The article Does Reading Fiction Make Us Better People?(https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20190523-does-reading-fiction-make-us-better-people ) examines the idea that reading fiction enhances our compassion and empathythat is, our ability to identify with other peoples experiences and relate to what they feel and think in their interior lives (Hammond). A story may introduce us to human concerns and emotions by painting a picture of characters lives.

The articles studies present a few events that have been used to gauge peoples empathy. For instance, how does reading a novel about a man suddenly going blind help us empathize with people who are visually impaired?

Remember in “Week 1:  What Are the Benefits of Literature,” you were introduced to some of the scientifically proven benefits of reading literature. From Week 1 Insights:

No matter the reader, no matter the writer, no matter the genre, literature is a cultural artifacta manifestation of the human experience. Thus, it can teach us about our society and about ourselves. It enables us to experience alternate lives from the safety of our armchairs, to project ourselves onto characters and environments, to explore worlds we would otherwise never experience.

Studies show that reading literature benefits us in profound ways. 

It promotes empathy and social skills (Castano and Kidd).

It alleviates symptoms of depression (Billington et al.).

It helps business leaders succeed (Coleman).

It prevents dementia by stimulating the mind (Thorpe).

This paper assignment will circle back to those benefits as you see them at work in the literature we have read and analyzed for this class.

Works Cited

Hammond, Claudia. “Does Reading Fiction Make Us Better People?” BBC Future. 2 June 2009. https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20190523-does-reading-fiction-make-us-better-people

Assignment

For this paper, choose another story and consider the following question: What does this story have to teach us about empathy for others? In responding to this question, your focus will be on the themes that arise from your close readings of the story. You will develop an argument on what the story teaches us about empathy and how it is conveyed.

Alternatively, you may choose to argue that the story does not teach us about empathy. In either case, you will use elements from the story to support your argument.

In addition, you will use evidence from at least one of the following articles to support your argument:

Schmidt, Megan. “How Reading Fiction Increases Empathy and Encourages Understanding.”  Discover Magazine. discovermagazine.com. 28 Aug. 2020. 

Castano, Emanuele and David Kidd. “Reading Literary Fiction Improves Theory of Mind.” Science. www.sciencemag.org. 18 Oct. 2013; 342 (6156): 377-80.

Coleman, John. “The Benefits of Poetry for Professionals.” Harvard Business Review, 2012. https://hbr.org/2012/11/the-benefits-of-poetry-for-pro

Thorpe, J.R. “Why Reading Poetry Is Good For Your Brain.” Bustle, 20 Apr. 2017. https://www.bustle.com/p/why-reading-poetry-is-good-for-your-brain-51884

Most of the articles in this list were referenced in the Week 1 Insights (see above). You should also refer to “Week 6 Insights:  Integrating Sources Using Your Own Voice” for guidance on working with your chosen article.

CRAFTING YOUR THESIS FOR PAPER 2

As you used three discrete literary elements in Paper 1 to support your thesis, you have learned that literary elements such as plot, characterization, setting, and theme are not always separate and distinct. Rather, these elements tend to inform each other, making the story a cohesive narrative. 

For Paper 2, you will focus on a significant theme from the story that can be extended to a real-life issue or concern. Your analysis of the storys theme, and the dimensions of that theme, will have affected or even changed how you think about a real-life issue. In other words, your argument will prove that reading and analyzing the story has shown you different viewpoints and thus can increase empathy in readers. 

Some issues or concerns to consider:

Gender roles (“Jury of Her Peers,” “Bloodchild,” “Miss Brill”)
Sexuality (“Giovannis Room,” “Bloodchild”)
Relationships (“Bloodchild,” “Giovannis Room”)
Marriage (“Jury of Her Peers”)
Race (“Giovannis Room,” “Recitatif,” “Bloodchild”)
Parenting (“Recitatif,” “Bloodchild”)
Class (“Recitatif,” “Giovannis Room”)
Remember that your Writing Process is recursive and iterative. You should refer to your earlier writing work in this class as well as the learning resources. The Thesis Statements handout and Learning Resources from Week 3 will be helpful. Your thesis for this paper may vary from the boilerplate, but it must still include a claim and three warrants. 

