Liberty University BIOL 101 Individual Assignment 4 complete solutions correct answers key

Ecological Encounters

 

  1. Should stewardship principles be taught in the Church?

 

Following a morning church service, you enter the foyer and overhear a discussion that you decide to join.

 

Bert: …so we really, really need to get the message out to the world that we are selfishly ruining our environment. Politically important people are exploiting poor people and the environment itself. This is not what Jesus would do.

 

Herbie: Well, I think Jesus went about teaching the Kingdom of God, not saving the environment. When people are walking down a road that leads to continuous torment and death, how much time should you spend teaching them to repair the road they’re walking on? These issues are distracting.

 

Sally: Well, regardless of which road you’re walking on, you make little choices each day about how you will walk that road.

 

Bert: Good point. Jesus walked that road. He probably had one suit, simple food, a borrowed mattress to sleep on, and no recreational vehicle to drive. So He was making choices that we don’t think about enough.

 

Herbie: (sigh…) To get people to think about those choices, you have to change their hearts first. You must communicate the gospel to people. When they are healed, then the Spirit of Christ will point them to less ecologically extravagant choices.

 

Sally: But Herbie, is that really happening in our churches? Are new converts just naturally choosing more environmentally responsible patterns? Don’t we need to help them with this? Jesus said to make disciples. Doesn’t that mean teaching them on a variety of issues?

 

Bert: If we’re visibly out there being environmentally protective and responsible, people will ask: “Why is your church doing this stuff?” It will just be natural to share our story of conversion to following Christ and caring about the new priorities He builds into our hearts.

 

Herbie: Bert, I don’t think people will ask that question. They will assume we’re selfishly trying to save the turf we live on just like some of them do. It’s like, you’re doing a good thing but there’s nothing particularly spiritual about it. The world wants to save the planet. We want to save people.

 

Sally: Herbie, I think God wants us to do both. So, how do we get the world to see us making good environmental choices while they hear us proclaiming salvation through Christ and new life in Him?

 

 

You decide to chime in, but which response below is yours, a) or b)?

 

a)      We really need to focus on our original mandate from Jesus: preaching the gospel. As people come to faith in Christ, many questions including some regarding environmental issues may arise and we can answer their questions naturally as they come up, one-on-one.

 

b)      We need to “go into the world and make disciples.” As people come to faith in Christ, we must begin to disciple them. They must be taught how their faith in Christ as Redeemer and Creator applies to their use of the environment. This is just part of the whole picture.

 

In Blackboard, open the assignment link. Within the text box, type a “1.” followed by either a) or b) above, depending on which response you agree with. Then, add a single densely-crafted sentence (about 20 words) defending your choice while modifying it slightly if you wish to. Then, keep reading:

 

Herbie has left the discussion a bit frustrated. His wife is anxious to get to the restaurant they have reservations at. Ethel hears people talking and decides to come over and join in.

 

  1. How would you teach stewardship principles in the Church?

 

Sally: What if we start a new Sunday morning focus group before church where we could talk about these issues—you know—define them a bit and air them out?

 

Bert: No, no, no, no…The worst offenders will not join that group. We need to get Pastor Bob to do a sermon series on it so that the right people get the message. This has to be a revolution in the church’s consumerist thinking. The point has to be boldly made and made to everybody.

 

Sally: Well, why Pastor Bob? He has to live with us. Why don’t we get in a special speaker like Sleeth or DeWitt and have them do a series of three or four talks on a Sunday evening? We could add food and other enticements to get people out.

 

Ethel: Wait a minute…wait…just a minute! If you’re going to try to get everybody to wear blue jeans and old shirts and live in a tent in February, you’re going to divide this church right down the middle. And I know which side I’ll be on. Why should I stop wearing makeup because some biblical illiterate has just pronounced it wrong!

 

Bert: No, no, no…Ethel, we’re not talking about stepping on people’s biblical freedoms. This can’t be a “style” issue. But there are very basic stewardship principles that have to be taught. It’s the principles that need exposure. God’s Spirit will then lead individual people further into applying those principles.

 

Sally: Bert….that sounds like Herbie. Don’t we need to present at least some specifics?

