Scenario:

“Best Protection Insurance Company (BPIC) handles a massive volume of claims each year in the corporate claims function, as well as in its four regional claims centers. The corporate claims function is headed by the senior vice president of corporate claims (SVPCC); reporting to the SVPCC are two managers of corporate claims (MCC-Life and MCC-Residential) and a highly skilled corporate claims specialist (CCS). Each regional office is headed by a regional center manager (RCM); the RCM is responsible for both supervisors and claims specialists within the regional office. The RCMs report to the vice president of regional claims (VPRC). The organization is structured as follows:

BPIC decided to reorganize its claims function by eliminating the four regional offices (and the RCM position) and establishing numerous small field offices throughout the country. The other part of the reorganization involved creating five new CCS positions. The CCS job itself was to be redesigned and upgraded in terms of knowledge and skill requirements. These new CCS positions would be staffed through internal promotions from within the claims function.
The SVPCC asked Gus Tavus, a 52-year-old RCM, to apply for one of the new CCS positions since his job was being eliminated. The other RCMs, all of whom were over 40 years of age, were also asked to apply. Neither Gus nor the other RCMs were promoted to the CCS positions. Other candidates, some of whom were also over age 40, were also bypassed. The promotions went to five claims specialists and supervisors from within the former regional offices, all of whom were under age 40. Two of these newly promoted employees had worked for, and reported to, Gus as RCM.
page 88Upon learning of his failure to be promoted, Gus sought to find out why. What he learned led him to believe that he had been discriminated against because of his age. He then retained legal counsel, attorney Bruce Davis. Bruce met informally with the SVPCC to try to determine what had happened in the promotion process and why his client had not been promoted. He was told that there were numerous candidates who were better qualified than Gus and that Gus lacked adequate technical and communication skills for the new job of CCS. The SVPCC refused to reconsider Gus for the job and said that all decisions were etched in stone. Gus and Bruce then filed suit in federal district court, claiming a violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. They also subpoenaed numerous BPIC documents, including the personnel files of all applicants for the CCS positions.
After reviewing the documents and discussing things with Gus, Bruce learned more about the promotion process actually used by BPIC. The SVPCC and the two MCCs conducted the entire process; they received no input from the VPRC or the HR department. There was no formal, written job description for the new CCS position, nor was there a formal internal job posting as required by company policy. The SVPCC and the MCCs developed a list of employees they thought might be interested in the job, including Gus, and then met to consider the list of candidates. At that meeting, the personnel files and previous performance appraisals of the candidates were not consulted. After deciding on the five candidates who would be offered the promotion (all five accepted), the SVPCC and MCCs scanned the personnel files and appraisals of these five (only) to check for any disconfirming information. None was found. Bruces inspection of the files revealed no written comments suggesting age bias in past performance appraisals for any of the candidates, including Gus. Also, there was no indication that Gus lacked technical and communication skills. All of Guss previous appraisal ratings were above average, and there was no evidence of decline in the favorability of the ratings. Finally, an interview with the VPRC (Guss boss) revealed that he had not been consulted at all during the promotion process, that he was shocked beyond belief that Gus had not been promoted, and that there was no question but that Gus was qualified in all respects for the CCS job.”…. END

Now…

Prepare a written report that presents a convincing disparate treatment claim that Gus had been intentionally discriminated against on the basis of his age. Do not address the claim as one of disparate impact.

Present a convincing rebuttal, from the viewpoint of BPIC, to this disparate treatment claim.

Watch both videos: Alonzo King, Lines Dance Company (Resonance I and Dust and Light – excerpt)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17wlDd-58OQ

