Assignment # 6: Provide Examples
Compose one or more paragraphs within which you support important generalizations (a generalization is, for example, a statement such as “People do change their thinking and attitudes about animal experimentation.”) with representative examples or illustrations to make such generalizations convincing or credible. 

When using outside sources, SEE THE “APA TAB” IN THE COURSE FOR DOCUMENTATION GUIDELINES.

FOLLOW THE MODEL and examples given, and be sure to refer to your evaluation guide/ rubric for where you will earn or lose points.

Example of another students:

Stem cell research is a highly controversial, highly debated subject. When scientists first began to study stem cells, the information provided to the public about the topic was not nearly as vast as it is today. In fact, what we now know about stem cell research can, and has, caused some people to change their stance on the issue entirely. In some instances, it has caused entire states to change their stance. For example, according to the University of Michigans Stem Cell Research: Overview (2013), on November 4, 2008, Michigan voters approved a proposal that would overturn a law dating back to 1978 (para 1). The University of Michigan (2013) explains that the old law prohibited the use of human embryos for research, even if those embryos were to be discarded (Stem Cell Research: Overview, para 1). The use of stem cells for research under the old law was not allowed under any circumstance, not even if embryos were just going to be thrown away. The new proposal, however, is in favor of further research on stem cells stating that researchers in Michigan can now derive new embryonic stem cell lines in labs and use human embryos for research permitted under the federal law (University of Michigan, 2013, para 2). Clearly, the state of Michigan has changed which side of the law it stands on when it comes to the matter of stem cell research. With further study and new information, more and more laws may be overturned to support stem cell research.
University of Michigan. Stem Cell Research: Overview. (2013). Retrieved September 12,
2016, from http://www.stemcellresearch.umich.edu/overview/faq.html#section0

Must follow APA 7 guidelines Needs a running head. There are two PArts

Part 1. Select a Management Topic from below Focus more on Part 1 600-800 words

Select a topic related to management

1. Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning

2. Diversity, Inclusion, and Equity

3. Working With Big Data

4. Gig Economy Contract Work

5. Sexual Harassment; #MeToo at Work

6. Automation of Jobs and Tasks

7. The Changing Nature of Work

8. Data Visualization and Communication

9. Creating Agile Organizations

10. WorkLife Balance Interventions

Find five (5) Scholarly peer reviewed articles in this area Within the last 5 years

Discuss the contributions of the 5 additional journal articles and how these articles help to provide additional clarity on the topic.

Each Journal Articles title is the Heading above your response, and this heading is left justified.

(State the name of the Journal Article)

            Discuss the Contribution of this article and in a separate paragraph discuss how this article provide additional clarity on the topic.

(State the name of the Journal Article)

            Discuss the Contribution of this article and in a separate paragraph discuss how this article provide additional clarity on the topic.

(State the name of the Journal Article)

            Discuss the Contribution of this article and in a separate paragraph discuss how this article provide additional clarity on the topic.

Etc. for the remaining 2 journal articles.

Part 2 Annotated Bibliography:  1 paragraph per source. Total of 5 paragraphs

In preparation for writing each of your discussion forums, you should submit an annotated bibliography. An annotated bibliography is a list of sources (books, journals, Web sites, periodicals, etc.) one has used for researching a topic (Annotated Bibliographies, 2020).

For all sources used in your discussion forum you should:

        Provide an APA formatted Citation

        Summarizethe source and discuss the research study that was conducted and what the findings were.

        Assess the source and discuss how useful it is and how it compares with other sources in your paper.

        Reflecton how the source will be useful to you in your forum. How does it help to shape your argument and how are you using it to shape your writing?

A sample APA formatted annotated bibliography can be found here: https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/general_writing/common_writing_assignments/annotated_bibliographies/annotated_bibliography_samples.html

INTRODUCTION
Healthcare organizations accredited by the Joint Commission are required to conduct a root cause analysis (RCA) in response to any sentinel event, such as the one described in the scenario attached below. Once the cause is identified and a plan of action established, it is useful to conduct a failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA) to reduce the likelihood that a process would fail. As a member of the healthcare team in the hospital described in this scenario, you have been selected as a member of the team investigating the incident.

