Read the text and answer the questions

                                SIX

“SKEPTICS MAY OBJECT”

Planting a Naysayer in Your Text

THE WRITER Jane Tompkins describes a pattern that repeats itself whenever she writes a book or an article. For the first couple of weeks when she sits down to write, things go relatively well. But then in the middle of the night, several weeks into the writing process, she’ll wake up in a cold sweat, suddenly realizing that she has overlooked some major criticism that readers will surely make against her ideas. Her first thought, invariably, is that she will have to give up on the project, or that she will have to throw out what she’s written thus far and start over. Then she realizes that “this moment of doubt and panic is where my text really begins.” She then revises what she’s written in a way that incorporates the criticisms she’s anticipated, and her text becomes stronger and more interesting as a result.

This little story contains an important lesson for all writers, experienced and inexperienced alike. It suggests that even though most of us are upset at the idea of someone criticizing our work, such criticisms can actually work to our advantage. Although it’s naturally tempting to ignore criticism of our ideas, doing so may in fact be a big mistake, since our writing improves when we not only listen to these objections but give them an explicit hearing in our writing. Indeed, no single device more quickly improves a piece of writing than planting a naysayer in the text—saying, for example, that “although some readers may object” to something in your argument, you “would reply that __________.”

 

ANTICIPATE OBJECTIONS

But wait, you say. Isn’t the advice to incorporate critical views a recipe for destroying your credibility and undermining your argument? Here you are, trying to say something that will hold up, and we want you to tell readers all the negative things someone might say against you?

Exactly. We are urging you to tell readers what others might say against you, but our point is that doing so will actually enhance your credibility, not undermine it. As we argue throughout this book, writing well does not mean piling up uncontroversial truths in a vacuum; it means engaging others in a dialogue or debate—not only by opening your text with a summary of what others have said, as we suggest in Chapter 1, but also by imagining what others might say against your argument as it unfolds. Once you see writing as an act of entering a conversation, you should also see how opposing arguments can work for you rather than against you.

Paradoxically, the more you give voice to your critics’ objections, the more you tend to disarm those critics, especially if you go on to answer their objections in convincing ways. When you entertain a counterargument, you make a kind of preemptive strike, identifying problems with your argument before others can point them out for you. Furthermore, by entertaining counterarguments, you show respect for your readers, treating them not as gullible dupes who will believe anything you say but as independent, critical thinkers who are aware that your view is not the only one in town. In addition, by imagining what others might say against your claims, you come across as a generous, broad-minded person who is confident enough to open himself or herself to debate—like the writer in the figure on the following page.

Conversely, if you don’t entertain counterarguments, you may very likely come across as closed-minded, as if you think your beliefs are beyond dispute. You might also leave important questions hanging and concerns about your arguments unaddressed. Finally, if you fail to plant a naysayer in your text, you may find that you have very little to say. Our own students often say that entertaining counterarguments makes it easier to generate enough text to meet their assignment’s page-length requirements.

Planting a naysayer in your text is a relatively simple move, as you can see by looking at the following passage from a book by the writer Kim Chernin. Having spent some thirty pages complaining about the pressure on American women to be thin, Chernin inserts a whole chapter entitled “The Skeptic,” opening it as follows.

At this point I would like to raise certain objections that have been inspired by the skeptic in me. She feels that I have been ignoring some of the most common assumptions we all make about our bodies and these she wishes to see addressed. For example: “You know perfectly well,” she says to me, “that you feel better when you lose weight. You buy new clothes. You look at yourself more eagerly in the mirror. When someone invites you to a party you don’t stop and ask yourself whether you want to go. You feel sexier. Admit it. You like yourself better.”

KIM CHERNIN, The Obsession: Reflections on the Tyranny of Slenderness

 

  The remainder of Chernin’s chapter consists of her answers to this inner skeptic. In the face of the skeptic’s challenge to her book’s central premise (that the pressure to diet seriously harms women’s lives), Chernin responds neither by repressing the skeptic’s critical voice nor by giving in to it and relinquishing her own position. Instead, she embraces that voice and writes it into her text. Note too that instead of dispatching this naysaying voice quickly, as many of us would be tempted to do, Chernin stays with it and devotes a full paragraph to it. By borrowing some of Chernin’s language, we can come up with templates for entertaining virtually any objection.

