A ruler, philosopher, or influential figure.

For this essay, choose one of the following topics:

Choose a ruler, philosopher, or otherwise influential figure from any chapter in the book, and support a claim for how this person has impacted our world today.
You are arguing in effect that if it weren’t for this person, the world would have been different in a significant way.

Your essay should present the different ways in which he/she has influenced history—in terms of religion or politics and/or culture Your paper should be persuasive, not just a neutral discussion of history. You are trying to persuade me, your reader, to your point of view. Make me see how this person is important.

Sample Solution

The post A ruler, philosopher, or influential figure. appeared first on homework handlers.

Job satisfaction

What is job satisfaction? What are values, and how do they affect job satisfaction? What specific facets do employees consider when evaluating their job satisfaction? Which job characteristics can create a sense of satisfaction with the work itself? How is job satisfaction affected by day-to-day events? What are mood and emotions, and what specific forms do they take? How does job satisfaction affect job performance and organizational commitment? How does it affect life satisfaction? What steps can organizations take to assess and manage job satisfaction?

Sample Solution

The post Job satisfaction appeared first on homework handlers.

Projects Proposal

MEAD Projects Proposal – Concepts Integration
This assignment is a GROUP DISCUSSION & GROUP PROPOSAL meant to get you going on your final project.  Note that your groups were created thematically, but that doesn’t mean you MUST only have ONE outcome.  That is, each person could contribute a segment (if more individual work is desired).  Done well and thoughtfully, this step creates a strong foundation for moving forward with your MEAD Project.

Remember: we are looking for targeted, manageable, and impactful works and approaches that can positively impact broader debates be they on campus, in Oxford, in the state and country as a whole, and of course, the world.  They should be empirical, comparative, holistic, relativistic + power-aware, biocultural, and ethical.

Objective: To think about the holistic approach using science, emergent controversies, and belief as a springboard; examine the benefits of bringing anthropological perspectives and methods outside of the academy
Outcome: A clear, structured written group proposal that outlines the specific approaches and topics related to a broader group approach and topic.

MEAD Project guidelines and specific directions for this assignment appear below.
MEAD Projects: Your ultimate goal is to create your own MEAD Project; this is the integration and “nuts and bolts”  stage.  A MEAD Project is a public presentation to a non-specialist audience on a topic of critical import.  It is not an original “research” paper or project.  Rather, it is drawing from anthropological research and evidence to re-present the importance and significance of anthropological discourses and data using a multi-subfield approach (archaeology/material culture, bio-physical, linguistic, cultural, medical). 

In other words, these projects are designed to insert your collective anthropological wisdom into a wider public debate, illustrating the critical import and unique ability of anthropological data and discourses to address the broad and existential concerns of humanity.

Direction:
PART I:  THINK BACK ON THE CLASS
Think about the Semester so far, and all of the topics and issues we have addressed.  From there, look at the guidelines for both the MEAD Projects generally (above) and this specific assignment (Part III below).

PART II:  GETTING TO A GROUP PROPOSAL
1. Building from your Individual Proposal 1.0,  and subsequent group discussion and Storyboard I & II exercises , start by each individual contributing their updated ideas and perspectives.
2. Be sure to show how your own chosen journal article could help your peers, and look at your peers’ summaries of their chosen readings.
3. BRAINSTORM BRAINSTORM BRAINSTORM

PART III:  WRITE UP AS A GROUP
In one post  answer the following questions in the format of a project completion proposal.  Note that the highlighted sections are the most important for this:
1. CONTEXT AND RESEARCH QUESTION:  What broad topic will your GROUP engage with your public anthropology project?  Answer this by discussing and exemplifying the “broad”  as well as potential “specifics”. NOTE: This will be refined from last week’s assignment.  It is possible to have multiple “specifics” relating to different team members.

2. EMPIRICISM AND SITUATED KNOWLEDGE:  You should include SPECIFIC references to AT LEAST ONE COURSE READING (if not more) + FUENTES (2012) TO JUSTIFY YOUR APPROACH AND PROJECT, and one ADDITIONAL OUTSIDE READING FROM EACH MEMBER OF THE TEAM as empirical evidence to use to substantiate and illustrate your topic. How and why are these readings relevant? 

3. ANTHROPOLOGICAL FRAMEWORKS:  How are holism, comparativism, relativism + power, biocultural change, and multi-subfield approaches addressed?

4. GENRE:  What format or portfolio object have you chosen (i.e. video, Ted talk, museum display, white/policy paper, podcast)?  Why and how does your topic lend itself well to your chosen format?

5. AUDIENCE:  Who is your AUDIENCE?  How have you chosen this audience, and why or how is the format and topic appropriate? 
STORY, NARRATIVE, CHARACTER ELEMENTS:  How will you “bring to life” your topic? What stories or characters will you use to HUMANIZE the topic and HOOK the audience?

6. PLAN FOR COMPLETION:  How do you foresee gathering the requisite data/information/images for your project, and what steps do you see necessary for completion?

7. ANOTHER WAY TO LOOK AT THIS:  How does your story link to anthropological concepts, what are your empirical sources, and how will you go about getting it done?

Readings:
You will EACH do some research and find AT LEAST ONE READING FROM THE COURSE THAT RELATES to your chosen topic.  THIS WILL BE INTEGRATED INTO YOUR GROUP PROPOSAL, AND BEGIN THE BASIS OF YOUR BIBLIOGRAPHY.  Note you will all rely on Fuentes (2012), and that you have all HAVE EACH already sourced one EXTERNAL reading (anthropological research, not just “news” articles) from the previous Individual Proposal assignment.

Grading information:
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).

Any topic (writer’s choice)

A process recording is a written tool used by field education experience students, field instructors, and faculty to examine the dynamics of social work interactions in time. Process recordings can help in developing and refining interviewing and intervention skills. By conceptualizing and organizing ongoing activities with social work clients, you are able to clarify the purpose of interviews and interventions, identify personal and professional strengths and weaknesses, and improve self-awareness. The process recording is also a useful tool in exploring the interpersonal dynamics and values operating between you and the client system through an analysis of filtering the process used in recording a session.

For this Assignment, you will submit a process recording of your field education experiences specific to this week.

The Assignment (24 pages):

Provide a transcript of what happened during your field education experience, including a dialogue of interaction with a client.
Explain your interpretation of what occurred in the dialogue, including social work practice theories, and explain how it might relate to diversity or cultural competence covered this week.
Describe your reactions and/or any issues related to your interaction with a client during your field education experience.
Explain how you applied social work practice skills when performing the activities during your process recording.