Global Business Course Project Content

Course Project Content

COURSE PROJECT

As introduced during Week 1 of the course, for your Course Project, you will be exploring contemporary issues in Global Business.

The purpose of your Course Project is to demonstrate your understanding, comprehension, and mastery of the following concepts:

Identify trends and current issues in global business
Assess business issues related to global business
Use global business terminology
Throughout this semester you will be acquiring knowledge on global business topics, theories, as well as terminology. You will apply this new knowledge to your Course Project. First, you will identify a current global business topic. You can choose your topic from the options listed below, or you may choose a current topic that interests you.

Once you have chosen your topic, you will then choose ten (10) current readings/articles that are directly related to your topic from a credible source. Suggestions for sources are listed below as well. Every week, beginning with Week 2, you will review one of your ten articles, and write a 500 word synopsis summarizing the reading and describing how it applies in a practical, professional context to global business.

At the completion of the 10 weeks you will have accumulated ten article summaries. You will then assemble the readings/articles, your ten completed written summaries, a cover page, and a table of contents in a professional portfolio to submit for grading during Week 13.

Ideas of topics include:

Equal Employment            Managing Diversity            Sexual Harassment         

Affirmative Action              Compensation                  Benefits                               

Recruitment                    Selection Tools                Performance Appraisal

Training & Development    Health and Safety            Workers Compensation                                                 

Ideas for sources include:

Journals
Newspapers
Magazines (Newsweek, Business Week, Time)
Internet (news sites, business sites)
Deliverables

Ten (10) Written 500 word summaries
Final Term Project – Will be submitted in a professional portfolio and turned in by the end of Week 13 in the following required format:
        1. Cover Page

        2. Table of Contents

        3. Ten Finalized Written 500 word Summaries

        4. Properly formatted APA References page including link to article

History of the UAE (Were the Qawasim Pirates?)

I need

1. A title (preferably in the form of a question, such as Were the Qawasim Pirates?),

2. An abstract (of no more than 150 words),

3. 1 or 2 key quotes from the readings (PDF’s)

4. Your critique or evaluation of the representation of the Qawasim as pirates.

LISTEN TO THE AUDIOFILE and READ THE 2 PDF’s

Interview Essay on somebody we admire

A profile essay is a type of essay that centers on a certain person. One of the most common profile essay assignments is one in which the author “profiles” a certain person, offering information about who that person is and why they are important.

For this essay, you will pick a living person to interview who you admire and write about said person. Interview this person as many times as necessary.

A profile essay does not have the same structure as a narrative essay or an argumentative essay. The type of writing for a profile essay is less rigidly structured, and an author can take several different approaches.

Prepare to write 1,500 words for this essay, and make sure to cite the personal interview with signal phrases throughout the body of the essay and a Works Cited page entry for each time you interviewed your subject. Let me be clear this part of the assignment is non-negotiable: papers short of the length requirement will be returned ungraded. Also, essays without a Works Cited page will be returned – ungraded.

Any time you render a full account, you answer what is commonly known as “reporter’s questions”–the who, what, where, when, why, and how questions reporters ask themselves to make sure their reports of news stories are complete. Your profile should be descriptive, using sensory language (touch, smell, sight, sound, and taste) to describe the person and related events. Profiles include action and details, provide a clear sequence of events, and use dialogue and direct quotations. Describe your subject in such a way that the details and facts help the reader visualize your subject and their experiences. Experiences happen in some place at some time, and good essays describe these settings.

I suggest you follow this basic outline:

Introduction: Introduce the topic, assuming the readers do not know your writing prompt. Make sure your introduction grabs the readers’ attention. Use at least one introduction strategy. Invest your readers in the topic. Make them care about it. End the introduction by stating your thesis statement, which should include a forecasting statement (sub-divisions).

Body Paragraphs: Follow the MEAL PLAN (Links to an external site.) for each body paragraph. Use evidence, examples, direct quotations, events, and people to support your paragraphs.

Conclusion: End your piece in a strong and interesting way. Sum up your main argument, but also include a strong conclusion strategy. You might want to predict what the future holds or explain the lasting impact of this event.

The right and the good

Read the assigned text this week philosophically. Outline the argument: thesis, premises (reasons for believing the thesis), and evidence to support the premises. You should organize your essay to answer the following questions in approximately 650 words:

What do you think the text is arguing?
What evidence is there in the text to support your reading?
What is the meaning of the text’s argument? Why?
What implications are there if the argument is true? Why?
Could the text be read as meaning something else?
What reasons might someone give for holding this alternative reading of the text?
Why do you find your original account of the argument and meaning of the text more persuasive than alternative readings?
Finish your essay by taking a position of your own. What is your thesis? What are your premises (reasons for believing the thesis is true)? What evidence do you have? Why might someone disagree with you? Why are you unpersuaded. This articulation of your own position should be approximately 350 words in length, and should refer back to the preceding philosophical analysis.

Please treat this assignment as one 1000 word essay. Be organized. Consistently follow a stylesheet like MLA, APA, or Chicago. You are encouraged to reference the work of Weston in providing an analysis of what is going on in the text.