TEMPLATES FOR ENTERTAINING OBJECTIONS

 *   At this point I would like to raise some objections that have been inspired by the skeptic in me. She feels that I have been ignoring the complexities of the situation.

  *  Yet some readers may challenge my view by insisting that __________.

     * Of course, many will probably disagree on the grounds that __________.

 Note that the objections in the above templates are attributed not to any specific person or group, but to “skeptics,” “readers,” or “many.” This kind of nameless, faceless naysayer is perfectly appropriate in many cases. But the ideas that motivate arguments and objections often can—and, where possible, should—be ascribed to a specific ideology or school of thought (for example, liberals, Christian fundamentalists, neopragmatists) rather than to anonymous anybodies. In other words, naysayers can be labeled, and you can add precision and impact to your writing by identifying what those labels are.

TEMPLATES FOR NAMING YOUR NAYSAYERS

 *   Here many feminists would probably object that gender does influence language.

    *But social Darwinists would certainly take issue with the argument that __________.

   * Biologists, of course, may want to question whether __________.     Nevertheless, both followers and critics of Malcolm X will probably suggest otherwise and argue that __________.

To be sure, some people dislike such labels and may even resent having labels applied to themselves. Some feel that labels put individuals in boxes, stereotyping them and glossing over what makes each of us unique. And it’s true that labels can be used inappropriately, in ways that ignore individuality and promote stereotypes. But since the life of ideas, including many of our most private thoughts, is conducted through groups and types rather than solitary individuals, intellectual exchange requires labels to give definition and serve as a convenient shorthand. If you categorically reject all labels, you give up an important resource and even mislead readers by presenting yourself and others as having no connection to anyone else. You also miss an opportunity to generalize the importance and relevance of your work to some larger conversation. When you attribute a position you are summarizing to liberalism, say, or historical materialism, your argument is no longer just about your own solitary views but about the intersection of broad ideas and habits of mind that many readers may already have a stake in.

The way to minimize the problem of stereotyping, then, is not to categorically reject labels but to refine and qualify their use, as the following templates demonstrate.

  *  Although not all Christians think alike, some of them will probably dispute my claim that __________.

  *  Non-native English speakers are so diverse in their views that it’s hard to generalize about them, but some are likely to object on the grounds that __________.

Another way to avoid needless stereotyping is to qualify labels carefully, substituting “pro bono lawyers” for “lawyers” in general, for example, or “quantitative sociologists” for all “social scientists,” and so on.

TEMPLATES FOR INTRODUCING OBJECTIONS INFORMALLY

Objections can also be introduced in more informal ways. For instance, you can frame objections in the form of questions.

    *But is my proposal realistic? What are the chances of its actually being adopted?

  *  Yet is it necessarily true that __________? Is it always the case, as I have been suggesting, that __________?

    *However, does the evidence I’ve cited prove conclusively that __________? You can also let your naysayer speak directly.

  *  “Impossible,” some will say. “You must be reading the research selectively.”

Moves like this allow you to cut directly to the skeptical voice itself, as the singer-songwriter Joe Jackson does in the following excerpt from a New York Times article complaining about the restrictions on public smoking in New York City bars and restaurants.

       I like a couple of cigarettes or a cigar with a drink, and like many other people, I only smoke in bars or nightclubs. Now I can’t go to any of my old haunts. Bartenders who were friends have turned into cops, forcing me outside to shiver in the cold and curse under my breath. . . . It’s no fun. Smokers are being demonized and victimized all out of proportion.

“Get over it,” say the anti-smokers. “You’re the minority.” I thought a great city was a place where all kinds of minorities could thrive. . . . “Smoking kills,” they say. As an occasional smoker with otherwise healthy habits, I’ll take my chances. Health consciousness is important, but so are pleasure and freedom of choice.

JOE JACKSON, “Want to Smoke? Go to Hamburg”

Jackson could have begun his second paragraph, See Chapter 5 for more

  in which he shifts from his own voice to that of

his imagined naysayer, more formally, as follows:

“Of course anti-smokers will object that since we smokers are in the minority, we should simply stop complaining and quietly make the sacrifices we are being called on to make for the larger social good.” Or “Anti-smokers might insist, however, that the smoking minority should submit to the nonsmoking majority.” We think, though, that Jackson gets the job done in a far more lively way with the more colloquial form he chooses. Borrowing a standard move of playwrights and novelists, Jackson cuts directly to the objectors’ view and then to his own retort, then back to the objectors’ view and then to his own retort again, thereby creating a kind of dialogue or miniature play within his own text. This move works well for Jackson, but only because he uses quotation marks and other voice markers to make clear at every point whose voice he is in.

