Read articles, write an essay to answer the questions. Must A

Step 1: Please quickly read this article: https://cyberbullying.org/bullying-is-not-just-a-kid-problem (Links to an external site.)

Step 2: Then quickly review these two documents:

https://cyberbullying.org/preventing-cyberbullying-adults (Links to an external site.)

https://cyberbullying.org/response_cyberbullying_adults (Links to an external site.)

Step 3: Discuss the following:

  • Have you or has someone you know ever been the victim of cyberbullying? You can choose to describe an example from something you heard about/read about in the news (i.e. a celebrity, etc.). If you go this route, please provide a link to the story so that we can have the background information.
  • Why do you think cyberbullying so powerful? Or not? Please “back up” your answers – Make your argument.
  • Do you believe, cyberbullying can, and should, be stopped? If yes, how? If no, why? Explain.
  • What are your thoughts on the “preventing” and “response” tips provided? Do these seem plausible to follow? Why or why not?
  • Please feel free to also add articles, examples, videos, etc. about the topic that you find compelling. You may provide links at the end of your response. (optional)

Responses (as always) should be:

  • about 1 to 2-pages, single-spaced (quality is more important than quantity), PDF or Word Document submission
  • submission is clearly written and well organized
  • Times New Roman font (12 or 11), with 1-inch margins all around
  • no header is necessary (i.e. name, challenge #, class, etc.) since Canvas records all of this for you
  • link to the story (if using a mediated example for your reflection)
  • link to other examples (optional)
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a critical written review of an articles+factors consider when designing an OD intervention

organizational development assignmnet, 3000 words limit.

Section a)

Please provide a critical written review of one of the following articles:

Baughen, A., Oswick, C. & Oswick, R. (2020) Rethinking ‘Organizational Effectiveness’ as a Core Premise of Organization Development: Beyond Narrow Organizational Interests and Towards Wider Soulful Interventions. Journal of Change Management. Online DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/14697017.2020.1746684

Maes, J. D. & Weldy, T. G. (2018) Building effective virtual teams: Expanding OD research and practice. Organization Development Journal, 36(3), 83-90. Retrieved from https://manchester.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/2099386470?accountid=12253

Maxton PJ. (2020) Embracing Both Diagnostic and Dialogic Forms of Organization Development in Order to Exploit and Explore. The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science. Online: doi:10.1177/0021886320930020

Shevat A. (2020) Developing More Value Flexibility for Organisation Development in India: Lessons Learnt from Different Value Orientations Across the World. NHRD Network Journal, 13(3):352-358. doi:10.1177/2631454120951883

(2000 words)

Section b)

Critically discuss the factors you would consider when designing an OD intervention in a national context with which you are familiar.

(1000 words)

The detail of the assignmeny please see the attanchment. Also please use Harvard format for the reference.

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Art class writing paper

Format:

5-6 double-spaced pages of text, word count at least 1750. 12 point font, times new roman, images and bibliography should be in excess of the 5-6 pages.

Purpose:

The purpose of the assignment is to train your observation, research, and writing skills. You will learn how to look at and describe a work of art, paying attention to its different formal features. You will learn how to distinguish peer-reviewed sources, and how to properly cite them in your work through footnotes and a bibliography. You will hone your writing skills, which will serve you in all your humanities and social sciences courses at the UO, and in your professional lives once you finish your degree.

Task:

You will write a paper on ONE work of Euro-Western art (European or North American) completed between 1600 and 1980 of your choosing from the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s collection, accessible through the Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History, https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ (Links to an external site.). Your chosen work should NOT be one that is illustrated in the textbook or discussed in class, but it should be associated with one of the art movements covered in class. The Heilbrunn Timeline allows you to narrow your search according to time period and geographic region. If you would like to write your paper on a work of art that is not in the Met’s collection, you are welcome to, but please get your GE’s approval before you begin to make sure the work falls within the parameters of the class.

Your essay will consist of two primary components, (1) a visual analysis and (2) a research dimension.

In the first half of your essay (2-3 pages), you should describe and analyze the formal and technical aspects of your chosen work. You should spend at least one hour looking at your work and writing about what you see. The formal analysis section of your paper is due Tuesday October 20, 11:59pm.

In the second half of your essay (2-3 pages) you should situate your work within its historical and critical context, drawing on the lectures and readings, and comparing your work to one or two other works from the same movement or a related movement discussed in class. You must use at least three scholarly sources in your essay, which may include readings from class, excluding the textbook. Internet sources must be from peer-reviewed journals, i.e. articles from academic databases, such as JSTOR, etc. If you are working remotely, you will use mainly online journal articles or encyclopedias (e.g. Oxford Art Online), which are available through the UO Library Catalogue. Some books are also available online in the UO Library system. If you will be on campus or in Eugene and can visit the library, you are also encouraged to use print books that are published by university presses, or academic presses such as Ashgate, Zone Books, Reaktion, Routledge, etc. You will go over how to find appropriate sources in Week 5 Section. The complete essay (both visual analysis and research components) is due Tuesday December 1 at 11:59pm.