 

Bert: So you want Amish buggies instead of cars because a horse is more efficient than an engine?

 

Sally: Well…maybe we could start with some easy things everyone could do, like buying less stuff and finding ways to reduce power consumption at home.

 

Ethel: OK…yeah…I could see a bit of that. It would save some money too, probably. George keeps saying we should give more to the missionaries…I get sick of hearing it.

 

Bert: But, Herbie has a point. How can we forcefully get basic stewardship principles out there to the entire congregation without making seekers and new converts think that this is our central focus? There must be a way to do this.

 

Sally: Bert, I was thinking: most of the poorer people in town that we say we want to reach for Christ are probably living more simply than many of us. I think they resent us for our extravagance. Our gospel needs some credibility in this area. I think we look selfish.

 

Ethel: Well…well…maybe you could work the whole environment thing into a focus on helping some Ugandan orphanage or something. George breaks my heart with these orphan stories. We could save money here and donate it there along with the gospel. If it has anything to do with missions, George will drag me to it. Well actually…that’s not fair. I’d be interested in it myself.

 

You (chiming in again with one of the comments below): “I have an idea.”

 

a)      Let’s get together at Herbie’s place and discuss it further. He had some good points and I fear that this new teaching will get us all distracted from a bigger evangelistic goal that we’re really not dealing with very well.

 

b)      I found this Christian website called Woodlakebooks.com. They’ve got good special group studies we could adopt for a “come if you want” 9-week focus group. We could meet just with interested people during a non-worship-service time. We could start our own little stewardship project and get the pastor to update the congregation on what we’re doing.

 

c)      Hey, Parish Publishing in New England makes weekly bulletin inserts that we could use over the long term. Everybody would get them, so we could sort of press the issue on people a bit. We could use them to invite interested people to an ongoing focus group on the subject. A missions project could be an outlet for the money we save.

 

d)     We need to get Pastor Bob excited about this or it will appear divisive. Phil knows him really well. Phil could get him to do some topical sermons on stewardship and how it relates to our message of salvation, maybe in a special Sunday night teaching series.

 

e)      Hey, Phil has graduate degrees from seminary and from Liberty University in environmental management. Maybe Pastor Bob would let Phil do a few successive Sunday morning teaching sessions during the worship hour. We could get the congregation to understand a little of the science behind caring for the earth.

 

f)       We need Pastor Bob and Phil to build a money bridge. They need to use worship service time to get us involved with a third-world evangelism and service project. They could convince people that our own environmental stewardship could help fund it all. Once people see the connection, we can start the stewardship classes to show people how to save money and contribute.

 

In the assignment text box, type a “2.” followed by 1 of the lettered choices above, depending on which response you agree with. Then, add a single densely-crafted sentence (about 20 words) that either

 

·         explains why you have selected this option

or

·         improves on the position you have selected

 

Bert has left the discussion reluctantly. His wife reminded him that the walk home takes 10 minutes and the bean casserole has now started cooking. The kids are hungry. Cal Lorrie, a nutritionist, has been listening to this conversation and decides to join in.

 

  1. Does environmental stewardship affect what I eat?

 

Ethel: Gee, maybe those third-world orphans I spoke of are already the environmentally responsible people. I mean, they surely lean less heavily on the environment than we do. Don’t they? Really, I just couldn’t live like that…

 

Cal: One huge area of environmental stewardship involves what you choose to eat. Some third-world tribal groups probably eat mostly what they hunt and kill and do very little with vegetation unless the hunting fails for some reason.

 

Sally: Why would you mention that? Isn’t a vegetarian diet just a choice you make because it may be healthier for you?

 

Ethel: Oh, here we go…celery and water…

 

Cal: It’s more than nutrition. It’s a food web concept. When you get your protein from beef, or worse, from shellfish, you eat higher and higher in the food web. More calories are expended to get protein from shrimp than from beans and rice.

 

Ethel: Oh Cal, protein is protein. Doesn’t it cost the same amount to make the same quantity of protein?

 

Sally: I should have taken that BIOL 101 online course that Liberty University was offering…

 

Cal: The shrimp swims around, actively feeds, escapes predators, and has a high metabolic rate. It uses lots more calories than a bean plant just getting its protein to you.