SCENARIO
It is 3:30 p.m. on a Thursday and Mr. B, a 67-year-old patient, arrives at the six-room emergency department (ED) of a sixty-bed rural hospital. He has been brought to the hospital by his son and neighbor. At this time, Mr. B is moaning and complaining of severe pain to his (L) leg and hip area. He states he lost his balance and fell after tripping over his dog.

Mr. B was admitted to the triage room where his vital signs were B/P 120/80, HR-88 (regular), T-98.6, and R-32, and his weight was recorded at 175 pounds. Mr. B. states that he has no known allergies and no previous falls. He states, My hip area and leg hurt really bad. I have never had anything like this before. Patient rates pain at 10 out of 10 on the numerical verbal pain scale. He appears to be in moderate distress. His (L) leg appears shortened with swelling (edema in the calf), ecchymosis, and limited range of motion (ROM). Mr. Bs leg is stabilized and then is further evaluated and discharged from triage to the emergency department (ED) patient room. He is admitted by Nurse J. Nurse J finds that Mr. B has a history of impaired glucose tolerance and prostate cancer. At Mr. Bs last visit with his primary care physician, laboratory data revealed elevated cholesterol and lipids. Mr. Bs current medications are atorvastatin and oxycodone for chronic back pain. After Mr. Bs assessment is completed, Nurse J informs Dr. T, the ED physician, of admission findings, and Dr. T proceeds to examine Mr. B.

Staffing on this day consists of two nurses (one RN and one LPN), one secretary, and one emergency department physician. Respiratory therapy is in-house and available as needed. At the time of Mr. Bs arrival, the ED staff is caring for two other patients. One patient is a 43-year-old female complaining of a throbbing headache. The patient rates current pain at 4 out of 10 on numerical verbal pain scale. The patient states that she has a history of migraines. She received treatment, remains stable, and discharge is pending. The second patient is an eight-year-old boy being evaluated for possible appendicitis. Laboratory results are pending for this patient. Both of these patients were examined, evaluated, and cared for by Dr. T and are awaiting further treatment or orders.

After evaluation of Mr. B, Dr. T writes the order for Nurse J to administer diazepam 5 mg IVP to Mr. B. The medication diazepam is administered IVP at 4:05 p.m. After five minutes, the diazepam appears to have had no effect on Mr. B, and Dr. T instructs Nurse J to administer hydromorphone 2 mg IVP. The medication hydromorphone is administered IVP at 4:15 p.m. After five minutes, Dr. T is still not satisfied with the level of sedation Mr. B has achieved and instructs Nurse J to administer another 2 mg of hydromorphone IVP and an additional 5 mg of diazepam IVP. The physicians goal is for the patient to achieve skeletal muscle relaxation from the diazepam, which will aid in the manual manipulation, relocation, and alignment of Mr. Bs hip. The hydromorphone IVP was administered to achieve pain control and sedation. After reviewing the patients medical history, Dr. T notes that the patients weight and current regular use of oxycodone appear to be making it more difficult to sedate Mr. B.

Finally, at 4:25 p.m., the patient appears to be sedated, and the successful reduction of his (L) hip takes place. The patient appears to have tolerated the procedure and remains sedated. He is not currently on any supplemental oxygen. The procedure concludes at 4:30 p.m.,and Mr. B is resting without indications of discomfort and distress. At this time, the ED receives an emergency dispatch call alerting the emergency department that the emergency rescue unit paramedics are enroute with a 75-year-old patient in acute respiratory distress. Nurse J places Mr. B on an automatic blood pressure machine programmed to monitor his B/P every five minutes and a pulse oximeter. At this time, Nurse J leaves Mr. Bs room. The nurse allows Mr. Bs son to sit with him as he is being monitored via the blood pressure monitor. At 4:35 p.m., Mr. Bs B/P is 110/62 and his O2 saturation is 92%. He remains without supplemental oxygen and his ECG and respirations are not monitored.

