Describe the record type and explain its characteristics.  Discuss whether you will be observing social/emotional development, physical development, cognitive development, or language development (choose one), and what the purposes are for assessing that domain.

According to child development specialists, one of the most accurate ways to learn about children is to observe them in daily activities” (Wortham, 2012, p. 117).  Among the many types of observation discussed in Chapter 5, anecdotal records, running records, time sampling, and event sampling are widely used in schools and centers across the nation.  For this discussion, you will begin to develop a plan for the observation types you will use in your written assignment this week, which involves the observation of an actual child.  Here is what you are asked to do:

 

  1. Choose either anecdotal or running records.  Describe the record type and explain its characteristics.  Discuss whether you will be observing social/emotional development, physical development, cognitive development, or language development (choose one), and what the purposes are for assessing that domain.
  2. Next, choose either time sampling or event sampling.  Describe the sampling method and tell what its characteristics are. Discuss whether you will be observing social/emotional development, physical development, cognitive development or language development (choose one that is a different domain from above) and what the purposes are for assessing that domain.

 

Attached is an example of the anecdotal and running record as well as the time and event sampling.

 

Here is a video to assist you with this discussion this, all about the observation process:

 

 

The Center for Early Childhood Education [EarlyChildhooldVideos]. (2013, January 30). Observing young children [Video file]. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t1Xtr3RKjGc

 

Hardman, M.L., Drew, C.J., & Egan, M.W. (2011). Human exceptionality: School, community, and family. (10th edition). Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Company.

 

Kostelnik, J., Rupiper, M., Soderman, A., & Whiren, A. (2014). Developmentally appropriate curriculum in action. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education.

 

Morrison, G. (2009). Early childhood education today. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson.

 

Wortham, S.C. (2012). Assessment in early childhood education. (6th edition) Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson (Required Text)

Comparison with existing research and explanation for similarities and dissimilarities

Importantly, literature review, the theoretical framework, and discussion require references. Prosy details of the following are necessary. Textual descriptions and interpretations are required to elaborate statistical results.Title: Positive effect of worry on perceived risk to societyIntroduction• Research question/objectiveo Examining the positive effect of worry on perceived risk to society• Research hypotheseso Political involvement has a positive effect on perceived risk to societyo Political involvement has a positive effect on worryLiterature review (review of existing research)• Effects of political involvement on perceived risk to societyo Positive effect (Sources A, B, C)o Negative effect (Sources D, E, F)o No effect (Sources G, H)o Therefore, uncertain effect• Political involvement has a positive effect on worryo Positive effect (Sources I, J, K)o Negative effect (Sources L, M, N)o No effect (Sources O, P)o Therefore, uncertain effectTheoretical framework• Positive effect of political involvement on perceived risk to societyo Psychoanalytic theory (Sources Q, R)o Appraisal theory (Sources S, T)• Political involvement has a positive effect on worryo Social construction theory (Sources U, V)Method• Sample description: means/percentages, standard deviations, skewnesses, kurtoseso Age, gender, major field, level of study, year of study, parental education…• Variables usedo Political involvement, worry, perceived risk to society…o Transformations: standardization, ranking, dichotomization/trichotomization, clustering• Analytic approach: reliability test, factor analysis, clustering, linear regression analysis, path analysis, log-linear analysis, logistic regression analysiso Variables involved: outcomes, predictors, controls, moderatorsResults• Univariate statistics: checking normalityo Age, gender, major field, level of study, year of study, parental education…• Reliability and ways to improve reliability• Factor analysis for validation: factorial validity (convergent and discriminant validity)o Scree plotting• Clustering for dichotomization and/or trichotomizaiton of variables• Linear regression analysis and its diagnostics for testing hypotheses: no problem of non-normality, multicollinearity, heteroscedasticity, deviant cases…o Findings about hypotheses and various effectso Residual plotting• Additional linear regression analysis for comparing effects and exploring moderating effectso Comparing effects and testing their differentials? Effect of political involvement more positive than the effect of ageo Testing moderating effects? More positive effect of political involvement with higher age• Linear regression analysis with two-stage least squares estimation to examine reciprocal effects• Log-linear analysis for testing hypotheses with dichotomized/trichotomized variables: hierarchical log-linear analysis and general log-linear analysiso Topological analysis• Logistic regression analysis for testing hypotheses with dichotomized outcomeso Marginal effect estimationDiscussion• Comparison with existing research and explanation for similarities and dissimilarities• Knowledge gained: consolidation and/or modification/improvement of existing theoriesReferences

Discuss the domestic terrorist event. Provide information about the critical infrastructure that was impacted and how the role of protecting this infrastructure was forever changed due to this event.