 

Ethel: (sigh…) You want the church to do beans and rice at the next church dinner? With perhaps a bit of water?

 

Cal: The issue is balance. An uncritical vegetarian will actually be malnourished in certain ways. But most of our church members probably do way too much with meat. You have to give a whole lot of “Corn-Flake-level calories and protein” to a steer to get far less steak protein. So with the steak, you are taking far more from the environment.

 

Sally: My cousin Atkins is on a high-protein diet to try to lose weight. Are you saying that’s misguided?

 

Cal: Oh, he’ll probably lose some weight for biochemical reasons. But ecologically, the high-protein diets are most successful in America because we have the money to spend to eat higher in the food web.

 

Sally: We really need to get this information into the hands of our church people. This would give them two independent reasons to do a more balanced diet.

 

Ethel: Sorry. Talk all you want to. My George will have a good-sized piece of beef every night for dinner. We’re past the hot dog stage of life and he certainly won’t let me switch out beef with veggie burgers!

 

You (make another choice; what would you like to say?): “Hmmm…”

 

a)      Sally, I think Ethel’s right. We really ought to look for less intrusive ways to become ecologically friendly. Pushing on people about their diets is just going to dump a whole lot of unbiblical guilt on people, but they won’t budge. The Bible says we can do either meat or vegetables…

 

b)      I know! There are lots of good recipes/cookbooks out there that are done by people who want to eat lower in the food web. We could wholesale a bunch of them and put them on a stand in the church lobby. That would make a neat statement and income could go toward a third-world help project.

 

c)      Well, Ethel, what about just sharing basic food web concepts that Phil would know about? Then individual members can respond as God leads them to. That might only take 3–4 sessions. We could do it as part of a weekend thing, but have the last session be a review session on Sunday morning so exposure is broad.

 

d)     Ethel, you mentioned church suppers. Let’s have a seminar series on eating carefully within our food web and show people, calorie for calorie, how their restraint would feed orphan children in Uganda. The last seminar would be a church dinner using recipes that are lower on the food web. That way, lots of people could make a choice that keeps little children alive.

 

 

There are differing degrees of dietary stewardship implied in the choices above. In the assignment text box, type a “3.” followed by 1 of the lettered choices above, depending on which response you agree with. Then, add a single densely-crafted sentence (about 20 words) that either

 

·         explains why you have selected this option

or

·         improves on the position you have selected

 

Submit your assignment when finished.

 

Note: Many food consumption variables exist which have not been discussed:

 

a)      If I eat some raw foods, energy isn’t needed to cook them.

 

b)      If I eat at a restaurant, the environment has to support the staff that waits on me, the builders who built the restaurant, the workers who maintain the facility, etc.

 

c)      If I buy locally, less energy is used to get the food to me.

 

d)     If I eat simpler foods, less energy is used to process the foods (corn and chicken vs. “corndogs” manufactured two states away and refrigerated all the way

Assignment: Self Analysis
.
�?To complete this assignment you should complete the following self-assessments:
o Career Orientations Inventory (on LOOP)
o ISAC Inventory (on LOOP)
o Jungs Personality Test – You can get this here: https://www.123test.com/
o Learning Styles Indicator- You can get this here: https://www.dcu.ie/careers/about-pfs.shtml
o Type Dynamics Indicator (Personality)- you can get this here: https://www.dcu.ie/careers/about-pfs.shtml
o Value-based Indicator of Motivation (what motivates you?)- You can get this here:
https://www.dcu.ie/careers/about-pfs.shtml
o Careers Interest Inventory (What Careers are you interested in?)- You can get this here:
https://www.dcu.ie/careers/about-pfs.shtml
o Leadership Style Inventory (On LOOP)
o Belbin Team Role Types- (On LOOP)
o Conflict Management style inventory- (On LOOP)
I attached all the results
For Belbin Team Role Types this site will give the result more calarification.
https://www.werkenmetteamrollen.nl/werken-met-teamrollen/The-9-teamroles.asp#.WAZyQuUrLIV
�?You must then prepare a reflection about the self-assessments completed above. This should be written according to the
reflection writing guidelines presented to you previously. Additionally it should include:
1o Brief description of the test
2o Brief description of your result
o Self-analysis
3-?your thoughts/feelings about your result 4- your assumptions before test and now what are your assumptions
� Assumptions on Self-Assessment Tests prior to completing them
� Post analyses – Changed Opinion Positive or
� Post analyses � Identified weaknesses of test & researched same
� �I have read many of the criticisms of the X test..�
� �Competency assessment tests are of limited benefit…De Vries highlights that there are different forms of intelligence and cognitive is just one�.�
5-?your reaction to the results
� Reactions
� Do not agree with result. Justify using examples as this could reflect weakness of test or lack of self-awareness or
� Agree with result. Provided example/story to explain own ability to relate result to life example