Sample thesis structure: 

[Story X] helps us to understand [theme/issue Y] by promoting empathy through [warrant 1], [warrant 2], and [warrant 3]

Sample thesis statement:

The conflicts between male and female characters in Susan Glaspells story “A Jury of Her Peers” helps readers have more empathy for the oppression of women through its depiction of Mrs. Wrights marriage, the womens roles, and the inequality between men and women in the story.

OUTLINE FOR PAPER 2

Refer to the work you did and feedback you received from Paper 1. The outline is a straightforward way of listing and organizing the ideas connected to your claim and three warrants for your five-paragraph essay. Your task in drafting this paper is to expand the levels of your outline in more detail.Next, you will convert the bulleted items from your outline into well-crafted sentences, and then combine those sentences into well-organized, logical paragraphs.

The paper will have three body paragraphs, each one led by a topic sentence that includes the explicit warrant. The rest of the paragraph will contain statements with the supporting evidence from both the story and the article. 

The essay will be structured as follows:

Introduction:
Create a context for the thesis by explaining the BBC article (two to three sentences). (Cite in the text.)
Provide a brief overview of the story (2 to 3 sentences)
State the thesis: [Story X] helps us to understand [theme/issue Y] by promoting empathy through [warrant 1], [warrant 2], and [warrant 3]
Body paragraph #1: Warrant 1
Supporting evidence from story
Analysis: How does the story help us understand the concern?
Body paragraph #2: Warrant 2
Supporting evidence from story
Analysis: How does the story help us understand the issue?
Body paragraph #3: Warrant 3
Supporting evidence from story
Analysis: How does the story help us understand the issue?
Conclusion
Return to the thesis 
Reflect on the connection between the article and the story. What have we learned from your analysis? Does fiction really promote empathy? 
Hints:Remember that your reader has read the story and is familiar with it; extensive summary is not useful. Rather, explain and analyze how “meaning” is derived from the story by the author’s implementation of literary elements. Note that the focus should be on the story, not the author, so repeated references to the author are unnecessary.

In this brief (3-5 page) paper, you will use both the structural and human resource frames to explain and make sense of an organizational mini-case with which you are familiar (note: this must be an education organization). The mini-case might derive from an organization you now work in or have worked in, or from a published case you are interested in. In writing this piece you are answering the questions: in what ways does the case display the concepts at work? How do the different ways of viewing the case uncover or highlight what is actually happening in the organization?

For this assignment you will write a 2-3pages (single-spaced; 1500 words) narrative essay about an instance of learning (or teaching) about your particular interest (pet community) that took place somewhere other than a school setting. The goal is to think about how the experience contributed to your learning in ways that we dont see in classroom spaces. This is because we will continue to hone our research skills as we observe at different sites, and on the electronic sites in the internet. You should be clear about how the learning happened in this place by connecting it to our course readings (at least 3 citations related to learning and development should be included). Use APA formatting and include a reference page (not included in the length requirement). If it helps to compare and contrast your learning experience to a more formal learning setting (i.e., the classroom), you can do this, but be careful! The comparative analysis may limit what you are able to say about the uncommon practices of a unique learning environment.

Questions to consider for this essay (You do NOT have to incorporate questions to all the answers, these are guides to be more analytical) :

Where did the learning experience happen?
For whom is the learning experience meant to include? Who benefits from this learning experience? Who is the audience? For whom is it important?
Why does this learning experience happen? Whats its purpose beyond the immediate situation?
Why is this learning experience important for you?
How did learning happen during this experience? What theories of learning (from class) explain the processes of learning that occurred?
Other items to consider for this assignment:
How is the physical space (e.g. room layout, website, order of modules, etc) arranged and how does this support learning? (if applicable)
How do people engage in learning? 
What tools and materials are used during the learning experience?
Who participates in the experience, and what kinds of relationships exist between the individuals?
What kind of rules and norms of communication exist and how were these visible to you?