Essay Grading Rubric:

The following three categories are equally weighted

Organization: Your essay should have an introduction and conclusion. The body of your essay should have a formal analysis and research component. You should have a complete bibliography of your sources and proper footnotes (see guide in expanded rubric on canvas, which will be covered in Week 5 Section), appendix of images, and you should proofread and spellcheck your work. Your essay should be 5-6 pages, double spaced in 12 pt times new roman font, without footnotes, bibliography, or images.

Visual Analysis: You should provide a complete formal description of your work of art in the body of your essay. Pay attention to line, color, form, and iconography.

Research: You must consult at least 3 peer-reviewed sources and are also encouraged to use primary sources to develop your discussion of the work in its historical context. Your sources may include assigned readings from class, excluding the textbook. Internet sources are not acceptable unless they are peer-reviewed journals, i.e. articles from JSTOR, etc. that you source from the UO library catalogue. Books should be published by university presses, or academic presses such as Ashgate, Zone Books, Reaktion, Routledge, etc.

You must cite all ideas that are not your own, even if you do not directly quote a source. My preference is that you use Chicago style for your references. If you are not familiar with this style, please consult: http://researchguides.uoregon.edu/citing-plagiarism/chicagoLinks to an external site.Links to an external site.

Plagiarism is a serious academic offence and all accounts of plagiarism will be reported to the Office of Student Conduct and Community Standards. If in doubt, always cite it. To ascertain that you are not plagiarizing in your written work, please consult: http://researchguides.uoregon.edu/citing-plagiarismLinks to an external site.Links to an external site.

Late Policy for Essay: The penalty for late research papers is a 5% deduction per day, unless you have a medical or personal emergency, or unforeseeable circumstances related to COVID-19 that prevent you from submitting your work on time.

Basic Guide to Footnoting

General points:

  • The number for a footnote should go outside the final punctuation mark following the relevant sentence.
  • Every footnote should be given its own number in sequence. Do not repeat numbers to refer to a previously cited reference. There is another way to indicate that (see below).
  • Footnotes go in the footnote section of the page (not the footer). Most word processors will arrange them automatically if you click “insert footnote.” Do not try to enter them manually in the footer. It messes up the page layout.
  • Footnotes should be single-spaced. Do not add indentations or extra lines between notes.

When to insert a footnote:

  • When you paraphrase an idea.
  • When you reference someone else’s scholarly argument.
  • When you quote directly from a source.
  • When you want to suggest further reading and additional references to your reader. For this you would preface your note with “See”.
  • When you have something additional to say that doesn’t relate directly to your argument; namely, a side point that might be relevant to some readers but isn’t essential to your topic.
  • When you want to provide the longer context of a quote. This could be giving the original language, the full sentence if you have excerpted a small piece, or even the full document if it is appropriate.

How to do a footnote that cites a specific scholarly source:

  • Book: First and Last Name of Author/s, Book Title in Italics: Including Long Winded Subtitle, First and Last Name of translator followed by , trans. if it’s a translation (City of Publication: Name of Publishing Company, Date of Publication), pages.

e.g. Jean-Claude Schmitt, The Holy Greyhound: Guinefort, Healer of Children since the Thirteenth Century, Martin Thom, trans. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983), 5–35.

  • Article in a Journal: First and Last Name of Author/s, “Article Title in Quotation Marks: Including Long Winded Subtitle,” Journal Title in Italics, volume: issue (Year of Publication), pages.

e.g. Giles Constable, “Medieval Latin Metaphors,” Viator 38:2 (2007), 1–20.

  • Article in an Edited Book: First and Last Name of Author/s, Book Title in Italics: Including Long Winded Subtitle, First and Last Name of translator followed by , trans. if it’s a translation (City of Publication: Name of Publishing Company, Date of Publication), pages.

e.g. Sebastián Salvadó, “Templar Liturgy and Devotion in the Crown of Aragon,” On the Margins of Crusading: The Military Orders, the Papacy and the Christian World, Helen Nicholson, ed. (Surrey: Ashgate, 2011), 31–44.

If you want to cite multiple things:

  • You just include all the references in the same footnote, separating each reference with a semi-colon and then end the whole long thing with a period.

e.g. See Stephen White, Custom, Kinship, and Gifts to Saints: The laudatio parentum in Western France, 1050–1150(Chapel Hill: UNC Press, 1988); Barbara Rosenwein, To Be the Neighbor of Saint Peter: The Social Meaning of Cluny’s Property, 909–1049 (Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press, 1989); Constance B. Bouchard, Holy Entrepreneurs: Cistercians, Knights, and Economic Exchange in Twelfth-Century Burgundy (Ithaca: Cornell, Univ. Press, 1991); Sharon Farmer, Communities of Saint Martin: Legend and Ritual in Medieval Tours (Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press, 1991).