In Unit VII, you will submit a research paper based on a terrorist event that has happened in history. You will identify the event and research the environmental, political, economic, and sociological impact of the event and the response at all levels of government. Your research will include identifying the type of response partners and agencies involved with the response and recovery of the event and outlining the after actions and lessons learned from the event.

To prepare for that upcoming assignment, this unit will have you begin researching articles and identify your chosen event. Your instructor will provide feedback on the topic that you select for your research paper.

Your assignment for this unit is to write a brief paragraph that identifies a selected terrorist event and then to create an annotated bibliography for two research articles from the Waldorf Online Library that you plan to use in your future paper. You should select sources that meet the criteria below.

Discuss the domestic terrorist event. Provide information about the critical infrastructure that was impacted and how the role of protecting this infrastructure was forever changed due to this event.  Discuss the national strategies for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) as it relates to this event. If your event occurred prior to the development of the DHS, discuss what strategies were likely developed as a reaction to the event you selected

Your annotated bibliography must be a minimum of three pages in length and adhere to APA style.

You have to go on www.waldorfuniversity.com  To find the two article in the library

Research and describe the Ethical issues in the Hubble telescope launch case?

Assessment Details and Submission Guidelines Unit Code MN601 Unit Title Network Project Management Term, Year T1, 2019 Assessment Type Assignment 1, Individual Assessment Title Individual case study assignment Purpose of the assessment (with ULO Mapping) The purpose of this assignment is to build a clear understanding of project management fundamentals and their application, specifically:? demonstrate project leadership skills; identify and assess risk in designing, executing a major project;? critically reflect on current project management ethics, research, and theory and practice; Weight 15% Total Marks 30 Word limit 800-1000 Submission Guidelines? A draft of the report must be submitted on Moodle by the day before the Week-6 class, to get feedback from the tutor in Week-6. Updated version of the report must be submitted on Moodle the day before your Week-7 class.? The assignment must be in MS Word format, 1.5 spacing, 11-pt Calibri (Body) font and 2 cm margins on all four sides of your page with appropriate section headings.? Reference sources must be cited in the text of the report, and listed appropriately at the end in a reference list using IEEE referencing style. Extension? If an extension of time to submit work is required, a Special Consideration Application must be submitted directly on AMS. You must submit this application three working days prior to the due date of the assignment. Further information is available at: http://www.mit.edu.au/about-mit/institute-publications/policies- procedures-and-guidelines/specialconsiderationdeferment Academic Misconduct? Academic Misconduct is a serious offence. Depending on the seriousness of the case, penalties can vary from a written warning or zero marks to exclusion from the course or rescinding the degree. Students should make themselves familiar with the full policy and procedure available at: http://www.mit.edu.au/about-mit/institute-publications/policies- procedures-and-guidelines/Plagiarism-Academic-Misconduct-Policy- Procedure. For further information, please refer to the Academic Integrity Section in your Unit Description. Prepared by: A/Prof Nalin Sharda Moderated by: Dr Sihui (Sue) Zhou April 2019 1 of 4MN601 Network Project Management 2019 T1 MN601 Assignment-1 MEL SYD V1.4 2 of 4 THE BEST PROJECT MANAGERS ARE EMOTION-DRIVEN LEADERS~ By Claude Emond, 12 Apr 2010Acknowledgement: The following case study is taken verbatim fromhttps://www.projectsmart.co.uk/the-best-project-managers-are-emotion-driven-leaders.phpA short while ago, Charles J. Pellerin, the author of, How NASA Builds Teams: Mission Critical Soft Skills for Scientists, Engineers, and Project Teams, came to Montreal to lead a one-day workshop based on his book. This event was organised with the sponsorship of the PMI-Montreal chapter.This was a very enlightening day. Charles used his own personal ill-fated story, as the project director for the launch of the Hubble telescope, to get us to travel with him on his journey to the discovery of true leadership. This journey not only got him to redeem himself through an officially ‘unauthorised’ 60M US$ fix mission to get astronauts to repair the telescope, but also got him to better understand the root of true leadership and design a system to make it happen. This is this system