For this paper, you will develop an argument that you began exploring in the Week 2 discussion, which asked, “What is literature?”Your paper will answer that question using the following format: 

“This story is an excellentexample of literature because it provides meaning about X.” 

Examples of how you might fill-in “X” include “children and parenting,” “the Black experience,” “gendered double standards,” or another aspect of the human condition that you can relate to and that has a significant presence in the story. 

The answer statement above is only half of your thesis. The thesis is constructed with two main parts: a claim and warrants.For this paper, your thesis will havethreewarrants. 

Example: 

Flannery O’Connor’s short story “A Good Man Is Hard to Find” is an excellent example of a literary work because it provides insight into the hypocrisy of religious morality through character, setting, and theme. 

Week 3 shows you how the outline is a straightforward way to list and organize your ideas to support your claim with three warrants.Your task in drafting this paper is to expand the levels of your outline in more detail.Next, you will convert the bulleted items from your outline into well-crafted sentences, and then combine the sentences into well-organized, logical paragraphs. 

Your three warrants will use the literary elements you explored and applied in Week 2.You may choose any literary elements, and you do not have to use three different ones.However, the body of your paper needs to have three paragraphs.For instance, if you choose to only discuss plot, then you must have enough information to develop three paragraphs about how the plot elucidates your thesis claim.

Summary vs. analysis:Be aware that a paper analyzing a piece of literature is not a plot summary.Summary should be brief, with only the details necessary to identify the parts of the story required to develop your paper. 

You must use the short story MISS BRILL by Katherine Mansfield for references.

Description

Choose a side on this issue to argue for or against. Argument is key.  A presentation of ideas and information will not suffice.  You must include argument. Take a stand

Note: The following topics are meant only to serve as examples of the kinds of policy issues that are presented in these particular fields. You may choose from among these, but you are not required to do so. Just remember, you may not write about abortion, gun control, marijuana legalization, euthanasia/physician-assisted suicide, the death penalty, or gay marriage.

      Education
o  Should a community college education be free?
o  Should online education be standardized for all schools/colleges?
o  Should the SAT or ACT be used in college admissions?
o  Should public schools require school uniforms?
o  Should school lunches be regulated/changed/supported with locally grown food/required to purchase from school/etc.?
o  Should homeschool requirements be more heavily regulated/funded/monitored/etc.?
o  Should all high school graduates be required to attend some form of college?
o  Should all high school graduates be required to take a gap year before attending college?
o  Should community service be a requirement of high school or college graduation?
o  Should schools institute stricter polices (searches/lockdowns/metal detectors/ more security guards/etc.) to increase safety on school grounds?

      Technology
o  Should the government more heavily regulate social media sites?
o  Should the government have access to technology that can break passcodes on smartphones?
o  Should laptops or smartphones be allowed in classrooms as tools?
o  Should there be a minimum age requirement on devices?
o  Should game ratings be revised?
o  Should people get identity chips implanted under their skin?
o  Should people trust/use smart speakers in their homes?
o  Should people in all countries have equal access to all technological developments or more specifically, should WiFi access be available to all communities at no charge?

      Food Issues
o  Should the government promote a vegetarian diet?
o  Should specific diets be supported by the FDA?
o  Should fast food restaurants/junk food/meats/etc. be taxed more heavily?
o  Should organic foods be subsidized more heavily to promote growth of the organic industry?
o  Should GMO foods be more heavily regulated?
o  Should additives be regulated/removed from foods?
o  Should vitamins be added to foods?
o  Should the government regulate the food industry at all?
o  Should food labels be more transparent in their information?
o  Should sugar/junk food be treated as an addictive drug?