REPRESENT OBJECTIONS FAIRLY

Once you’ve decided to introduce a differing or

opposing view into your writing, your work has

only just begun, since you still need to represent and explain that view with fairness and generosity. Although it is tempting to give opposing views short shrift, to hurry past them, or even to mock them, doing so is usually counterproductive. When writers make the best case they can for their critics (playing Peter Elbow’s “believing game”), they actually bolster their credibility with readers rather than undermine it. They make readers think, “This is a writer I can trust.”

We recommend, then, that whenever you entertain objections in your writing, you stay with them for several sentences or even paragraphs and take them as seriously as possible. We also recommend that you read your summary of opposing views with an outsider’s eye: put yourself in the shoes of someone who disagrees with you and ask if such a reader would recognize himself in your summary. Would that reader think you have taken his views seriously, as beliefs that reasonable people might hold? Or would he detect a mocking tone or an oversimplification of his views?

There will always be certain objections, to be sure, that you believe do not deserve to be represented, just as there will be objections that seem so unworthy of respect that they inspire ridicule. Remember, however, that if you do choose to mock a view that you oppose, you are likely to alienate those readers who don’t already agree with you—likely the very readers you want to reach. Also be aware that in mocking another’s view you may contribute to a hostile argument culture in which someone may ridicule you in return.

ANSWER OBJECTIONS

Do be aware that when you represent objections successfully, you still need to be able to answer those objections persuasively. After all, when you write objections into a text, you take the risk that readers will find those objections more convincing than the argument you yourself are advancing. In the editorial quoted above, for example, Joe Jackson takes the risk that readers will identify more with the anti-smoking view he summarizes than with the pro-smoking position he endorses.

This is precisely what Benjamin Franklin describes happening to himself in The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin (1793), when he recalls being converted to Deism (a religion that exalts reason over spirituality) by reading anti-Deist books. When he encountered the views of Deists being negatively summarized by authors who opposed them, Franklin explains, he ended up finding the Deist position more persuasive. To avoid having this kind of unintentional reverse effect on readers, you need to do your best to make sure that any counterarguments you address are not more convincing than your own claims. It is good to address objections in your writing, but only if you are able to overcome them.

One surefire way to fail to overcome an objection is to dismiss it out of hand—saying, for example, “That’s just wrong.” The difference between such a response (which offers no supporting reasons whatsoever) and the types of nuanced responses we’re promoting in this book is the difference between bullying your readers and genuinely persuading them.

 Often the best way to overcome an objection is

not to try to refute it completely but to agree with

part of it while challenging only the part you dispute. In other words, in answering counterarguments, it is often best to say “yes, but” or “yes and no,” treating the counterview as an opportunity to revise and refine your own position. Rather than build your argument into an impenetrable fortress, it is often best to make concessions while still standing your ground, as Kim Chernin does in the following response to the counterargument quoted above. While in the voice of the “skeptic,” Chernin writes: “Admit it. You like yourself better when you’ve lost weight.” In response, Chernin replies as follows.

Can I deny these things? No woman who has managed to lose weight would wish to argue with this. Most people feel better about themselves when they become slender. And yet, upon reflection, it seems to me that there is something precarious about this well-being. After all, 98 percent of people who lose weight gain it back. Indeed, 90 percent of those who have dieted “successfully” gain back more than they ever lost. Then, of course, we can no longer bear to look at ourselves in the mirror.

In this way, Chernin shows how you can use a counterview to improve and refine your overall argument by making a concession. Even as she concedes that losing weight feels good in the short run, she argues that in the long run the weight always returns, making the dieter far more miserable.

TEMPLATES FOR MAKING CONCESSIONS WHILE STILL STANDING YOUR GROUND

     *Although I grant that the book is poorly organized, I still maintain that it raises an important issue.

   * Proponents of X are right to argue that __________. But they exaggerate when they claim that __________.

    *While it is true that __________, it does not necessarily follow that __________.

   * On the one hand, I agree with X that __________. But on the other hand, I still insist that __________.

Templates like these show that answering naysayers’ objections does not have to be an all-or-nothing affair in which you either definitively refute your critics or they definitively refute you. Often the most productive engagements among differing views end with a combined vision that incorporates elements of each one.