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jTzMNNvgKAo
Watch a Dance Performance and write a Critique:  Students must watch one dance performance online and write a 2 page critique on the performance.
Students are encouraged to take notes while watching the performance and I would suggest writing your critique as soon as possible after viewing the video while the information is still fresh in your mind.  Papers should discuss specific information regarding the performance (group/company performing, place, costumes, dancers, lighting, and movement style) but mostly concentrate on the movement aspects of the performance as well as relate back to material covered in the textbook. What does the movement say about society and the world today?  Do you see familiar patterns or themes being explored in the work?  Do the performance/performers speak to relevant societal issues today?  Guidelines for Viewing a Dance Performance:When writing a dance critique, there are many things to consider prior to the performance. Who is performing? Are they professionals or amateurs? Is it a new work or classic choreography reset? Who are the choreographers? Are they known for other works? It is important to meditate carefully on the performance prior to seeing it so you can take as much from it as you can.When viewing a performance be an active participant, dont be a passive consumer.  Work as hard at viewing the piece as the choreographer did making the work.  Consult your program notes when writing critiques.During the performance, there are also many things to consider that should be incorporated into your writing process. What style of dance is it? Is the performance experimental or conventional? What are the cultural implications of the performance? How do elements of the performance, such as lighting, scenery, and costume, enhance the choreography?If a performance is very abstract, take as much from it as you can and strive to deliver your opinion of it as clearly as possible in your writing. Remember that there is no right answer since art is abstract and everyone responds to art differently.There is a lot to take in when viewing dance, and it can be easy to forget aspects of the performance. It is helpful to bring a notebook and pen to jot down notes and initial reactions to the performance that you may forget later on. Also, write the paper as soon as possible after the performance to prevent a foggy recollection.If there is a talk-back at the end of the performance, at which the choreographers and/or dancers answer questions and explain the performance more thoroughly, it is highly advisable to stay. It can offer you some insight into the choreographer’s motivation as well as uncover some of the meaning of the performance.Guidelines for Writing About a Dance Performance:The opening statement of your critique should draw the reader in.  Be creative.  Tell the reader where and when the concert took place.When writing about choreographers, always identify them by name.  Try to get inside the head of the choreographer.  What were the choreographers intentions and were they successfully communicated?  What do you think the choreographer was trying to say with the dance, or what did the dance say?  Try to have a thematic focus when writing your critique.  Were the themes of the individual piece clear?  What was the dance about?  Analyze the symbolism.  Does it relate to current events?Discuss the choreography.  Did the choreography flow, what were the dynamics, how did it move in space and what were the motivations for the movements?  Make general comments but also include detailed descriptions.  Try to give at least one specific movement image.  Example:  In another vignette, a woman seated properly, perpendicularly, on a bench, begins to tilt at an angle.  As her legs leave the floor and her torso leans to the side, both she and the bench seem to levitate a little above the floor.  Vienna-Lusthaus (revisited); Reviewed by George Jackson: Dance Magazine, May 2003: 79.