Nurse J and the LPN on duty have received the emergency transport patient. They are also in the process of discharging the other two patients. Meanwhile, the ED lobby has become congested with new incoming patients. At this time, Mr. Bs O2 saturation alarm is heard and shows low O2 saturation (currently showing a saturation of 85%). The LPN enters Mr. Bs room briefly, resets the alarm, and repeats the B/P reading.

Nurse J is now fully engaged with the emergency care of the respiratory distress patient, which includes assessments, evaluation, and the ordering of respiratory treatments, CXR, labs, etc.

At 4:43 p.m., Mr. Bs son comes out of the room and informs the nurse that the monitor is alarming. When Nurse J enters the room, the blood pressure machine shows Mr. Bs B/P reading is 58/30 and the O2 saturation is 79%. The patient is not breathing and no palpable pulse can be detected.

A STAT CODE is called and the son is escorted to the waiting room. The code team arrives and begins resuscitative efforts. When connected to the cardiac monitor, Mr. B is found to be in ventricular fibrillation. CPR begins immediately by the RN, and Mr. B is intubated. He is defibrillated and reversal agents, IV fluids, and vasopressors are administered. After 30 minutes of interventions, the ECG returns to a normal sinus rhythm with a pulse and a B/P of 110/70. The patient is not breathing on his own and is fully dependent on the ventilator. The patients pupils are fixed and dilated. He has no spontaneous movements and does not respond to noxious stimuli. Air transport is called, and upon the familys wishes, the patient is transferred to a tertiary facility for advanced care.

Seven days later, the receiving hospital informed the rural hospital that EEGs had determined brain death in Mr. B. The family had requested life-support be removed, and Mr. B subsequently died.

Additional information: The hospital where Mr. B. was originally seen and treated had a moderate sedation/analgesia (conscious sedation) policy that requires that the patient remains on continuous B/P, ECG, and pulse oximeter throughout the procedure and until the patient meets specific discharge criteria (i.e., fully awake, VSS, no N/V, and able to void). All practitioners who perform moderate sedation must first successfully complete the hospitals moderate sedation training module. The training module includes drug selection as well as acceptable dose ranges. Additional (backup) staff was available on the day of the incident. Nurse J had completed the moderate sedation module. Nurse J had current ACLS certification and was an experienced critical care nurse. Nurse Js prior annual clinical evaluations by the manager demonstrated that the nurse was meeting requirements. Nurse J did not have a history of negligent patient care. Sufficient equipment was available and in working order in the ED on this day.

REQUIREMENTS
Your submission must be your original work. No more than a combined total of 30% of the submission and no more than a 10% match to any one individual source can be directly quoted or closely paraphrased from sources, even if cited correctly. An originality report is provided when you submit your task that can be used as a guide.

You must use the rubric to direct the creation of your submission because it provides detailed criteria that will be used to evaluate your work. Each requirement below may be evaluated by more than one rubric aspect. The rubric aspect titles may contain hyperlinks to relevant portions of the course.

A. Explain the general purpose of conducting a root cause analysis (RCA).

1. Explain each of the six steps used to conduct an RCA, as defined by IHI.

2. Apply the RCA process to the scenario to describe the causative and contributing factors that led to the sentinel event outcome.

B. Propose a process improvement plan that would decrease the likelihood of a reoccurrence of the scenario outcome.

1. Discuss how each phase of Lewins change theory on the human side of change could be applied to the proposed improvement plan.

C. Explain the general purpose of the failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA) process.

1. Describe the steps of the FMEA process as defined by IHI.

2. Complete the attached FMEA table by appropriately applying the scales of severity, occurrence, and detection to the process improvement plan proposed in part B.

Note: You are not expected to carry out the full FMEA.

D. Explain how you would test the interventions from the process improvement plan from part B to improve care.

E. Explain how a professional nurse can competently demonstrate leadership in each of the following areas:

promoting quality care

improving patient outcomes

influencing quality improvement activities

1. Discuss how the involvement of the professional nurse in the RCA and FMEA processes demonstrates leadership qualities.

