350 WORDS
Use the internet or library to research for a case involving a human service professional accused of ethical violations due to behaviors and risks inherent in the digital age. Focus your search on the United States. Please choose a different case example than your classmates have chosen.
Please respond to the following:
Describe the case in detail and report the outcome
Apply the risk management strategies learned from the readings to the case.
Analyze how the strategies could be applied and speculate how the outcome may have been different had these techniques been utilized.
Each of your article reviews should include the following items. Limit your answer to each question to 1-2 paragraphs.
1. Author/Year/Title of the Article. For example: Smith, Michael E. (2002) "The Earliest Cities.
2. State the main topic of this work.
3. State the conclusion of the author.
4. Identify two important statements/points made by the author to support his/her/their conclusion. Discuss these two statements/points.
5. Give one thought/comment that you have after reading the article or raise one question that you think the author should address in this article. What is your reason to think so
The digital revolution as some call it has brought many benefits and conveniences to people worldwide. It has certainly made travel easier and, in many ways, more interesting. Travel destinations can be explored on smartphones, information combed, and bookings made. Digital devices have unchained business people from their desks and allowed real-time communications through many online channels.
There can be little doubting that many people just love their phones. However, there is mounting evidence that using smartphones is addictive and that it can harm a persons mental and physical health. An article in The Wall Street Journal suggests that smartphone use lowers ones intellect (Carr 2017). Chang (2017) identifies the following eight (8) dangers of excessive phone use:
Injuries and accidents
Posture-related disorders
Screen fatigue
Reduced attention span
Sleeping problems
Disconnection with friends and family
Identity theft
Damage to the spine and ne
Bleisure is not a word to be found in any dictionary yet, but despite this it is a hot trend in tourism. It can be defined as a combination of business and leisure travel. Whereas tourism statisticians prefer to put visitors in neat boxes, the growing numbers of bleisure travelers are bound to confound the number-counters by blurring the boundaries between market segments.
The following are some of the likely reasons for the popularity of bleisure trips:
Time poverty
A concept liked by millennials
Someone else is paying for the trip (or most of it)
People may not return to the same destinations
Family can be brought along
See more of the world and gain greater knowledge
Have more and different cultural experiences
Two research studies have been completed on bleisure travel and are listed in the sources. The research by BridgeStreet Global Hospitality (2014) found that 60 percent of respondents had taken bleisure trips and another 20 percent intended t
"Streets without joy" by Bernard fall. this is not a summary of a book. you are encouraged to focus on major themes of the book and how the themes of the war for Indochina, the strategies used on both sides the moral issue involved in a civil-colonial war, importance of knowing your local environment, and the human stories involved in these conflicts. and please use direct examples from the book.
I will attach direct instructions for this assignment.
Write a review as though it were a
submission to a journal and you are a reviewer who has been asked to evaluate
whether or not it is publishable (with accept, invite to revise and resubmit, or reject as
the options, accompanied by 1-2 pages of comments)
You must attempt all questions. 200-300 words or more per part. Use references.
PART 1
The Dolezal controversy has raised questions about the way we talk about race in society and in the process taken a concept that scholars have been interrogating for a long time into public discussion. Before attempting this week's discussion board please review the article "Racial Formation in the United States" by Michael Omi and Howard Winant (1986)
In your initial discussion post, answer the following questions:
1. What does it mean to understand race as a social construction?
2. To what extent does the Dolezal controversy help illustrate race as a social construct rather than a biological fact?
PART 2
In 2005, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the first race-based drug. Called BiDil (pronounced bye-dill), it was intended to treat congestive heart failure in African-Americans only. The approval was widely declared
ITS SUPPOSED TO BE AN ART ANALYSIS
SHE IS VERY STUBBORN ABOUT THE NSTRUCTONS IF YOU CANT DO T CORRECTLY DONT BID!!!!!!
View the videos provided in the links below. These videos teach you how to analyze a painting. Then, using the second set of links, select one painting out of the four provided and analyze it according to the criteria presented in the videos.
Based on the information presented in the videos, provide an analysis of one of the four paintings shown in the links provided.
The analysis can be in a narrative or bullet point format. Be sure to utilize the terminology presented in the videos such as line, form, etc.
This analysis is 10% of your final grade, so be thorough.
VIDEOS TO VIEW
Madonna of the Meadow by Giovanni Bellini
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sM2MOyonDsY
The Third of May by Francisco Goya
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_QM-DfhrNv8
Number 1A 1938 by Jackson Pollock
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N
The assignment is to write a response paper to the book, Bias, by Bernard Goldberg.
The premise is simple: what did this book teach you about journalism? From that
jumping-off point, there are lots of possibilities for development, depending on your reaction to the incidents and situations described in the text.
In chapter 12, beyond the natural body, it states During the second wave of feminism that started in the 1970s,(fe)male bodies were of central concern in many debates, although in a rather peculiar way. Feminist biologists, like myself, were certain that biological determinism had to be rejected. We knew that nature does not determine what we mean when we use terms such as woman, body, femininity. We chose this position to contest those opponents of feminism who suggested that social inequality between women and men is primarily rooted in biological sex
differences. According to this opinion, social changes demanded by feminists are wishful thinking because biology, rather than society, sets constraints on the behavior and abilities of women. Biology is destiny, and feminists simply have to accept this reality.
Drawing on the historical facts presented in this chapter, write a short essay on the arguments presented by feminist biologists about challenging the notion that biology