But what if you’ve tried out all the possible answers you can think of to an objection you’ve anticipated and you still have a nagging feeling that the objection is more convincing than your argument itself? In that case, the best remedy is to go back and make some fundamental revisions to your argument, even reversing your position completely if need be. Although finding out late in the game that you aren’t fully convinced by your own argument can be painful, it can actually make your final text more intellectually honest, challenging, and serious. After all, the goal of writing is not to keep proving that whatever you initially said is right, but to stretch the limits of your thinking. So if planting a strong naysayer in your text forces you to change your mind, that’s not a bad thing. Some would argue that that is what the academic world is all about.

Questions: 

1. According to the authors, why is it important to plant a naysayer (incorporate a counterargument) in your own essay? You should provide at least two reasons, giving either direct quotes or paraphrased statement from the reading, and with specific page numbers.

2. Provide a brief summary of a naysayer perspective that you have discovered in your research and that you plan to incorporate into your research paper. Be sure to explain how and why this will be a counterargument.

aprn week 1

 

 you will be developing an Individual Professional Practice Document (IPPD) that will identify the regulations, requirements, certification, and rules of the state in which you plan to practice as an APRN upon graduation. As you complete certain modules, you will be asked to add to the IPPD, so it is essential that you keep it handy and edit along the way as you receive feedback from your faculty. Adding to the document with each assignment will produce a complete document by the end of the course. For this assignment, use the Individual Professional Practice Document (Word). Please only submit Week 1 information.

Identify the following:

  • Your name
  • APRN specialty foci
  • State you plan to practice as an APRN
  • The state’s definition of a Nurse Practitioner. See Appendix 1A in Buppert text.
  • The title allowed by that state. See Appendix 1B in Buppert text.

Using the Map feature on the NCSBN APRN Consensus Model link, write a summary of how the state you plan to practice in is meeting the components of the consensus model. Refer to the Nurse Practice Act for details related to the state.

If you live close to the border of another state and plan to practice or already practice in that state, it is strongly recommended that you have a separate document for that state as well. Not all states have the same regulations and requirements.

supply chain integration

 

upply chain integration is a major contributing factor to organizational success. The goal of supply chain integration is alignment within the supply chain. As a business leader, how can you achieve greater supply chain integration with suppliers and customers?

Amazon is a prime example of a company that has successfully managed its supply chain to achieve growth and profitability. Research the progression of Amazon’s supply chain integration. Write a 1,000-1,250-word paper that address the following questions:

  1. How do sales and operations planning in supply chain integration impact the company overall? What would Amazon’s medium- and long-term forecast inform the operations management department? How do logistics, transportation modes, and warehouse locations impact Amazon’s competitiveness?
  2. How does global sourcing and procurement impact the overall effectiveness of the supply chain? What are the benefits and challenges that have occurred when outsourcing logistic and other functions?
  3. How has Amazon successfully leveraged e-commerce strategies to promote supply chain integration and boost sales and growth for the organization? Which strategies have been particularly effective and why?
  4. Do you feel that Amazon sets an example for other companies to model regarding supply chain integration? Be sure to explain your rationale. 
  5. How would conscious capitalism and a Christian worldview impact Amazon’s supply chain integration?

Incorporate five to seven resources to support your paper.

Prepare this assignment according to the guidelines found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center. An abstract is not required.

Week 3: Assignment- Final Paper Outline

Prior to beginning work on this assignment, review all of the Week 3 Required Resources. Looking ahead at your Week 5 Final Paper, provide an outline highlighting the major points of your paper. In your outline, include all major ideas your Final Paper will address, with two to three sentence explanations for each. Annotated Bibliography for Final Paper is INCLUDED IN ATTACHMENTS!!!!!!!! 

In your paper, outline the following:

  • Provide your thesis statement, which identifies the topic of your paper.
  • Summarize your chosen topic.
    • Describe your topic including whether you are focusing on treatment or punishment.
    • Provide data to show how treatment or punishment has an impact on juveniles, the community, and the juvenile justice system.
    • List the cultural and diversity issues present in your chosen juvenile justice problem.
    • Describe how addressing your chosen perspective (treatment or punishment) contributes to the goal of a more just society.
  • Analyze the empirical research on your chosen topic.
    • You may use your Week 2 Annotated Bibliography to complete this section of the paper.

