Identify and explain similarities and differences between two sources in order to support a claim about one or both of them

Choose one of the four plays we’ve read this semester, either the play itself or a cinematic interpretation of the play that we watched.
Paper 2 assignment instructions Quick overview: ● compare/contrast at least two sources, at least one of which must be a film ● 5-7 pages, double-spaced Goals of this assignment: ● identify and explain similarities and differences between two sources in order to support a claim about one or both of them ● practice using the language of film analysis ● develop an argument supported by logical and demonstrable reasons and concrete evidence ● demonstrate an understanding of audience needs (your audience is me and your classmates) ● engage critically with Shakespeare Important dates: ● draft or detailed outline due in hard copy Friday 12/1 for peer review ● final polished paper due in hard copy 12/11 Detailed instructions: Choose one of the four plays we’ve read this semester, either the play itself or a cinematic interpretation of the play that we watched. Compare and contrast this text/film to another film. The second film may be one that we watched in class, but does not have to be. You may choose to compare/contrast e.g. two versions of Hamlet, or Olivier’s Hamlet to Brook’s Lear, or Kozintsev’s Lear to the original play. If you want to use a play not read in class, or compare a source from class to a non-Shakespeare film, talk to me first. As with paper 1, you should be conscious of what theory or theories you are using to make your interpretation, whether or not you discuss it/them explicitly. In your paper, you may focus on how the films use cinematic and narrative techniques to emphasize themes, develop characters and their relationships, and/or re-envision Shakespeare’s text. You might examine cinematic techniques in terms of editing, comparing how the films’ cuts draw parallels between particular characters, or in terms of setting, examining how the films use public and private space. You should address, however briefly, why these two sources should be put in dialogue with each other. General guidelines: ● be aware of what theory or theories you’re using. It will serve as the frame of reference for the questions you ask, the evidence you privilege, and the grounds for the comparison you’re making. Often your professors will tell you what approach they want you to take; in this case, I’m leaving it up to you. ● have a thesis expressing a relationship between your two sources. It should be more specific than something like, ‘While Romeo and Juliet and West Side Story initially seem very different, they actually have a lot of similarities.’ That’s a fine – and useful – starting point, but the thesis should be a claim about the significance of one or more of those similarities or differences. For example, a thesis like ‘Whereas the use of nature in Brook’s Lear emphasizes the nihilism of the original play, Kurosawa’s Ran uses nature to suggest the possibility of redemption’ does explicitly compare the two texts, but it draws a specific and concrete distinction. On the other hand, a thesis like ‘While West Side Story focuses more on societal and systemic problems than a doomed individual love affair, both the movie and the original play comment on the redemptive nature of love’ acknowledges key differences between the two texts but highlights an important similarity. ● have an organizational scheme. There are several ways to organize a compare/contrast paper, but two of the most common are text-by-text or point-by-point. A text-by-text essay would provide a discussion of one text and then the other, and bring them together in the conclusion. A point-by-point essay, on the other hand, would discuss the texts together in terms of specific points of contact or disjunction. This is often, though by no means always, a more sophisticated approach. ● use clear signposting to keep your reader oriented. All argumentative papers require you to link each point in the argument back to the thesis. Without such links, your reader will be unable to easily see how new sections logically and systematically advance your argument. In a compare-and contrast, you also need to make links between the sources you’re comparing in the body of your essay if you want your paper to hold together. To make these links, use transitional expressions of comparison and contrast (similarly, moreover, likewise, on the contrary, conversely, on the other hand…) and contrastive vocabulary. Keep in mind: ● you should have a bibliography, even if it is only two items long. Use MLA formatting. ● this should be a critical analysis, not a subjective evaluation – i.e., you should make an argument about the sources, not about whether or not they’re good, or which one is better ● have a title! ● feel free to use screenshots or images to illustrate your point – make sure you caption them with brief descriptions, and refer to them in the body of the text in some consistent way (e.g., Figure 1, Figure 2…). ● when writing about literature and film, use the present tense: Hamlet is losing his mind in the present, Lear is banishing Cordelia in the present, Juliet is deceiving her parents in the present. If you use secondary sources, these should be discussed in the present or simple perfect: As Helene Foley has shown…, Brantley Bryant demonstrates convincingly… (NB this convention does not hold for fields like social and hard sciences, which discuss scholarship and many sources in the past tense.)

Is it possible to use icebergs as a source of freshwater? What obstacles – technological, social, environmental & political – do you foresee for such an endeavor?

respond to the following:

Watch the video titled “Nanotechnology Today – Fuel Cells, Buckyballs and Carbon Nanotubes – Bytesize Science” (7 min 24 sec) under the Nanotechnology terms section of the Science Corner. You can also view the video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ndJlgTkm0oQ. Next, use the Internet, Strayer Library, or go to this open source e-journal Website at http://link.springer.com/journal/13204to research articles on nanotechnology. Then, select one (1) product of your interest that uses nanotechnology, and describe the overall benefits and drawbacks as well as the positive and negative impact that the product you have chosen has on human lives. Identify one (1) challenge (e.g., safety issue, ethical issue, etc.) that is related to the product in question and describe one (1) change that you think law makers should make to the current regulations over nanotechnology.