F. Acknowledge sources, using in-text citations and references, for content that is quoted, paraphrased, or summarized.

G. Demonstrate professional communication in the content and presentation of your submission.

File Restrictions
File name may contain only letters, numbers, spaces, and these symbols: ! – _ . * ‘ ( )
File size limit: 200 MB
File types allowed: doc, docx, rtf, xls, xlsx, ppt, pptx, odt, pdf, txt, qt, mov, mpg, avi, mp3, wav, mp4, wma, flv, asf, mpeg, wmv, m4v, svg, tif, tiff, jpeg, jpg, gif, png, zip, rar, tar, 7z
RUBRIC
A:ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS
NOT EVIDENT

An explanation of the general purpose of conducting an RCA is not provided.

APPROACHING COMPETENCE

The explanation does not accurately describe the general purpose for conducting an RCA.

COMPETENT

The explanation accurately describes the general purpose for conducting an RCA.

A1:RCA STEPS
NOT EVIDENT

An explanation of 6 RCA steps is not provided.

APPROACHING COMPETENCE

The explanation does not accurately identify or does not logically describe one or more of the 6 steps used to conduct an RCA, as defined by IHI.

COMPETENT

The explanation accurately identifies and logically describes each of the 6 steps used to conduct an RCA, as defined by IHI.

A2:CAUSATIVE AND CONTRIBUTING FACTORS
NOT EVIDENT

An application of the RCA process to the scenario is not provided.

APPROACHING COMPETENCE

The application of the RCA process to the scenario does not accurately describe causative or contributing factors that led to the sentinel event outcome, or the application does not accurately differentiate between causative and contributing factors.

COMPETENT

The application of the RCA process to the scenario accurately describes the causative and contributing factors that led to the sentinel event outcome.

B:IMPROVEMENT PLAN
NOT EVIDENT

A proposed process improvement plan is not provided.

APPROACHING COMPETENCE

The proposal does not outline a logical process improvement plan, or the proposal does not logically discuss how the proposed plan will decrease the likelihood of a reoccurrence of the scenario outcome.

COMPETENT

The proposal outlines a logical process improvement plan and logically discusses how the proposed plan will decrease the likelihood of a reoccurrence of the scenario outcome.

B1:CHANGE THEORY
NOT EVIDENT

A discussion of the application of Lewins change theory is not provided.

APPROACHING COMPETENCE

The discussion does not logically describe how Lewins change theory could be applied to the proposed improvement plan, or the discussion does not describe each phase of the theory.

COMPETENT

The discussion logically describes how each phase of Lewins change theory could be applied to the proposed improvement plan.

C:GENERAL PURPOSE OF FMEA
NOT EVIDENT

An explanation of the general purpose of the FMEA process is not provided.

APPROACHING COMPETENCE

The explanation does not accurately describe a general purpose of the FMEA process, or the explanation does not logically discuss why the FMEA process would be used.

COMPETENT

The explanation accurately describes a general purpose of the FMEA process and logically discusses why the FMEA process would be used.

C1:STEPS OF FMEA PROCESS
NOT EVIDENT

A description of the steps is not provided.

APPROACHING COMPETENCE

The description of the steps of the FMEA process does not accurately define each of the steps.

COMPETENT

The description accurately defines each of the steps of the FMEA process.

C2:FMEA TABLE
NOT EVIDENT

A completed FMEA table is not provided.

APPROACHING COMPETENCE

The FMEA table is incomplete, does not identify appropriate failure modes related to the improvement plan proposed in prompt B, or does not accurately apply the scales of severity, occurrence, and detection in evaluating the identified failure modes.

COMPETENT

The completed FMEA table appropriately identifies failure modes related to the improvement plan proposed in part B and demonstrates accurate application of the scales of severity, occurrence, and detection in evaluating the identified failure modes.

D:INTERVENTION TESTING
NOT EVIDENT

An explanation of intervention testing is not provided.

APPROACHING COMPETENCE

The explanation does not describe steps of an appropriate testing procedure or practice that would be used by the candidate to test interventions from the process improvement plan in part B, or the explanation does not logically describe how the intervention testing procedures or practices would improve care.

COMPETENT

The explanation describes steps of the testing procedures or practices that the candidate would use that are appropriate for testing the interventions from the process improvement plan in part B. The explanation logically describes how the intervention testing procedures or practices would improve care.