o Evaluate 6- What is your opinion of the test

form 1 to 6 for every self � assessment as paragraph for every test .
for the following question and the rest of reflection focus on something that I am good in it ( I have it form the result ) and something that I need to change and develop in it
o Analysis of your learning
Analysis of Your Learning
� What did you learn?
� What generalisations/conclusions (about your learning) can you draw from the experience?
� Use literature to derive understanding

??What did you learn about yourself
??How is doing this test/knowing this about yourself useful to a) your PDP; b) your career plan; c) your job interests
My pdp ( personal develop plan ) and my gool to become leader and have my own business and professor in finance at universiry . now I study master in business administration .
??What generalisations can you draw from all the tests/results
� Summary tables/paragraphs that pulls out overarching strengths & opportunities for development- Analysis!
� �my personality trait of EXXX with low attention to detail impacts me doing assessments such as these which require focus and are detail work�� Analysis!

�?What common themes emerge from the test results
�?What, in summary, do they say about you
�?What does the theory/research suggest this means about you
??Application in Context
�?What are your career/work goals?
�?What are the implications of the results of the tests for a) your career goals and b) your
job/work goals or c) your PDP
5
o You must use literature/research to back-up these conclusions.
�?Do the results help you understand things you did in the past/how you do things/why you did
certain things and not others
o What theories can explain this new understanding?
o Your understanding of �You�
??Does it change anything about how you see yourself- what and why
??Does it confirm something about yourself you already knew- explain
o You MUST use examples/stories, about yourself/your life, to explain your points throughout this reflection
o You MUST refer to research or theory to interpret your results and the implications for your career goal and PDP.