he talks about in his book. This is the system he is now applying as a consultant to NASA teams with radical performance improvements, thoroughly documented, scientifically measured…and all generously and clearly explained to us for our own usage in his amazing book.His leadership competency model is based on two continuums axes: the Emotional- Logical decision making process continuum and the Intuited-Sensed data preference continuum. Out of the reunion of those two continuums emerge four types of leaders, which are basically characterised as follows: ? The cultivating Emotional-Intuitive leader (green): great at giving gratitude, s/he is a people-builder who cares deeply about human beings and creates strong loyalty; the ultimate coach for large very complex projects.? The including Emotional-Sensing leader (yellow): great at making you feel included as a part of the greatest whole, s/he is a team-builder who develops harmonious teams and can mobilise and get the most difficult people to work as a team; the ultimate marketer for large complex projects.? The visioning Logical-Intuitive leader (blue): mastering reality-based optimism and living through complete commitment, s/he is an idea-builder, fond of creative ideas and demanding excellence; the ultimate innovator that can lead research and early phase projects…but might get stuck there.Prepared by: A/Prof Nalin Sharda Moderated by: Dr Sihui (Sue) ZhouMN601 Network Project Management 2019 T1 MN601 Assignment-1 MEL SYD V1.4 3 of 4 ? The directing Logical-Sensing leader (orange): organiser in chief, s/he is a system-builder, highly disciplined, well organised and using reliable processes; the ultimate project ‘deliverer and closer’ in hard times, putting the task first and meeting the objectives ruthlessly. Charles goes on, in his book and in his workshops, explaining that the most effective project leaders are those that can lead through their emotions, the ‘green’ and the ‘yellow’ ones, because project management is all about teamwork and human relationships, all about journeying together towards a better place for all stakeholders. He also says that, although emotion-driven leaders can always compensate for less logical abilities, by finding good ‘blue’ and ‘orange’ team collaborators, the reverse is not possible. So, ultimately, in order to become a very effective project leader, one who does not have innate emotion-driven leadership will have to develop the necessary genuine ‘gratifying’ and ‘including’ behaviours to succeed, and be able to handle effectively larger, more complex project teams.Charles has been using assessments of these leadership competencies to measure leaders’ and teams’ profiles and behaviours along the two continuums. He has also designed programmes to get teams in NASA and elsewhere to improve their profiles, behaviours and, subsequently, performance in delivering outstanding projects.I wrote above that Charles Pellerin was very generous in the material he shares in his fabulous book. He is also very generous on his website, How NASA Builds Teams. If you go there and register, you’ll get access to some of his presentation PowerPoints. You will also be able to make a free assessment of your individual leadership style as well as a free assessment of your team profile. And, if ever Charles gets to your town for a workshop, just go have a journey into project leadership with him. This man, innately a ‘blue’ Logical-Sensing guy, has succeeded his transformation into a gratifying, very including man, who will lead you to a better self and coach you to awaken the great project leader you were born to be. Prepared by: A/Prof Nalin Sharda Moderated by: Dr Sihui (Sue) ZhouMN601 Network Project Management 2019 T1 MN601 Assignment-1 MEL SYD V1.4 4 of 4 Assignment taskWrite a report on the above case that addresses the following issues; and carry out research on project management practice and discuss the ethical implication. In your report, you must use the headings given in Table 1. We encourage you to use 5- 10 key peer reviewed sources for your analysis (a combination of journals, conference papers, website or any other reliable source to support your analysis).Table 1: Report headings, their description, and marks for each HeadingDescription Marks 1. Executive SummaryGive an executive summary that gives a big picture of the issues presented in the case study. 5 2. Leadership issues Explain the problems that can arise if the project leader is ineffective. 5 3. Leadership stylesDescribe the leadership styles articulated by Charles Pellerin. 5 4. Project Success Explain which leadership styles can build teams that can lead to project success, and why? 5 5. Ethical issues Research and describe the Ethical issues in the Hubble telescope launch case?What were the possible solutions to these Ethical issues? 5 6. ReferencesList all references and give in-text referencing using IEEE style. 5 TOTAL 30 Marking Rubric: Grade ? Mark ? HD 80-100% DI 70-79% CR 60-69% P 50-59% Fail