E:DEMONSTRATE LEADERSHIP
NOT EVIDENT

An explanation of how a professional nurse demonstrates leadership is not provided.

APPROACHING COMPETENCE

The explanation does not logically describe how a professional nurse competently demonstrates leadership in one or more of the given areas.

COMPETENT

The explanation logically describes how a professional nurse competently demonstrates leadership in each of the given areas.

E1:INVOLVING PROFESSIONAL NURSE IN RCA AND FMEA PROCESSES
NOT EVIDENT

A discussion of involvement in the RCA and FMEA processes is not provided.

APPROACHING COMPETENCE

The discussion does not logically describe how the involvement of the professional nurse in either the RCA process or the FMEA process demonstrates leadership qualities.

COMPETENT

The discussion logically describes how the involvement of the professional nurse in both the RCA and FMEA processes demonstrates leadership qualities.

F:SOURCES
NOT EVIDENT

The submission does not include both in-text citations and a reference list for sources that are quoted, paraphrased, or summarized.

APPROACHING COMPETENCE

The submission includes in-text citations for sources that are quoted, paraphrased, or summarized and a reference list; however, the citations or reference list is incomplete or inaccurate.

COMPETENT

The submission includes in-text citations for sources that are properly quoted, paraphrased, or summarized and a reference list that accurately identifies the author, date, title, and source location as available.

G:PROFESSIONAL COMMUNICATION
NOT EVIDENT

Content is unstructured, is disjointed, or contains pervasive errors in mechanics, usage, or grammar. Vocabulary or tone is unprofessional or distracts from the topic.

APPROACHING COMPETENCE

Content is poorly organized, is difficult to follow, or contains errors in mechanics, usage, or grammar that cause confusion. Terminology is misused or ineffective.

COMPETENT

Content reflects attention to detail, is organized, and focuses on the main ideas as prescribed in the task or chosen by the candidate. Terminology is pertinent, is used correctly, and effectively conveys the intended meaning. Mechanics, usage, and grammar promote accurate interpretation and understanding.

WEB LINKS
IHI FMEA Tool
SUPPORTING DOCUMENTS
FMEA Table.docx

~please use this link http://www.mhhe.com/socscience/psychology/faces/#
and choose Major Depression ” click EACH title at the top (starting with diagnosis) and with its corresponding subtitles on the left hand side (ALL OF THEM)
If there is a video please watch it (instructions are in attachment on what to cover about the videos)

~directions and rubric are attached in the files

~1500 words or more

~use TWO peer-reviewed journal articles (2000s and up only)

~no cover page needed, references do not count towards (but paper still needs a reference page) 1500+ words

A presidents inaugural address is usually designed to set the tone for the next four years (or at least until the next day, when his critics and the media get down to serious business).  Of the three rhetorical appeals, it focuses primarily on ethos and pathos, and much less on logos, since the country is pretty much logosed out by inauguration day.  This is a speech of healing and hope, putting the divisiveness of the campaign away for now, and looking forward to a future of working together as Americans toward a common goal (ha-ha!).

In this paper, I would like you to read the inaugural addresses of Presidents Obama and Trump and analyze each in terms of both content and style, with special attention paid to the three appeals as well as those rhetorical strategies–tropes and schemesthey deploy to convince their supporters that they will get what they voted for and their critics that the next four years will not be as terrible as they anticipate. I also want you to compare and contrast the projected audience (i.e., us) for each of the speeches and examine whether they are the same or not.

[Remember: This is not about your personal politics.  It is about rhetoric and you should approach each speech as dispassionately as humanly possible.] 

The paper should be 4-5 pages long and formatted/documented according to the MLA style.  Limit your outside research to the speeches themselvestext and videothough you may want to search out some of the campaign speechestext and videoof both as points of comparison between the rhetorical techniques used to attain the office and those used once they have.