CHAPTER: METHODOLOGY
Research Strategy
This study will adopt an exploratory research design where secondary data analysis will be used to understand phenomenon. Secondary data indicates the multiple dimensions based on the realities of different authors. According to Edirisingha (2012), the ontological and epistemological idea behind it is interpretivism. There are different realities presented are socially constructed; thereby, this research forms a basis for future objectively constructed realities through actual primary research.
Data Collection
This type of study relies on results, reports, working and conference papers, and that have already been presented. This secondary analysis is aimed at establishing hypotheses that can be used by future researchers who wish to engage in primary research future. The secondary analysis is easy to conduct because it is cheap and less time consuming.
Sampling Strategy
Since this is there is limited empirical information on this topic, this secondary analysis will utilize secondary data from previous literature to determine the factors that have been proposed result in an aged workforce in small businesses. In addition, this analysis will help to determine the impact this ageing workforce has on the small business: positivity or negatively. Review was based on reports and articles on ageing and small business specifically in the UK. Only articles written in English were included.
Data Analysis
The findings in this review represent the raw data. Since the evidence to be included is Based on the search results and nature of evidence, data analysis will be based on extracting the study, population, and results, which will be in tabular form.
A systematic review was used to determine the impact of ageing on small businesses in the UK. This kind of study is more ideal because it allows the application of evidence-based research in to the real world of business. This kind of study targets both quantitative and qualitative type of data. The use of systematic reviews allocation of individuals into groups based on the researcher�s purpose, in this case, the age factor. Being a systematic review, various databases were used, including Wiley Online, CIPD website, JSTOR, Springer, Project Muse, ProQuest Archive, Academic Search Complete and others based on relevance of the research study. The search terms used were developed in reference to the topic of the study. These terms included �age�, �ageing�, �old/older generation�, �business performance�, �effect/impact�, �small businesses UK� and the articles were selected after a thorough review of the abstract. In the event an abstract was missing, the full text was used for determining inclusion or exclusion of the article. Articles included in the study had to meet the inclusion/exclusion criteria. The selection process was made by the review team, which included two reviewers and their discrepancies were resolved by including a third reviewer.
The inclusion/exclusion criteria entailed the selection of studies that solely adapted experimental kind of studies but randomization was not crucial. Studies examining the effect of age on small businesses (located in the UK) were of interest. The problem of study is old age; thus, the study compares the baby boomers from the age of 55 in accordance with Dhanjal and Schirle (2014) with the younger population less than 55 years in the workplace. Also, individuals included in the study had to have at least three years, but no more than four years, of experience working in a small business. Internships and attachments counted for the years of experience. Older people are presumed to have numerous chronic ailments according to the Institute of Medicine (2008); hence, articles reporting on medical costs as a variable were excluded from the review. Also, the individuals had not have received a performance appraisal prior to the study to ensure that the baseline performance assessment was the first and improvement strategies done during appraisal processes were not underway in either one of the participants.
Apart from the inclusion and exclusion criteria stated above, all studies were included regardless of the language used in reporting. Keeping note of all the essential elements of the studies to be included in this review, the review of empirical evidence older than ten years was disregarded. Therefore, the studies were limited to the years between 2007 and 2016. The study collected both quantitative and qualitative data. The review was conducted for a time period of three months. During this time, the searching, inclusion and exclusion of research studies, and went on. Data was extracted from the selected articles and spreadsheet was used to present the results. Publications from the selected studies were appraised and if found worthy of inclusion, was reviewed. Search results were checked based on relevance and duplication. Hence, similar publications of a study were linked to avoid duplication (Committee on Standards for Systematic Reviews of Comparative Effectiveness Research & Institute of Medicine, 2011).
Studies that met the inclusion/exclusion criteria were retrieved for further appraisal. Validity of the review was assured by determining the quality of the studies reviewed, and studies with a low score were excluded from this review. The quality of the studies included in this review was determined by a scoring system developed by the review team. The quality assessment tool used in this review was adapted from the AMSTAR tool (Smith 2011, Devane 2011, Begley 2011, and Clarke, 2011).
Upon obtaining the original results, a thorough examination of the inclusion criteria and quality of the studies led to a small number of studies that were used for the final review. The effects of age were noted down using M/s Excel and a second review was done to ensure that no one effect had been omitted. In addition, this reporting template was used to note down the sample size of each study, the effect sizes of the result, and robustness of the methods used in each study. Themes were noted for qualitative studies, and this information formed basis for the narrative.
Variation in the studies� methodology made it impossible to combine the results. Heterogeneity prevailed in reference to the age of the participants in the different studies and the variables of interest. Therefore, the results of each study were discussed separately. A narrative approach sufficed as the mode through which the authors summarized the findings.

Ethical Approval
This research is entirely based on secondary research analysis. The ethical clearance process with the Anglia Ruskin University re secondary data approval.
This research also has approval from the Anglia Ruskin University and gives rise to no ethical issues.

This was the method chapter that I got it from you guys back in August and my tutor has gone through it and gave me following comments …please go through it and please modify it accordingly…It seems there are few things missing on it.
Unfortunately at the moment it is reading like a findings chapter ie what you have done and not why and what you intend to do.

The chapter is the defence of a research design which provides clarity from research methods theory for what you intend – has to be written in the future tense and provide a structure of what you will do.

There are also no discussion of the constraints.

You may want to use some of this for your findings you need to translate it to your plans for what you will do

1.

What does ΔG of a metabolic reaction measure?

the net change in free energy during a reaction

the amount of heat energy gained or lost in a reaction

the amount of matter transferred in a reaction

the change in activation energy required in a reaction due to enzyme activity

the activation energy of a reaction

2.

Which of the following does a catalyst change during a chemical reaction?

the free energy of the products

heat

entropy

activation energy

the free energy of the reactants

3.

ATP is not the only molecule that can drive reactions. When ATP is depleted during exercise, muscle cells use phosphocreatine to drive the regeneration of ATP.

