people to sell their stuff, many other companies can open their stores, individuals can also sell their stuff. And eBay only allows people to text messages within eBay’s platform and does not give an option for sharing videos or audios. Moving on, it somehow provides interactivity with the customers, after items are shipped most sellers provide a tracking number and with that number buyers can their order. Some major stores that operate under eBay might have a need to pay for inventory rent, tax, shipping cost, and etc. However, with the eBay, sellers get reduced costs because online stores save businesses from paying store rents, utilities, and etc. So, when it comes to customization, eBay provides that kind of feature for sellers to put into their stores. Next, eBay has its own social media, also it gives a feature for both sellers and buyers to share products through social networks.

2.I have chosen to look into Groupon.com as an e-commerce website to review for the following features:

  • Ubiquity – also referred to as m-commerce, ubiquity measures how accessible an e-commerce site is from mobile devices anytime. The Groupon app is available for both Apple and Android users, and since all the site is selling are discounts on other companies products, this site can be accessed and used at anytime of the day.
  • Global Reach – measures how well the company reaches countries around the globe. Groupon does a fairly well job at this by operating in 48 countries around the globe. For comparison purposes, Walmart operates in 27 countries, with physical locations, and 10 countries with e-commerce sites.
  • Universal Standards – with the Groupon successfully operating in 48 different countries it becomes readily apparent that they are operating with universal standards that can be easily managed and applied throughout different countries.
  • Richness – is the measure of the complexity of the message, or information, that is being presented. Groupon offers very high level of richness for the information that they are presenting, for example, they offer an overview of the product and company that produces the product, they explain any stipulations included in the offered deal, they will shoe deadlines for some of their deals, and they often have pictures of what is being offered.
  • Interactivity – is a measure of some form of communication between the customer and the company. Groupon bases some of its recommendations on the customers physical location, and what is near by.
  • Information Density – is a measure of not only the total amount data available, but also the quality and how much of that data is available to all participants. Groupon can only offer what the businesses are willing to post through the site. Therefore, both the consumer and seller are looking at the same information, and that would indicate that both the seller and customer would have the same information.
  • Personalization and customization – this is a measure of the extent that a service is able to be changed due to a customer’s wants or past behavior. Groupon does a great job with this aspect of e-commerce through the accounts that can be set up when searching for deals. Also, the customer can search for specific deals based on location, product, amount saved, and many other customizable settings.
  • Social Technology – this is content that has been generated by the user, and also information that is delivered through social media. Groupon has a social technology aspect with their site. Each deal has a review area for people that have gotten the deal in the past to review, make comments, and give suggestions to future potential deal getters.

3. E-commerce site: WarbyParker.com

Ubiquity – E-commerce technology is everywhere – work, home, mobile devices

Warby Parker is an online retailer which allows customers to purchase glasses and sunglasses. They also offer a mobile app which makes browsing and purchasing easy with a clean mobile interface.

Global Reach – technology reaches across national boundaries

WP is an American retailer and does not sell internationally.

Universal Standards – there is one set of technology standards

E-commerce lowers market entry costs. Majority of WP’s sales are done online in addition to offering brick and mortar stores.

Richness – video, audio, and text messages are possible

WP offers a rich customer experience by providing help options such as email, live chat, and a call/text option.

Interactivity – technology works through interaction with the user

Customers are able to virtually try on frames by uploading a picture to the site. Customers can also interact with employees through phone, email, or text for help.

Information Density – technology reduces information costs and raises quality

Personalization and Customization – personalization of marketing messages and customization of products and services based on individual characteristics

The site lacks on personalization based on past searches/previous purchases. It does offer customization that a customer can tailor to fit their needs after creating an account.

Social Technology – user generated content and social networks

WP is active on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube. All of these social networks are available on their site.

Give any two feedback with examples and thoughts. 5-7 full sentence is fine.

Multiple Intelligences

Watch the video Howard Gardner on Multiple Intelligences and read the section in the textbook on multiple intelligences (pp.30-31). Then write a paper that addresses the following:

  • Describe the nine types of intelligences Gardner recognizes.
  • Explain the importance of recognizing various types of intelligence in teaching and learning and analyze the potential risks to learning if these types of intelligences are neglected.
  • Assess the value of technology in supporting multiple intelligences in teaching and learning.

Your paper should be three to five pages in length (not including title and reference pages), should incorporate at least three scholarly sources (including the textbook), and should be formatted to APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.