Economics/American Dream
Should immigration policies be tightened or loosened to fill the growing need for jobs?
Should the income gap between men and women be closed?
Should affirmative action be used in hiring?
Should entitlement programs like Medicare and Social Security continue to be supported and funded by Congress?
Should all Americans be required to start a private retirement fund like a 401k or an IRA?
Should all Americans be required to save a percentage of their salary?
Should America adopt universal healthcare? (Think of this in an economic light.)

Gender Issues
Should there be mandatory sexual assault training in colleges and workplaces for students and employees?
Should the US require paid maternity/paternity leave?
Should affirmative action be used to increase the number of women in certain workplaces?

REMEMBER THIS IS A CONTINUANCE FROM THE LAST 2 PAPERS YOU’VE DONE
Continue to take baseline measurements on your behavior. Remember to measure behavior without trying to make any changes at this point.
Discuss at least five positive punishments that would be effective for you personally.  Remember that positive punishment is something you dislike that is added to your environment because you did not meet a goal.  Examples might be: having to do additional chores, a scolding, doing pushups (assuming you dislike all of these).
Discuss at least five negative punishments that would be effective for you personally.  Remember that negative punishment is removing something that you like because you did not meet a goal.  Examples could be loss of cell phone, no dessert, paying a fine and losing money, loss of television time (assuming you like all of these).

Hello. I need writer to do my thesis from abstract to the references. I attached a file where there is all the instructions. I study social work in health care. I need master degree quality for my topic.
The thesis is for addressing the problem and the sociological and mental effects and health behaviors as an effect of the heavy mental health problems too. Finding solutions from the previous research articles and books and discuss the gaps that needs more research and suggest more suggestions.

Written Activity #2 : When Anthropologists Go “Public

This assignment is next in a series of activities called “Public Anthropology” that we will do this semester.  It is inspired by Margaret Mead’s engagement with wider publics – not just other anthropologists.  The world, it seems, could benefit from a more anthropological perspective.  What is anthropology, what kinds of questions or issues does it raise for you, and how are the skills applicable?  What is the “Big Question” that interests you?  This is what we are ultimately getting to.

Objective: To think about and synthesize your anthropological learning these past years, and to articulate to nonspecialist audiences the complexities of bringing an anthropological approach to a human problem.
Outcome: Analze the ethics, benefits, and pitfalls of bringing anthropological approaches to wider publics.

First, read the following articles.  As usual, some of these are quite short.  Your basis for understanding the readings should be the works and discussion from Week 1.
1. Liebow (2018) Actions No More Passive Bystanders, Please
2. Dresser (2020)  (Links to an external site.)The Meaning of Margaret Mead (external link); https://aeon.co/essays/how-margaret-mead-became-a-hate-figure-for-conservatives
3. Scheper-Hughes (2009) Actions  Making Anthropology Public;
Starn, Orin (1986) Actions  Engineering Internment
4. Price (2000) Actions Anthropologists as Spies

In one post of appx. 750 words (yes, you may have more), answer the following questions:
1, What are the ethical concerns of bringing anthropology to the wider public?  Briefly discuss three points.
2. What are the ethical concerns of NOT bringing anthropology to the wider public?
3. What are the benefits of bringing anthropological perspectives and methods outside of the academy?  Discuss three specific points.
4. What are the dangers of bringing anthropological perspectives and methods outside the academy?

The standard Activities Rubric will be used to grade this exercise.
1. Anthropological Perspectives (4) Exhibits awareness and understanding of ethnocentrism, cultural relativity, contexts, and power in all activities;
2. Course Concepts (4) Directly and appropriately utilizes course terminology in all writing and activities;
3. Examples (4) Describes and utilizes appropriate examples from course materials (readings, films, individual fieldwork, media sources);
4. Follows Instructions (4)  Is this a compare/contrast discussion?  Did you find outside sources if required?  Were you supposed to upload an image?  Follow the directions!!  And put in some effort;
5. Writing, Style, Organization (4)  Writing is always important.  The writing can be indicative of your effort (see #4 above).