Watch the video titled “Why We Need Rare Earth Elements” (3 min 18 sec) under the Rare Earth Elements terms section of the Science Corner. You can also view the video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqoQfN9DgNs. Next, identify at least one (1) challenge (e.g., economic impact, environmental concerns, human rights, etc.) that is associated with mining rare earth elements. Suggest one (1) way for the government to mitigate the challenge in question.
Fresh water is vital resource. Is it possible to use icebergs as a source of freshwater? What obstacles – technological, social, environmental & political – do you foresee for such an endeavor?

Create a curriculum plan as a document using Microsoft Word and a media version.

The focus is to develop a one-week unit plan. You will create a curriculum plan as a document using Microsoft Word and a media version. The media version can be a website (e.g., using Weebly.com (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site., GoogleSites.com (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site., NewHive.com (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site., Wix.com (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. or LucidPress.com (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.) or an alternative format (e.g., PowerPoint), which must be approved in advance by the instructor The curriculum plan demonstrates your mastery of the four course learning outcomes and the media version demonstrates your ability to use technology to communicate your mastery to a wider audience. The curriculum plan you create will span one week of instruction and include several components, which are described in the instructions below. Additionally, review the Instructor Guidance for Week Five for additional assistance beyond the instructions provided here with the assignment. Be sure also to review the Grading Rubric associated with this final project to understand how you will be evaluated. It is recommended you use headings throughout your writing to organize sections. Sections are indicated below in italics and bold font and are followed by the instructions for that section.
Instructions
Professional Curriculum Plan
Developmental Age (1 point): In one to two paragraphs, describe the developmental age/level of the children for whom the unit plan is designed.
Classroom Management (1 point): In two to three paragraphs, explain your philosophy of classroom management using examples from Jaruszewicz (2013) for support.
Theoretical Alignment (1 point): In two to three paragraphs, describe the theoretical alignment of your unit using specific examples (e.g., Does it align to Piaget, Vygotsky, or another theorist?).
Curriculum Approach (1 point): In two to three paragraphs, describe which approach to curriculum you most closely adhere to using specific examples (e.g., Do you adhere to a Montessori, Creative Curriculum, or other model?).
Developmentally Appropriate Practices (DAPs) (1 point): In two to three paragraphs, explain how your classroom setting will foster developmentally appropriate practices using specific examples. Connection to Family Plan
Parent Letter (3 points): In one page, write a letter to parents that includes the following components: An overview of the unit. The purpose of the unit. The objectives of the unit. The recommendations for home support. An overview of the assessments. Content and Developmental Domain Plans and Assessments
Content Lesson Plan and Assessment (4 points): Develop one lesson plan with an assessment that addresses one content area (i.e., language arts, math, science, social studies, or diversity and character). It is required that you use the Lesson Plan TemplatePreview the document to complete this portion of your assignment. It is suggested that you utilize the Early Childhood and Child Development: Lesson Plan HandbookPreview the document as a guide for how to more effectively plan this lesson.
Developmental Domain Lesson Plan and Assessment (4 points): Develop one lesson plan with an assessment that addresses one or more of the developmental domains (i.e., cognitive, affective, and/or psychomotor). It is required that you use the Lesson Plan TemplatePreview the document to complete this portion of your assignment . It is suggested that you utilize the Early Childhood and Child Development: Lesson Plan HandbookPreview the document as a guide for how to more effectively plan this lesson. Free Play/Center Plan
Center Overview (1 point): In two paragraphs, write an overview for the center plan that describes the importance of play.
Centers Plan (2 points): Include a completed version of the Centers Plan TemplatePreview the document.
Center Layout (2 points): Using the software of your choice, create a classroom layout of the center(s). Other Instructions
Introduction (.25 points): Write a succinct introduction to the unit plan that describes the contents of the plan and the organization of the contents of the plan.
Conclusion (0.25 points): Write a succinct conclusion to the unit plan that describes the contents of the plan and major points from the contents of the plan.
Media Version (1.5 points): Include a link to your media version in the document you submit that contains the components described above. The media version can be a website (e.g., using Weebly.com, Google Sites.com, NewHive.com, Wix.com or LucidPress.com) or an alternative format (e.g., PowerPoint), which must be approved in advance by the instructor.

Explain practical, original, and specific strategies for enhancing intergroup relations.

Attitude Adjustment An attitude is an evaluative reaction (i.e., feelings), often based on belief and demonstrated through behavior. In this discussion, we will consider intergroup attitudes by examining stereotypes, prejudice, and discrimination.
To inform your thinking on this topic, begin by reading “Toward a Relevant Psychology of Prejudice, Stereotyping, and Discrimination: Linking Science and Practice to Develop Interventions that Work in Community Settings” (Acevedo-Polakovich, Beck, Hawks, & Ogdie, 2016), “Intergroup Contact Theory” (Pettigrew, 1998), and “Summary and Conclusions” (Sherif, Harvey, Hood, Sherif, & White, 1988).
Then, select a group. Possible dimensions from which you may select your group include, but are not limited to: race, gender, social class, nationality, sexual identity, (dis)ability, rural versus urban status, religious belief, incarceration/criminal history, occupational status, victim, military status, and so on. Provide a brief summary of the group and concrete examples to illustrate. Summarize social psychological theory and research relevant to the experiences of members of this target group (e.g., What are the origins of prejudice toward this group? What are the influences on members of this group? etc.), and explain practical, original, and specific strategies for enhancing intergroup relations.
Your initial post should be 500-1000 words in length and must contain a minimum of three scholarly, peer-reviewed references, in addition to required course resources as applicable. Additional credible references are encouraged