How would the payment of dividends affect your company’s free cash flow, business and finance homework help

IMPORTANT NOTE: The thread discussion questions are an opportunity to go outside the box to demonstrate your analytical, integrative, problem- solving and critical thinking skills using the knowledge acquired in your readings. As a result, it is very important to pay close attention to the questions and be able to conduct your discussions in the context of your question.– Please keep this in mind when you complete this week’s assignments for me.

You must expand your ideas further. Analysis must be deep and very instructive.

ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS. Each question should be answered in at least 250 words. Quality of content and use of course and outside-of-course resources to support your position or analysis. When applicable, refer to your workplace using it and your own job as examples. The answers should not be in the form of essay, just straight to the point, in full sentences- Work must be original and cite your sources.

text book: https://vk.com/doc-77652506_340859945?dl=9e4506fed8154b2ff5

1. Your company which began with one of the selected projects has now been in operations for several years and consistently has shown a net profit each of those years.  While the number of shareholders has grown during the years your company has never paid any dividends.  The company treasurer would like to consider paying out dividends.   How would the payment of dividends affect your company’s free cash flow?   What concerns should you address related to future growth of your company if you pay out dividends to stockholders?

2. If you do decide to pay out dividends to stockholders you would also like to understand how investors might value the company based upon the dividend amounts.  Discuss the factors you would need to consider to estimate the company value using the dividend-discount model and assuming a constant dividend growth pattern.

1. Now your company wishes to sell more stock to raise capital for an expansion program.  If you company’s stock has a beta of 3.0 and other competitors in the same industry have an average beta of 1.75 what impact will that comparison have on the sale of a new issue of your company stock?  Describe the equation used to calculate beta and what actions could your company take to reduce the 3.0 beta.

2. You are still planning to sell more of your company stock to raise capital for the expansion program.  However, in your preparation for this stock sale you realize that your stock could be viewed as risky because of the possibility of crop failures and other natural disasters.  Discuss the differences between the various types of such risks and identify which risks investors can use diversification to reduce.

Final Portfolio Cover Page Draft

Cover Page

First, you need to have a cover page for the portfolio. This cover page should direct me as your reader and needs to have strong claims about what you’ve learned. That means I’m more interested in your analysis of your writing than just a summary report. I know the summary, but I want insight into your process and learning.

A few examples:

  • The cover page is your manifesto on “How should I write?” with analysis and examples to advance an argument about writing.
  • The cover page is a Hamiltonesque playlist that samples the best of your writing along with liner notes to explain how this argues what you’ve learned.
  • The cover page is a Rebecca Skloot imitation using annotations throughout to explain argumentative choices and analyze your writing in a particular piece.
  • The cover page is a metaphor (think “Bread” or “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas”) that gives advice to future 39A students about their own path through the course.

Use imitation, metaphor, or another tool or technique to get you into this and highlight what you learned. It’s a good idea to use the best practices you learned within the cover page and portfolio as well rather than just writing about them. The cover page must help guide the reader through the rest of the portfolio.

development planning

I need you to find me a scholarly publication that examines discusses an employee development plan or program, either a theoretical approach or results from a specific application. then I need you to send it to me first so that I approve it for you. after I approve it, I need you to critique the plan in 1 to 2 pgaes max. then I need you to write 2 pages with the my own development plan in bulleted list following the instructions file that I uploaded. if you need anything you can find it in the file. please I need the work to be uniqe.

This assignment has to be based on a Synagogue visit 3 pages long.

Week 6: Field Trip Report

Submit Assignment

  • Due Sunday by 11:59pm
  • Points 150
  • Submitting a file upload

For this class you are required to visit a religious site not your own. This could be a synagogue, a Christian church, a mosque, or a temple. The purpose of this trip is to report on what you saw -normally a religious service—and how it compares to your own religious upbringing and/or current practice.

The report should give a description of the site and a detailed summary of the religious service. As part of your assignment you should:

  • Describe what you observed. What were the material expressions of the service (statues, paintings, music, etc). Was there anything special going on that day (e.g., baptisms)? If there was a sermon, analyze it.
  • Provide a cultural and historical context for what you saw/experienced. What information from your textbook and research provides information about and contextualizes your experience? What are some of the historical roots of your experience? What parts seem more contemporary?
  • Conclude with your personal reaction to this experience and any questions you had about your experience.

This paper should be at least three (3) pages in length (1500 words) with proper APA formatting. This includes proper documentation. This is a formal academic paper so pay careful attention to the basics of writing a good English composition.

Don’t forget to submit your assignment.