Notes on quotes:

  • In general, you should quote primary sources directly. Secondary sources should not be quoted directly but instead synthesized into your own words. Both should still be cited, though.
  • Quote directly from a secondary source only when your writing is critiquing the particular language, i.e. argument, of the author.
  • Paraphrasing another author’s points does not require quotation marks but does require citation.
  • You may summarize points from primary source documents without quotation marks but they should still be cited.
  • There is almost no reason to ever quote from secondary sources such as a survey, textbook, encyclopedia, dictionary, etc. These sources summarize the secondary sources and do not present a scholarly argument.
  • When a quote is more than three lines, make it into a block quote. Block quotes do not have quotation marks, they are indented on both left and right, and they are single-spaced, even if the paper is double-spaced.
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Water management: Strategies for arid environments (Colorado River Valley & Wadi Hanifa Wetlands)

( the research is due in 9 of December ) but i need a brief information about this by two days then I will extend the time )

I need a research about Water management: Strategies for arid environments (Colorado River Valley & Wadi Hanifa Wetlands).

The research should be comparative between the two city through a scale of a watershed or management of water. Draw or analysis or diagram how the pattern affect these two places differentially.

i am going to upload one pdf that could help about Colorado and this link you can find more then 8 publication and images about wadi hanifa welands. (https://archnet.org/sites/4458)

*Requirements

Research paper with primary source research

    • 10-15-page paper with images, ~3,500-word text w/ attribution of sources and images.
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spss data analysis

this questions must use spss version 24 and below, dont use version 25 it has very poor graphics. if possible use, version 21 it has the best graphics.there are two zip files in the attachments. each of them has a question which needs two way anova. however, there is no need of post hock tests. i need tables for the means and as well i will attach a sample graph which is needed for the interactions alongside the other tables of the ANOVA. there is also an attached sample which you need to refer on the results section when reporting the analysis. for the screenshot attached, make sure you include that interaction graph in the analysis of both questions. please do each question in a separate word document. thanks

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Students will prepare a critical discussion of how occupational therapists can contribute to improving the health and well-being of individuals with complex disabilities or long-term conditions.

This assessment component assesses learning outcomes 1, 2 and 5 for this module.

Students will prepare a critical discussion of how occupational therapists can contribute to improving the health and well-being of individuals with complex disabilities or long-term conditions. Students should draw upon a current health or social care issue which may have been discussed/publicised in the media, or perhaps was experienced first-hand during placement. This may be an area of health/social care in which Occupational Therapists are not currently working.

Your assignment should include an introduction, main body, and conclusion. Maximum 2500 words. Please ensure that you include an assignment cover sheet.

Note:

  • You must use evidence and key texts in your assignment.
  • You should ensure that you look at the guidance for the submission, the learning outcomes for the module and the marking rubric used to award the overall mark for your submission.
  • You MUST use the university approved system for references.

Learning Outcomes

1. Integrate and evaluate experiences from practice placement with respect to current policy and priorities in health and social care.

2. Apply professional reasoning skills to complex case scenarios in Occupational Therapy practice.

5.Evaluate the impact of long-term conditions on health and social care.

Presentation: Each manuscript must be word processed in the following format:

  • Font size 12-point, Double line spaced
  • Arial or Times New Roman font
  • Margins 2.5 cm left and right and top and bottom
  • All pages must be numbered (sequentially) and contain your student ID number
  • Harvard style of referencing
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students will map a landscape of two social documentaries/analyze/landscape paper(1300-1500words)

Summary: students will map a landscape of two social documentaries studied in class.

Hale County This Morning, This Evening

Plastic Wars (PBS Frontline)

You must analyze your two films in the following ways:

1.SYNOPSIS of EACH FILM: Provide a brief (1 paragraph) synopsis of each film. Answer these questions: What is this film about? What characters do we meet? How does the film start and what happens at the end? What are the primary themes present in each film?

2.CINEMATIC ANALYSIS: Analyze and compare/contrast each film in terms of its cinematic approach, being sure to address how these approaches support the film’s themes and impact the viewer’s experience. Remember: Each cinematic choice made by the director has a purpose. Your job is to describe the specific technique used and then analyze the purpose behind that creative decision and how it affects the viewer. Include an analysis of the following:

a.What type of documentary is this and why? (refer to the five types of documentaries learned in class)

“poetic, expository, reflexive, observational, performative, and participatory”

b.What is at stake in this film? What is at risk for the characters? How does this make the viewer invested in the film?

c.Describe the filmmaker’s use of (3) of the following cinematic elements and what impact they wanted that choice to have on the viewer:

1.Cinematography

2.Editing

3.Music

4.Graphics

5.Archival footage

6.Motion Graphics

Remember to GIVE SPECIFICS. For example: “The director composed many of her shots using a wide-angle frame which situated the protagonist within an empty frame, emphasizing the loneliness of the scene.”