Consider the following half reactions:

1. ATP + H2O → ADP + Pi

ΔG = –7.3 kcal/mol

2. Phosphocreatine + H2O → creatine + Pi

ΔG = –10.3 kcal/mol

From these two reactions, calculate the Gibbs free energy of the following coupled reaction, catalyzed by creatine kinase:

Phosphocreatine + ADP → ATP + creatine

ΔG = ?

Which is the correct net Gibbs free energy of the reaction?

ΔG = –3 kcal/mol

ΔG = –17.6 kcal/mol

ΔG = 0 kcal/mol

ΔG = +3 kcal/mol

ΔG = +17.6 kcal/mol

4.

Which source of energy does active transport use?

the regeneration of ATP bound to an active transport pump

the hydrolysis of ATP bound to an active transport pump

the hydrolysis of GTP bound to the active transport pump

the transport of ATP bound to an active transport pump

the transport of GTP bound to an active transport pump

5.

Which is an anabolic process?

protein synthesis

glycolysis

ATP hydrolysis

protein degradation

active transport

6.

The sodium-potassium pump is an active transport pump that uses energy to pump potassium into cells and sodium out of cells. Why is ATP energy required?

to change the shape of the ions

to transfer glucose in the same direction as Na+ ions

to pump the Na+ and K+ ions along their diffusion gradient

to pump the Na+ and K+ ions against their diffusion gradient

for the membrane to change shape

7.

Which definition best describes a cell’s metabolism?

the chemical reactions that break down glucose for energy

the use of ATP as an energy carrier

the energy level that must be overcome for a chemical reaction to move forward

the burning of fat molecules for energy

the sum of all the chemical reactions occurring in an organism

8.

Which reaction can provide the energy needed to run an endergonic reaction?

protein synthesis

photosynthesis

ATP hydrolysis

enzyme catalysis

All answers are correct.

9.

Which process(es) can directly amplify signals in a transduction pathway?

activating adenylyl cyclase

activating kinases

activating phosphatases

activating phospholipase C

All answers are correct.

10.

What happens when protein kinase A (PKA) phosphorylates phosphorylase kinase in the epinephrine signal transduction pathway?

Phosphorylase kinase becomes deactivated, and glucose production is suppressed.

Phosphorylase kinase becomes activated, and glucose production is suppressed.

Phosphorylase kinase becomes deactivated, and glucose production is enhanced.

Phosphorylase kinase becomes activated, and glucose production is enhanced.

None of the answers are correct.

11.

Which is a catabolic process?

glycolysis

ATP synthesis

ion transport

photosynthesis

translation of mRNA into protein

12.

Which reaction does a kinase catalyze in a signal transduction pathway?

binding of a signal molecule to a receptor

production of cAMP

phosphorylation of a TARGET  protein

All answers are correct.

None of the answers are correct

Financial statements is a more common term used to refer to statements produced at the end of the accounting periods, such as the income statement, balance sheet, cash flow statement and the statement of owner’s equity. These four financial statements are sometimes known as the final accounts, which the business prepares.

The income statement also known as the trading and profit and loss account is a financial statement, which helps to calculate the gross profit and the net profit of the company for a particular year. Most of the businesses prepare the income statement because they compare revenues with expenses and check the performance. If the revenue exceeds the expenses, the business has earned a profit and vice versa. The information contained in the income statement is not only, but also useful for the internal users of the business such as the managers and owners but however it is also useful for the external users such as government, investors and creditors’.

For internal users, income statement helps to check the performance and profitability of the business. Owners invest their money merely to earn profits and thus it is necessary for them to check the amount of money they have earned in an accounting period. Similarly, manager’s status is directly linked with the profitability of the business. If the organization has able to achieve higher profits, manager’s salary and status often increases. Moreover, income statements also help to check the revenues and expenses of the business and thus managers can decrease their unnecessary expenses to earn more profits. In the same way, making of income statements is also useful for the external users such as investors, creditors and the government. Investors usually check the income statements of the organization to check the past financial performance of the business and to assess the capability of generating future cash flows. Moreover, creditors also take the help of the income statement to check whether the business has enough revenue to pay its dues on time. Finally, the government needs to check in order to calculate the taxes which the firm has to pay with respect to the profits earned over time.