As with all well-researched and organized writing, your topic (first) sentences of your paragraphs contain the major ideas of your paper. Therefore, this outline can be used in the construction of the body of your Final Paper in Week 5. Please visit the Writing Center to access information on how to develop your Outlining (Links to an external site.).

The Final Paper Outline

project plan

Project Schedule
Due Week 10 and worth 150 points

This assignment consists of two (2) parts: a project schedule, and a written response. You must submit both parts as separate files for the completion of this assignment. Label each file name according to the part of the assignment it is written for.

Part A: Project Schedule
(Submit as one [1] Microsoft Project file)

  1. In Assignment 2, you developed a project plan. Now, using the information from your project proposal, create a multi-level work breakdown structure (WBS) and detailed project schedule.
    Your project must include the following criteria:

    • The project must consist of at least twenty-five (25) tasks. 
    • Each task must contain a start date, a finish date, and have main staffing and non-staffing resources assigned. 
    • Assume that your work activities are completed during normal weekdays (no weekend work) under normal conditions (8 hours per day). 
    • In terms of holidays, you can assume no work will be done the following days: New Year’s Day, President’s Day, Good Friday, Good Monday, Friday before Memorial Day, Memorial Day, the business day before Independence Day, Independence Day, the Friday before Labor Day, Labor Day, the day before Thanksgiving Day, Thanksgiving Day, Black Friday (day after Thanksgiving), the business day before Christmas, Christmas Day, the business day after Christmas Day, and New Year’s Eve.

Part B: Written Response
(Submit as a Microsoft Word file)

Write a one to two (1-2) page response in which you:

  1. Analyze your project in terms of project completion, critical path, and slack / float. Specifically, be sure to answer the following: 
    • When will the project be completed? 
    • What is the critical path for the project?
    • How much slack / float is in your project? What activities have the greatest slack / float?
  2. Summarize the recommendations or improvements you would make to your project schedule. Specifically, be sure to answer the following:
    • Identify the top three (3) activities that you believe could impact the project completion date.
    • What additional activities would you add to this project to make it more complete, from a project management viewpoint?
  3. Format your assignment according to the following formatting requirements:
    • Typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides.
    • Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student’s name, the professor’s name, the course title, and the date. The cover page is not included in the required page length.

Brainstrom

 

For this brainstorm, let’s aim to figure out a working thesis and really focus on finding quotes from the sources to support that thesis!  So, aim to pick a side– collectivism or individualism- and once you’ve gotten that, let’s aim to get ideas for logos (quotes from the text, Always Running, and at least two other sources from this unit) to back it up.  For the brainstorm itself, try choose a brainstorming technique that can help you accomplish this (maybe a T-Chart where you list examples from the sources of individualism on one side and on the other side examples of collectivism? For the quotes from the texts, maybe fold a sheet in four and put a source in each corner and add quotes to support the thesis from each text in its corner?  Up to you!)

First, brainstorm for 10 minutes to decide on your working thesis and/or possible quotes to support that thesis (Part 1). Then, answer the questions afterward to reflect on how your brainstorming went (Part 2).  Include both Part 1 (your brainstorm in a document or on a sheet of paper) and Part 2 (the answers to the questions about how your brainstorming went) in a file/files that you upload (a Word, PDF, or picture) or in the text box below.

Part 1- Brainstorming Techniques You Can Use to Brainstorm on a Sheet of Paper

Different people use different brainstorming techniques to help them think about their topic. People who learn visually will like to use charts or clusters, while people who think more analytically (they like to analyze things) may like to use bullets or cubing.  Look at the following brainstorming techniques, then try to use one(s) that you think will work well for you based on how you like to learn:

  1. Freewriting

Give yourself a specific amount of time (say 10 minutes or 15 minutes) and/or space (1 full page) to write down any thoughts or ideas that come to mind about your topic.  If you’re having trouble finding ideas that relate, you can write down ideas that might seem to oppose the topic.  After you’re done, look back to see if there are any connections between the ideas, main ideas, or just plain interesting ideas that you would like to continue thinking about or developing.  It can be a good idea to repeat the process again and further develop those ideas since you may want to use them for your paper.  Note- if it’s easier for you to talk through a subject, feel free to use this same process but do so out loud while also recording yourself.