3.SOCIAL IMPACT: Write one paragraph on each film’s social impact and how it was achieved. Use the Four Impact Dynamics as a way to frame and describe the impact or outcomes.

4.MAKE A CASE: In your opinion, which film was the most effective? Give specifics as to why.

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Literary Comparative Essay

Your paper ought to feature a clear and concise thesis that you can argue for 5 or more pages.

  • Select 2 brief (but coherent) passage, each around 10 to 15 lines.

The time periods of the main texts in this course are Archaic Greece, Classical Greece, Ancient Rome, Medieval Europe, and Renaissance Europe.

You may, however, also write about more modern texts that were included on Blackboard during our various “legacy” lectures.

This thesis and every subsequent point you make must be supported by evidence from the text. You ought not to simply quote the text but work with it. Explain how the use of figures of speech, word choice, imagery, etc. contributes to the comparative argument you are trying to make.

You should aim for an integrated comparison. Don’t simply list features in Text A in one paragraph, followed by features in Text B in another paragraph. Instead, the best essays will actively compare both texts throughout each body paragraph.

I am interested in what you have to say through your comparison of the two texts. In other words, simply comparing the two texts is not enough. Those comparisons should create an insight about Western culture.

You may use outside evidence to help you make your point in this essay. This outside evidence is not necessary.

Important:

One text come from Dante Inferno, cantos 1-34

One text come from Legacies of Dante’s Inferno

Legacies of Dante’s Inferno links: http://www.columbia.edu/itc/history/winter/w3206/e…

https://learn-us-east-1-prod-fleet01-xythos.conten…


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Oraganizational behavior

1- Answering the questions

2- I want to one response for each one of the four of the statement. ( you will find in the attachment below)

Leadership is both process and property. As a process, leadership is the use of noncoercive influence to direct and coordinate the activities of group members to meet a goal. As a property, leadership is the set of characteristics attributed to those who are perceived to use such influence successfully. Influence is the ability to affect the perceptions, beliefs, attitudes, motivation, and/or behaviors of others.

Leadership and management IS not the same, although, they are similar. Individuals may be placed in a leadership role by an organization due to longevity, education, or other reasons, but it is important to note that the job position does not necessarily guarantee that the individual is a leader. An individual may be a leader and manager or just a manager or they can be neither. Organizations need both, managers and leaders in order to be effective and productive.

  1. Review table 11.1—Discuss the difference between a leader and a manager.
  1. In your opinion, are leaders born and/or can individuals be trained to be leaders? Is there a difference? Explain
  1. What is the difference between the Michigan study, the Ohio State study, Leadership Grid, and the LPC Theory?
  1. Who is Fred Friedler? What did he discover/identify/explain?
  1. What is the difference between the LPC Theory, Path-Goal Theory of Leadership, and Expectancy Theory? (The Expectancy Theory was discussed in chapter 5).
  1. Who is Victor Vroom? What did he discover/identify/explain?
  1. What is the difference between the Leader-Member Exchange Model, the Hersey and Blanchard Model?
  1. Define and provide an example of transformational leadership, transactional leadership, charismatic leadership.
  1. Are there differences in leadership styles for men and women? Explain. Is one gender better in leadership than the other? Explain
  2. Describe and discuss the difference between strategic leadership, ethical leadership, and virtual leadership.

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Environmental Issue Paper

Both outline of paper and final paper.

Pretend you work for a government agency and your boss has asked you to prepare a report about a pressing environmental issue. You will choose an environmental issue from a set provided on Canvas (and listed at the bottom of this document). You will write a three-part paper based on this issue. Part I , present the environmental science background of the issue. Part II , analyze the ways in which different actors involved or impacted by the environmental issue are affected by it. Part III, explain the political-legal circumstances raised by the issue and the proposed policy solutions. Assume your audience is college-educated but does not have a background in the particular issue you are addressing.

The paper is not an editorial or advocacy piece. It should present material from a neutral perspective, not present your personal opinion . In this paper, avoid using biased phrasing such as “should” or “must” or personal statements such as “I believe” or “I feel”.

Your paper should be informed by data and insights from peer-reviewed academic articles, news articles, and policy documents such as white papers. For each environmental issue, we will provide three sources, one in each of these source categories. You will need to find at least four additional, credible sources (to have a minimum of 7 sources in total). Two of the sources you provide must be peer-reviewed academic articles. The others can come from any of the three categories.

A peer-reviewed academic article is one that is published in a scholarly journal after having been reviewed and evaluated by a panel of scientists. You can learn more about peer-reviewed

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