The balance sheet is another financial statement which shows the assets, liabilities and the capital of the business. This document is prepared at the end of the accounting period, and it helps to check the liquidity position and the current health of the organization. It is based on an accounting model (e.g., assets = capital + liabilities). Internal users, such as managers and owners take the help of the balance sheet to check the liquidity of the business…

In a 4-5 page reflection paper, assess your nursing career through �appreciative inquiry� (Billings & Kowalski, 2008).
Drawing on your own life stories and experiences, what does a nursing career mean to you?
How does your nursing practice parallel the ANA (2015) Code of Ethics? List 4 specific examples from the Code of Ethics.
What motivates you to remain in the nursing profession? Give an example through a personal story and what you learned that motivates you as a registered nurse.
Develop 3 short-term and 3 long-term goals that emphasize your unique strengths. �
How will a BSN degree impact your short-term and long-term career goals?
Be creative and talk about your personal journey as a nurse. Include a personal nursing philosophy in the reflection.
Remember to follow APA 6th edition format and include a title page, running head, page numbers and a reference page, as well as in-text reference citations. The page limit is content and does not include the title page and reference page.

Two of the Learning Goals for this Course are:

1. Articulate the relevance of Earth Science to individuals and to society.

2. Evaluate Earth Science related topics presented in the media, on the basis of the evidence presented and your knowledge of physical processes.

You will further examine the theme of these Learning Goals here in ‘Assignment 2’.

Specifically, this REQUIRED activity has 2 parts. It is worth a total of 9% of your Course Grade (6% for Part 1, 3% for Part 2). For FULL MARKS, make posts that are thoughtful and which contribute to your own and your colleagues learning in this course. Details about grading are in the rubric below.

During this exercise you will (1) analyze a media article that is relevant to the course and articulate your findings in a short, well written essay post which finishes by asking 2 well-founded questions, (2) reply to one of the questions posed by your colleagues about their initial post PLUS post a minimum of TWO discussion contributions about your own OR a colleague’s topic.

PART 1. The first part of this assignment is due no later than March 14 (11pm).

To do:

  • Upload your Media Article. See instructions below.
  • Write your Post 1.
  • Upload your Post 1 as well as your original Media Article into your Small Group Discussion Board. See instructions below.

Post 1 Specific Instructions

Post 1 – Essay Content

Your essay should include two main components.

Firstly you should use what you know about physical processes (from the course) to analyze the scientific evidence given in the article.

Secondly you can do one of two things:

1. Explain how the article’s findings impact either individuals or society as a whole. In other words, add new insights into how the science in the article might change the way either individuals, or society in general, operates.

or

2. Assess the validity of the assertions and conclusions given in the article. In other words analyze the accuracies or inaccuracies in the discussion or conclusions presented.

In addition to the two main components outlined above, your essay should have a short introductory sentence or two and finish with a concluding sentence or two.

Make sure that your essay does not just summarize the original article. Also, we are NOT looking for a personal opinion piece but rather a fact driven analysis of your media piece. Take some time to work on your submission so that it flows logically from one idea to another.

Essay Specifics

Your essay should not be less than 400 words and should not exceed 500 words. The news article that is the subject of our post must be cited. [Also, please attach a copy of your research article to your essay post or include a direct link or address to your article so that other students (and the instructor and TA) can refer to it if they would like to.] Beyond that, it is not necessary to go outside the course readings and materials to complete your essay. If you do decide to research further work beyond the course, you should include citations in your essay text where required. Include the specifics of the original article and any relevant references at the bottom of your essay. (See the FAQs for more specifics on eligible references.)

Post 1 – Required Questions to Follow Essay

At the end of your essay you should post two substantive scientific questions that were raised in your mind from the article you chose. Each question and justification should be roughly 100 words (this is in addition to the 400 – 500 words for your essay itself).

  • Include some explanation or justification for why you are asking this question. Do not simply pose the question and leave it at that. You must explain to your colleague what it is about your piece AND your own knowledge that caused you to wonder about the issue you identify as a question.
  • Here are some examples of the way a question might arise in your mind:
    1. The original article said xyz but I heard/read that abc (with a reference).  I wonder if…, or it doesn’t make sense to me that …”, or similar …
    2. “What the original article said about xyz seems unexpected because … xyz (use logic, &/or a reference). I wonder where / how / why … .” etc.
    3. “The original article is interesting … and isn’t it also true that … (with a reference) …?” etc.