What thoughts or feelings did the concert or piece evoke?  In constructing your critique, reflect on why you may have had certain reactions.  Always back up your assertions, positive or negative with concrete examples.  Dont just be a negative critic; offer your thoughts in a constructive way.  Comment on the music and identify the composer(s) and musician(s) when possible.  What was the relationship of the dance to the music?  Did the music play an important role in the performance?  Was the music live, pre-recorded or some combination of both? What difference did it make?  Did the form of the music influence the form of the dance or vice versa?Were the dances well-rehearsed and/or well performed? Support your comments with specific examples. Did the dancers work together well in the ensemble pieces?Were the makeup, props (if used), and costumes appropriate?  Discuss the scenic design, lighting design, and overall use of the theatre space.  When speaking about any element of design, you must include the designers’ names.Comment on the overall production; give the reader a sense of what it looked like.  What was your reaction to the concert as a whole?  How did the piece or pieces connect?Each critique should reach a conclusion regarding the performance.    Mechanics: Do not write in the first person.  Your essay, paying attention to grammar, neatness and spelling, should be as thorough as possible. All critiques must have a title page, which will include your name, performance attended, date, and course name.The ticket stub and/or verification from the performance must be attached to each critique.Only typed papers, two pages, double-spaced, in standard 12 font, with one inch margins on all sides, are acceptable; do not justify right margin.  Check your computer for margin settings.  Read other critiques in Dance Magazine, if necessary. Tell the reader the name of the performance and/or the name of the company. Identify the composer(s), choreographer(s) and title(s) of the work(s) you have chosen to discuss.  When writing about a specific dancer(s) identify them, when possible.  Dance Critique Pet Peeves: When writing about the subjects below:Refer to male dancers, men or danseurs (if classical ballet) NOT men dancers, boys, guys or malesRefer to female dancers, women or ballerinas (if classical ballet) NOT women dancers, girls, gals, chicks or femalesRefer to a piece, work or dance NOT routine or act Refer to movements NOT movesRefer to live music NOT live musiciansRefer to recorded or pre-recorded music NOT taped music
Refer to danced together or in unison NOT in sync or synchronizedRefer to the performance or the concert NOT the show, play or recitalDO use both names (“Catherine Zeta-Jones danced well in Chicago” or “Ms. Zeta-Jones danced well in Chicago.”)DO NOT use first names only to refer to dancers (“Catherine danced well in Chicago”)  DO NOT write in the first personDO NOT make general assumptions for the audienceDO NOT include title page information on first page of critique (name, date, professor’s name, class, performance)DO NOT switch tenses;            Example when to alternate tense; (Serenade was performed poorly yet it is a choreographic triumph.)            Example when not to alternate tense;(On Friday night the dancers appeared tired which causes the choreography to be lack luster.)DO NOT identify the performers in a list from the program notes.ExamplesThis is poor example of an opening paragraph because it does not grab the readers attention and only lists information readily found in the program. Also it does not provide the reader with any additional information or insights into the performance.  At 8:00 PM on February 27th, 2004, Les Ballets Russes de Monte Carlo, directed by Serge Diaghilev, performed Symphonie Fantastique at the Maggio Musicale in Florence, Italy.  The choreography was done by Lonide Massine.  This ballet consisted of five movements.  The set was created by Christian Brard, executed by Prince A. Schervachidze.  The costumes were designed by Christian Brard.  Costumes for the 2nd, 3rd and 4th movements were made by Madame Karinska.  The costumes for the first and fifth movements were made by Madame Larose.  The ballet premiered July 24th, 1936 at Covent Garden, London, England, and was conducted by Efrem Kurtz.  Performing lead roles were, Lonide Massine and Tamara Toumonova. Also dancing were Tatiana Riaboushinska, Alexandra Danilova, Yurek Lazowski, Vera Zorina, Marc Platoff, Vera Volkova, Igor Youchkevitch and George Zoritch. Hector Berlioz did a great job composing both the music and the libretto for this performance.This is a good example of a description of a piece.  It captures the sense and feeling of the piece and draws the reader in and makes the audience want to see and experience the performance themselves.Amelia Koper, in collaboration with the dancers, composed a piece to the song Coney Island Baby by Lou Reed. Danced by an even number of people, there were chemistries created and relationships to be inferred by the audience as two dancers would move according to each other. This piece, like most others of the performance, exhibited a close connection between music and movement. It was as if the choreographer drew significance and meaning