  1. Invisible Writing

This is just like freewriting, but it takes the process a step further by making what you write “invisible.”   If you’re writing on a computer, turn off the computer screen while you work.  If you’re writing by hand, don’t pick up your pen or pencil while writing (write down every idea, no matter how strange or unrelated) and don’t look back at what you’ve already written down.

  1. Listing/Bulleting

Write down lists of words or phrases about an idea related to the overall topic. You can make a general list about any words/phrases that come to mind, a list of words/phrases to support a claim you want to make, or even a list of words/phrases opposing the claim you want to make.

  1. Clustering/Mapping/Webbing

Start with an idea in the center of the page, ideally the main topic, then “map” out related ideas coming off of it.  Keep mapping for a set amount of time, or until you can’t come up with anymore.  You can also work backwards and start off with ideas, then go back and map/connect them visually.

  1. Word Storm/Word Association

This is a bit like clustering/mapping/webbing, but instead of an idea you start off with one word.  Then, you “map” out related words that come to mind when you think of the first word, second word, etc.  This can be a good technique to use to develop the essay topic itself, and it may lead to interesting areas of it you might not have seen at first glance.

  1. Questioning

This technique is similar to that used by investigative reporters.  Basically, you want ask and answer the six main wh- questions: who, what, where, when, why, and how.  You can also ask yourself questions to describe a topic (eg. What is it? What caused it?  What is it like/unlike?  What do people say or think about it?).

  1. Cubing

This is a bit like questioning, but may be helpful for visual learners.  Draw a cube, then use the wh- questions listed above to investigate your topic.  Write and answer one question on each side of the cube.  Once you’re done, look at the at the different sides to see how they interact.  More specifically, see if any common themes or ideas repeat themselves.  Instead of using the wh- questions, you can also write the following info about your topic on each side: 1. Describe it, 2. Compare it, 3. Associate it, 4. Analyze it, 5. Apply it, and 6. Argue for and against it.

  1. Using Drawings, Shapes, or Charts

This is another technique that can help visual learners.  Draw or sketch out your topic.  What do you “see” when you think about it?  Similarly, you can do a freewrite in a shape that relates to the topic (for example, a cat if you’re writing about animals).  Charts, a likely familiar technique, can also be a good way to “see” connections between ideas.  You can use t-charts, graphs, or tables to explore connections between ideas.

Adapted from: The Everyday Writer and http://writingcenter.unc.edu/handouts/brainstorming/ and http://www.cccti.edu/WritingCenter/Documents/BrainstormingStrategies.pdf

Part 2- Reflection Questions to Answer after Brainstorming

  1. What brainstorming technique(s) did you use, and why did you think that technique would be helpful for you?
  2. How did you feel while brainstorming (anxious, nervous, free, happy, etc.) and why did you feel that way?
  3. Do you think brainstorming helped you think of new ideas for the essay? Or helped generally? Why/why not?

Network Infrastructure Week 3

 

These days, wireless networking is prevalent in the home, in the office, and even in public settings such as restaurants. This popularity can be attributed to ease of use and wireless protocol advancements. Devices such as tablet personal computers assume an Internet connection in their design. More and more televisions are including wireless capability. The ability to configure wireless connection devices is an essential skill for all entry-level network administrators.

Part 2 must consist of 4–6 pages that addresses the following:

  • Share whether you use Ethernet and/or Wi-Fi in your home. Describe your observations and thoughts about similarities and differences between Ethernet and wireless technologies.
  • Summarize the steps necessary to set up a wireless network.
  • Discuss challenges and concerns one might experience when using wireless. Share any personal experiences when using wireless in your home, at school, or in a coffee shop.
  • Research and describe the vulnerabilities of the WPA2 encryption method, and suggest countermeasures that could reduce the risk exposure to an organization currently using WPA2 on its wireless devices.
  • Summarize how the wireless developments over the last 5 years have impacted networking.
  • In addition to any Library or other resources, you must include at least two references to your LabSim content.

Be sure to reference all of your sources using APA style. Refer to the APA Style Guide found in the Library for further information.