Human development in psychology focuses on the life span of people and identifies aspects which change and remain the same.

In the last class presentation we discussed a few perspectives (biological, ecological and biological/ecological) within Human development. Then, we watched 20 minutes of a documentary film: ‘Louder Than A Bomb’, and were asked to link what you heard, observed, and remembered of the characters in the film, and utilize the a the ecological perspective to deepen your thoughts. This exercise is a creative way to apply the information by linking theory with action.

Please continue to develop your thoughts utilizing one of the 3 perspectives below. Write at least 3-4 sentences of developed linked thoughts.

Utilizing the Ecological perspective (Bronfenbrenner), identify and describe the environment(s) that the you as an adolescent experienced.
Psychodynamic Perspective: Projective identification. Which one of the high school students did you like or identify the most with? Please clarify your thoughts with clear detail, or a concrete example to clarify your ideas.
Take Erik Erikson’s stages of Psychosocial Development and identify how you as an adolescents experienced one of the stages: Industry vs. Inferiority, Identity vs. Role.
Please read your notes and the textbook material as you develop your thoughts. Thank you!

Dear Team

Hope this email ***

i would like to request your kind support in working on Task 3 for my project. kindly follow the link below to get 3 folders that has:

1. Task explanations file so you will know what exactly we need for this task. (Task explanations.rar)

2. Supporting files if you need any details from them (Supporting files.rar )

3. Survey and analysis files (Survey files.rar )

Download link
https://we.tl/L3Nb9irrMk

what we need is to write 2000-3000 words explaining everything about this task and the steps we went through to complete this project. what you need to know is that we did the below and these points and steps should be clear and well written. the steps we followed and tools we used:

1. as per the topic we decided on the topic and the objective of the survey and the outcomes needs from it. ( please view the survey file to know more)

2. as per our knowledge of the main topic of the project, and as per our details and information about shurooq PR from the files we have and from the website and newspapers and social media. we decided the questions and the survey method.

3. we got the approval on the questions from the instructor.

4. we had a phone interview with the higher management of shurooq ( we have a supporting emails of that)

5. we got the strategic answers for our questions from the management ( please see Hessah / Yasser and Marwan file)

6. we used Survey Monkey website to create the survey

7. the survey was divided into 2 ( 1 is for general public to know the public awareness of shurooq and from it we will know our weakness and strength and how we will develop later on) and second part is for the internal employees of shurooq where we can judge on the internal communications and we measure the PR performance and how to develop later on.

7. we used whatsapp / linkdin / calls / emails to get the answers ( we got 46 surveys) please see the 2 files of analysis ( you will view all the results.

now we reach to your part where we need your support in preparing the search paper. kindly let us know if you need any further details.. Kindly NOTE that recommendations or suggestions will be for the next task so you don’t need to include anything for now

Thank you

1. Write a one paragraph abstract introducing your policy topic
2. Present 3 graphics illustrating 3 different data messages relevant to your policy topic
3. The 3 data messages must include 2 graphs and 1 map, appropriately titled
4. Each graph and map must be original, created by you
5. For each graph or map, answer the following questions:
a. What does the graphic tell you? Interpret the full meaning of the graph or map. Be thorough and specific. Drill down to all aspects of the graphic.
b. Why are these data significant?
c. What is the health-related context surrounding this issue?
d. Based on the data you have described, what are your public policy recommendations?
e. References
6. Describe what you learned from completing this assignment.

Please chose carbon monoxide for the policy topic. Please try to use recent date and use recent references no later then 2010. But please try to use the recent data and references as possible.only use internet sources as well so I can see attach links from where you got the data and information from. The graph and map has to be original. U can use us map maker and type in graph maker on google

Here is an EXAMPLE of how this coursework should be done https://sakai.luc.edu/access/content/attachment/HSM_340_01W_2250_1166/Announcements/c0ad771d-ba5a-4367-9448-1572d978f91c/Jordan%20Wirtz%20Spring%202016.docx