Icons of America
Background: The United States is said to be one of the most culturally diverse countries in the world. Nearly every region of the world has influenced American culture. U.S. culture has also been shaped by the cultures of Native Americans.
The United States is sometimes described as a melting pot in which different cultures have contributed their own distinct “flavors” to American culture. Just as cultures from around the world have influenced American culture, today American culture influences the world. The term Western culture often refers broadly to the cultures of the United States and Europe.

Assignment: Please create 1-2 pages (jpg only) to be included in our final lecture of the United States. Your page(s) should not be an overview; it should represent one specific area that represents an icon of American culture.
This could be a person, place, or event. Go beyond the Statue of Liberty I got that one covered!
There should be just enough text to identify the image not tell a whole story.

After reviewing Appendix C of Hands-On Database, use Visio to re-create one of the E-R diagrams provided in Appendix F of Database Design for Mere Mortals. Please note that the symbols used in Visio are not identical to those used in Database Design for Mere Mortals. You should create your diagram using symbols with similar meanings.

I will provide the reading material and access to Visio if you do not have access to it

In 2-3 paragraphs, describe thoroughly, clearly, and in detail the pattern of changes easily visible in the apparent position and motion of the Sun in the sky over the course of a year, as observed by ancient astronomers and discussed in our class.

The short answer response will be graded based on its content and thoroughness (60%), the clarity and accuracy of your response (20%), and the use of details , evidence, and examples (20%). For example, if your writing is generally correct, but vague (“Astronomers figured out that the Earth orbits the Sun”), then you may lose points for details and example (When did that happen? Who was involved? What was the evidence?). You should also remember to stay focused and answer the questions; essays that do not directly address the questions given in the prompt–including long essays that wander off topic– will lose points for clarity and accuracy.

Select a historical emergency response event in the United States, provide a two-page summary, and then provide a 5-7-page critique of leadership in the scenario.
***Event – Hurricane Harvey of 2017***

Questions to consider include the following:
a.  Which of Kouzes and Posners leadership practices was least exercised and what negative impacts resulted?
b.  In retrospect, what could leaders have done to affect a better outcome?
c.  Now, consider yourself in a leadership role during this event, what less-than-optimal leadership tendencies do you think you have to monitor as a leader in this event?
d.  What leadership strengths do you have that would be most useful in this event and how would you tap into those strengths in a practical sense.

Be specific. Be sure to link Leadership Practices with practical examples from the historical event and with practical examples in your proposed plan of action.

Paper must contain the following components:
1.    Your proposal should include the 5 leadership practices from Kouzes & Posner.
          -Model the Way
          -Inspire a Shared Vision
          -Challenge the Process
          -Enable Others to Act
          -Encourage the Heart
2.    Format:
a.    Opening summary of the concept
b.    Scope of the program (what will need to be involved and audience you intend to affect)
c.    Body of the proposal where you develop the vision and leadership practices to enroll us in supporting this program and challenges to overcome
d.    Expected result from this approach
e.    Conclusion and call to action
3.    References backup, support, issues to overcome

SAR 3 Writing Assignment: Proposal Argument.
include an Annotated Bibliography for the Proposal Essay.
State the thesis of your proposal completely.
Explain why this issue deserves attention. Whats at stake?
Identify and describe those readers whom you hope to reach with your
proposal. Why is this group of readers appropriate? Can you identify
individuals who can fix the problem?
Briefly discuss the major difficulties that you foresee for your proposal.
How will you demonstrate that the action you propose is necessary
and workable? Persuade the audience to act? Pay for the proposal?
Determine what research strategies youll use. What sources have you
consulted?
Also include an Annotated Bibliography of the sources you will be drawing
from for this writing assignment. Annotated bibliographies are essentially
work cited pages with annotations. Review the example of an annotated
bibliography on page 483 and the handout “Annotated Bibliographies” to
assist you in completing this assignment.
Format Double space. Use 12-pt Times New Roman font. Include a heading, header, and title
as required for MLA style (covered in your textbooks). To avoid plagiarism, cite any
information taken from outside sources including from the textbook. Use MLA-style citations.
Mechanics Although these are not formal essays, they should be edited as carefully as your
major essay assignments. After you draft and revise the content of the Response, after you work
on the organization, spend some additional time editing and proofreading. Eliminate grammar
errors, punctuation errors, and other surface issues that can make your writing confusing or less
convincing to readers.
Organization All Reader Responses should include well-organized paragraphs with topic
sentences and supporting evidence. Specific assignments may give a number of paragraphs or
other directions about organization.
Content Specific content is assigned for each Response. Each assignment will require you to
read carefully and think critically about what you have read.
SubmissionEach Short Academic Response Assignment requires three steps:

Case scenario in files  explain why the faith-based intervention was successful. Determine what conditions would cause a human service professional to integrate faith-based interventions into the counseling strategy. It is wise to stay abreast of what services are available in your area; locate 5 faith-based agencies in your area or region and explain briefly what they do and for which populations

Please write an 6-10 page literary analysis of one or more class readings utilizing secondary research in literary and interdisciplinary studies to support your argument. Your scholarly essay analysis

You can approach the essay by focusing on a theme or issue, or on a specific text or collection of texts from our class readings. Avoid summarizing the primary texts. Remember that I am most interested in your explication of complex ideas and themes. While your thesis must be one of literary interpretation, you may employ interdisciplinary research methods.