Stress Management_Comprehensive Plan

The plan must include an account of insights and wisdom. A paper must contain the following: Each section should be numbered, be at least one paragraph, typed, spell checked, have proper grammar, and include the source(s) used.  It must be no less than one thousand words. Each paragraph topic must be no less than 200 words. You will be graded according to accuracy and thoroughness of answers. This project will not be complete without addressing the following:

  1. Describe your top stressor. Purpose is to identify the problem of the stressor.
  2. Identify triggers and describe how it affects your emotions, physical and spiritual reactions.  It is important to identify the underlying emotion associated with the problem to resolve it.  
  3. Discuss how you will maintain balance with your mind(emotions), body, and spirit. Consider adding or changing something to find balance. Include different relaxation techniques that you will incorporate for each stressor and why you have chosen these specific techniques.
  4. Discuss one current event on stress management.  I recommend searching news stories, periodicals, and Google to find current events. Make sure to include a website or upload article.
  5. After completing your stress management plan, reflect on how you feel about your strategies.  Comment on how this will satisfy both your practical needs in life and your personal well being.

Need help! ASAP

Need help with a final essay regarding. Wealth Inequality within the United States due by May 12th.

SL Project Research Paper Instructions 
Instructions: Please turn in a5-7page paper addressing the following four sections: Section One: Introduction • In reference to your scholarly research article on the history of your social issue, what is the history of this issue? When did this issue emerge? Why? What was the social context? • In reference to your scholarly research article on the history of your social issue and news research, what is the current state of this social issue locally, nationally, and globally? •Why did you select this social issue for this service learning project?•What service paradigm(s) is/are typically used to combat this social issue (e.g., charity, project, social change)? Why? Please explain using information from The Irony of Service by Keith Morton. 
Section Two: Scholarly Research • In reference to two of your scholarly research activity articles on your social issue, answer the following questions: (If you conducted the service equivalent assignment, locate two scholarly research articles on your social issue through the UNLV Library)or What did researchers want to find out and why?(Research Problem)or How did they go about finding this information?(Methods)or What did they learn?(Findings)or What are the implications of the findings for your social problem? Why does it matter? (Discussion)or What did you did you learn from reading this article in relation to your social issue? Please explain.
Section Three: News Research • Track your social issue in the news by locating recent local, national, and global news articles on your social issue each month for three consecutive months (i.e., 9 total news articles) and reference your news articles. Use the Media Bias Chart (https://www.adfontesmedia.com/)to examine the bias and reliability of each news outlet and answer the following questions : or What were three common themes in relation to your social issue between the local, national, and global news articles ? or Compare and contrast how these themes looked different from local, national, and global perspectives. or Using the Media Bias Chart, what conclusions would you draw about the bias and reliability of the local, national, and global news perspectives? Or Remark on your observations of how logical fallacies were made across the local, national, and global perspectives.
Section Four: Service Learning Reflection • If you completed the “SL Scholarly Activity” assignment, reflect on reading about your social issue in the news and in a scholarly research article each month. How has this reading and this culminating service learning project affected your (1) understanding of this social issue and (2) your intentions to engage more broadly with social issues.
Your paper will include these headings (corresponding with the grading rubric):
Introduction
Scholarly Research
News Research 
References

speech outline informative speech

  

Informative Speech (Online)

Description:

Develop a speech to inform your audience based on one of the following categories: 

· Report (inform) on a famous person (a past or present person).

· Report (inform) on famous organization.

· Provide information on a famous event (be specific).

In preparing your speech, select an appropriate introduction and conclusion. 

Your speech should demonstrate clear organization. 

The organizational format should be designed to increase audience interest and retention of the message. 

The speaker must select and incorporate a visual aid that visually enhances and supports their presentation (25 points). 

Pay careful attention to see that the topic is adapted to the audience and the occasion. The topic should be well researched as evidenced by strong supporting materials.

Remember to choose a topic that you can present in 4 to 6 minutes

Informative Speech Guidelines:

Submit a word processed outline (Rich Text Format (.rtf) or a current version of Microsoft Word (.doc or .docx)) with a bibliography or reference section (See specific details listed below)

Time limit – 4 to 6 minutes.

You may only use 1 – 3X5 index card to assist you during the presentation

Incorporate a visual aid(s) into your presentation* (EXCEPTION – PLEASE DO NOT INCORPORATE VIDEO CLIPS (e.g., YouTube) INTO YOUR PRESENTATIONS)

Be ready to speak – no late speeches

This project is worth 150 points. (See the attached detailed evaluation form I will use to grade your speech)

Speech evaluation = 100 points

Typed final outline = 25 points

Visual Aid = 25 points

* You may use Microsoft PowerPoint for extra credit. (See specific details listed below)

PowerPoint for Extra Credit: (20 points)

Create a Microsoft PowerPoint presentation to support your speech. 