Introduction
a. The Introduction starts with a broad opening statement which establishes the context and time period in question.
b. The second, third, and fourth sentences of your introduction should explain/allude to your three body paragraphs. For instance the second sentence should say how your first body paragraph will help prove your thesis argument.
c. Your fifth, and final sentence, should sum up your argument with a statement that combines the main points of your body paragraphs into a single unified thesis. The thesis statement should clearly present your argument to the reader.

2. Body Paragraph One
a. Body Paragraph One will deal with the first sub-argument that you will present to prove your thesis.
b. It should open with a topic sentence. This topic sentence should be an argument that helps support and prove the thesis statement. (Think of it as a mini-thesis for your paragraph)
c. From the topic sentence, you can go on to present specific evidence to support your argument. This evidence must relate to your topic sentence. Do not fact dump or story tell. (Aim for using at least two solid pieces of evidence per paragraph.)
d. Once you use a piece of evidence, you should be sure to write at least one sentence explaining why you used it and how it helps prove to your topic sentence. (This is the analysis)
i. For an in class essay, your explanation may be an analysis of a specific event, action or trend that proves historical impact
ii. For a Document Based Question (DBQ), your explanation may be an analysis of one of the documents provided
iii. For an out-of-class research assignment, your explanation may be a an analysis of a piece of evidence using properly cited statistical data, an article, or a paraphrase which provides deep insight into your argument
e. Then, wrap up the Body Paragraph with a mini-concluding sentence that sums up only what you have discussed in this paragraph and how it relates to your thesis.

3. Body Paragraph Two
a. Body Paragraph Two should follow the exact same rules as Body Paragraph One.
b. This time, pick the second sub-topic in your intro paragraph.

4. Body Paragraph Three
a. Body Paragraph Three should follow the exact same rules as Body Paragraph One and Two.
b. This time, pick the third sub-topic in your intro paragraph.

5. Conclusion
a. Your conclusion is a wrap-up of the entire essay.
b. The first thing your conclusion should contain is a reworded thesis statement.
c. The conclusion should then continue to address how your not proven topic sentence arguments supported your thesis statement.
d. Finally, the conclusion should end with a more general observation about how the topic applies to the time period.
e. Conclusions should be approximately five sentences.

*It is important to remember that this is simply a rough sketch to guide your essays. If your topic is quite complicated, then you may have more than three body paragraphs. Furthermore, you can expand your individual sub-topics, as well. If you have a complicated sub-topic argument in support of your thesis, you may need to break that argument down into separate paragraphs.*

Here is a diagram of the basic essay guidelines. Remember, “Body Paragraphs” simply stand for specific subtopics for your thesis. There can be more than three if needed.

I. Introduction
a. Opening Statement
b. Body paragraph 1 introduction
c. Body paragraph 2 introduction
d. Body paragraph 3 introduction
e. Thesis Statement

II. Body Paragraph
a. Topic Sentence (pertaining to Subtopic #1) Explanation/Define the subtopic
b. Evidence/content A
c. Explanation/analysis of evidence A
d. Evidence/content B
e. Explanation/analysis of evidence B
f. Mini-conclusion only about Subtopic #1

III. Body Paragraph 2
a. Topic Sentence (pertaining to Subtopic #2) Explanation/Define the subtopic
b. Evidence/content A
c. Explanation/analysis of evidence A
d. Evidence/content B
e. Explanation/analysis of evidence B
f. Mini-conclusion only about Subtopic#2

IV. Body Paragraph 3
a. Topic Sentence (pertaining to Sub-Topic #3) Explanation/Define the subtopic
b. Evidence/content A
c. Explanation/analysis of evidence A
d. Evidence/content B
e. Explanation/analysis of evidence B
f. Mini-conclusion only about Subtopic #3

V. Conclusion
a. Restatement of Thesis
b. Sum up how your body paragraphs support your thesis statement (multiple sentences)
c. Broad statement relating to topic and its legacy moving forward

Assignment # 5: Describe a Process
Compose one or more paragraphs within which you describe one or more processes important to an understanding of your topic. My topic is Stem cell research.

When using outside sources, SEE THE “APA TAB” IN THE COURSE FOR DOCUMENTATION GUIDELINES.

FOLLOW THE MODEL and examples given, and be sure to refer to your evaluation guide/ rubric for where you will earn or lose points.