Clearly identify your speech title and your name. 

Your slides may include text, photos, graphs, or tables, etc., for support. 

Incorporate/use your PowerPoint presentation in your speech.

Submit your PowerPoint presentation to the ASSIGNMENTS FOLDER by June 26, 2021. 

To receive extra credit you must incorporate PowerPoint presentation in your speech and upload your PowerPoint file to ecampus.

PowerPoint presentations must be submitted in the following formats: Microsoft PowerPoint (.ppt) or (.pptx).

Speech outline – Your outline should contain the following information:

A clearly identified speech title and your name.

An introduction (Use complete sentences) 

A body – 2 to 3 main points (include relevant definitions, examples and other forms of support) (Use complete sentences) 

A conclusion (Use complete sentences) 

Use a minimum of three (3) different types of complete references or citations for the bibliography or reference section using either an APA or MLA format. (See Purdue University online writing lab)

For additional help with topic research and library resources (See Research guides and help).

All text should be 12 point font and written using a standard font.

Margins should be one inch on all sides. 

Submit to the ASSIGNMENTS FOLDER by June 26, 2021. (Outlines must be in one of the following formats: Rich Text Format (.rtf) or a current version of Microsoft Word (.doc or .docx).

Your outline will be graded according to the following standards:

Outline divided into the three major parts – introduction, body, and conclusion. 

Introduction includes: General purpose, specific purpose, thesis statement, preview statement, attention-getter.  

Main points are corroborated by adequate, relevant and interesting support materials. 

Conclusion includes: A summary of main points and closing remarks. 

Transitions are used between the major parts of the speech. 

Outline indicates a logical thought pattern. 

Bibliography contains at least three (3) different types of acceptable sources (Don’t use Wikipedia as a reference). 

Use complete references or citations for the bibliography or reference section using either an APA or MLA format (See Purdue University online writing lab).

Spelling, grammatical, capitalization, and punctuation errors/typos.

Submitting Speech Presentations:

Record and upload your speech to YouTube (YouTube) and send me the file link so I can find and view your speech (Submit to the ASSIGNMENTS folder).

Submit your YouTube file link to the ASSIGNMENTS FOLDER by June 26, 2021.

Make sure that you have access to the proper recording and/or computer equipment. 

An audience of at least 3 adults (18 years or older) must be present for each speech, so plan ahead. Audience members can consist of family members, neighbors, friends, classmates or co-workers, you decide. 

A speaker must visible in the recording to receive any class points, a grade of 0 will be recorded for all parts (speech, outline, & visual aid) of this speaking activity. 

An audience of at least three (3) adults must be present throughout the presentation.

Your recordings must show both the speaker and an audience of at least 3 adults periodically during the speech (Failure to meet this requirement will result in a 35% grade reduction for that presentation). 

The visual aid you have selected must appear in the recording and be incorporated into the speech, if I don’t see your visual aid in the recording; you will not receive credit (25 points). 

To receive extra credit, your PowerPoint presentation must be incorporated into your speech.. If you are using PowerPoint submit to the ASSIGNMENTS FOLDER.

Remember if I cannot view your presentation, I cannot grade your presentation and you will receive a “0”. 

Speeches are timed and research is required. 

You will also need to include your presentation outlines when you submit your speeches. Submit your speech outlines to the ASSIGNMENTS FOLDER. If you are using PowerPoint submit to the ASSIGNMENTS FOLDER. 

To find out more information concerning YouTube go to YouTube support.

You will also need to include your required presentation outlines and visual aids when you submit your speeches. 

Submit your speech outlines to the ASSIGNMENTS FOLDER by June 26, 2021. 

If you are using PowerPoint submit to the ASSIGNMENTS FOLDER by June 26, 2021.

Important Activity Information:

Important: The informative and persuasive speeches are required for this course.

Important: “Failure to present either the informative or persuasive speech will result in a reduction of one letter grade from your final overall course grade.”

Important: A speech must presented to receive any class points. Partial points or credit will not be given if a speech is not presented, a grade of 0 will be recorded for all parts (speech, outline & visual aid) of an incomplete speech.

If I cannot view your presentation, I cannot grade your presentation and you will receive a “0”.

See the sample videos located in the EXTERNAL LINKS folder for further guidance and information.