SAMPLE:

    Other experiments are performed on animals to test the effectiveness of new drugs and medical procedures.  For example, animals are infected with various viruses, they are implanted with cancers, artificial hearts and kidneys, or they are surgically altered so that the diseases or medical procedures can be studied in more detail.  As Peter Singer reports in Animal Liberation (2006), Robert J. White of the Cleveland Metropolitan General Hospital is the perfect example of the scientist who thinks of a laboratory animal as a tool for research (pg. 37).  Studying the human brain, White experiments on the decapitated heads of monkeys that are alive in fluid (pg. 75).  While Whites studies may sound bizarre, they are but one example of biomedical research employing animals as subjects.

SAMPLE:
Scientists have come up with ways to increase plant production, extend shelf life, and make food more nutritious through genetically modifying organisms. In 2015, Chelsea Powell, and Anna Maurer, from Harvard University, created a flow chart about the most common ways that GMO plants are made and explains it through easy to follow pictures and notes.  They describe GMO production as a process that starts out simple enough and that begins with the question: what do I want from this plant?  Once scientists come up with an answer, they look into nature to find a trait that exists in that species of plants.  It may take a while, but once the plant with the desired trait is found, scientists will look at its DNA and isolate the trait they want.  It is then compared to the DNA of other plants in the same species so they can find out where the DNA of one plant can fit into the DNA of another.  The desired DNA is then cut from the strand and is inserted into the other plant.  This can happen by either shooting the genes into the plant directly, or through using bacteria and enzymes to alter the modified plant, which has a more successful rate of integration than directly inserting a gene. With luck, the foreign DNA is absorbed into the DNA of the seeds and a plant will grow.  It may take several tries to get a plant to grow after the genetic modification, and even then, the plant may not have the traits that were desired in the first place.  At that point, the process begins anew, until the desired effects are grown (para. 3).  It may seem like an over complicated method of seed production, especially when basic plant seeds are readily available and cheap, but these new seeds have the potential to bring more nutritious food production to the most desolate of places. 

importantly, all of the above thinkers are political theorists insofar they were political activists. Their ideas are not simply about helping us understand the world, but to get us to act to change the world. Their texts, in other words, are political in the best possible sense of the term.

Their causes and their proposals differ. But common ground is that they all pursue democracy: self-government.

So these thinkers have different ideas, I attached is their readings you will individually write about their ideas and compare and contrast two thinkers ideas and what will they have done things differently in this day and now.

1.I introduce my topic and state my claim. I include an attention-grabbing lead, such as a quote, a story, or an interesting example.
2.I develop my claim with valid reasons and relevant evidence.
3.I anticipate opposing claims and counter them with well-supported reasons and relevant evidence.
4.My argument is well organized and establishes clear, logical relationships among claims, counterclaims, reasons, and evidence through the use of transitions.
5.My conclusion effectively summarizes my claim and leaves readers with a lasting impression.
6.I communicate ideas formally and objectively, using precise language.

Ephesians Word Study

Select a word from your Ephesians passage that you deem to be of significance to the interpretation of the passage. Base your determination of significance on Duvall & Hays Choose Your Words Carefully section in chapter 9, page 167 and a check for range of meaning in the concordance.  Be sure you understand range of meaning or semantic range and how to identify them. (Described in the Determine What the Word Could Mean section of Chapter 9, pages 170-172.)  A word may have great theological significance but, if it has no range of meaning, it is not a good choice for this assignment.

Using the steps outlined in Assignment 9-2, (steps 1-7) as a guide, do a complete word study of the word you have chosen. For instance, using your concordance, find the Greek word that translates the word you have chosen (step 1), write it out in transliterated form (step 2), make a list of the different ways this word is translated in the NIV (step 3), locate the verses that correspond to each translation (step 4)

In lieu of steps 5-7 create your own questions and answers (like steps 5-7) that will help you to identify the semantic range for your word based on its uses. If you have questions about this part, ask them in the Student Lounge or email your instructor.

If you have access to Verbrugge’s New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology, you may complete Step 8, otherwise this step is optional.