+1(316)4441378

+44-141-628-6690

Archive for the ‘English and Literature’ Category

Please choose your title

Write a 4 paragraphs blog research about the bad working conditions in some garment factories for working  children, long working time, safety, pay, space, ventilation and wellbeing. Chose the blog option. Write a title. Follow the outline to know what to write in each paragraph and the rubric that I send as 2 attachments in files. 4-6 Photographs and images have to be included in the blog. Please follow the research outline and the rubric.

Week 8 – Assignment: Develop an Employee Engagement Program

Your Signature Assignment requires you to act in the role of a consultant to assist in developing an employee engagement program. Your program proposal must consider work-life balance. Include at least one activity for each of the following four categories:

Employee appreciation

Employee-customer engagement

Diversity and inclusion

Community engagement/social responsibility

In addition, at least one activity should incorporate an explanation of how social media could be used to enhance that activity.

Support your proposal with at least 10 references from peer-reviewed journals.
No CoVEr PAGE

Length: 10-12 pages

Your paper should demonstrate thoughtful consideration of the ideas and concepts presented in the course by  providing new thoughts and insights relating directly to the topic. Your response should reflect scholarly writing and current APA standards

M3.4 Reflect and Ask Questions

M3.4 Reflect and Ask Questions
Reflect & Ask Questions



Evolve


In Module 3 you grappled with the concepts of critical thinking and argumentative reasoning for today and tomorrow. You examined the standard-bearer for scholarly thoughtthe peer-reviewed journal articleand considered what it can tell us and how it differs from other kinds of sources. In Module 4, you will continue questioning and examining information to understand that not all information is created equal, and in fact, some of it isnt the truth at all.

As you reflect on what you learned in this module, ask yourself:

Do I understand the components of a peer-reviewed journal article and how to use it in an academic argument?
Can I spot a logical fallacy when I see or hear it?
How does an academic debate differ from the debates I see on social media or in personal conversations?
Do I have any questions about the feedback I've been receiving from my instructor on my as

M3.3 Course Project – Milestone 3

M3.3 Course Project - Milestone 3



Evaluate


Thesis Statement Draft and Source Evaluation
In Modules 1 and 2 you chose a final project topic and narrowed your focus through the process of brainstorming and finding preliminary sources. Make sure you are reading your instructors feedback each week and making improvements before submitting the next Milestone. For example, if your instructor suggested replacing any of the sources you listed in Milestone 2, or refining your narrowed topic of focus, make sure to take that into account before working on Milestone 3.

Now, in Module 3, you will draft a thesis statement and evaluate your sources for relevance and credibility.

Step 1: Thesis Statement Draft
Make sure you have completed pages 3.9 through 3.11 in Chapter 3 on Drafting your Thesis Statement. There, you will learn more about how to create a concise, specific, effective, and relevant thesis statement and then draft it in the webtext, so i

M4.2 Discussion: From a Post-Truth World to a Pro-Truth World

M4.2 Discussion: From a Post-Truth World to a Pro-Truth World



Engage


Today, the prevalence of social media, the rise of algorithms, filter bubbles, bots, and international hacking efforts have brought the issue of fake news to the forefront of our national and international consciousness.  As you read in the webtext this week, the spread of misinformation is not an entirely new problem and it does not have one simple solution. However, there are changes all information consumers can make to how they engage with stories, facts, and data that can lead us from a post-truth world to a pro-truth world.

Begin by reading chapter 4 of the webtext and viewing all of Professor Alex Edmans TED Talk What to Trust in a Post-Truth World, below.


https://www.ted.com/talks/alex_edmans_what_to_trust_in_a_post_truth_world?utm_campaign=tedspread&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=tedcomshare




Edmans, Al. (2018). What to trust in a "

see in instructions

For this short review, of one or two paragraphs, you will demonstrate that you have actively read and engaged with one of the assigned poems. Choose ONE of:

Vivek Shraya, the truth about the race card (even this page is white, Arsenal Pulp, 2016, p. 54).

OR

Billy-Ray Belcourt, God's River (This Wound is a World, Frontenac, 2017, p. 28).

You must write in complete sentences. Your response does not need a central thesis, but all of the points in the instructions must be addressed.

Identify what you believe to be the main issue that the poem is addressing and what argument the poem makes about that issue.
Evaluate the effectiveness (or lack thereof) of the poem in relation to the issue you identify.
No additional sources should be referred to; just use your own ideas and understanding of the issue/theme.
You can either quotes the passage you are referencing in full at the beginning of your essay or refer to line numbers in in-text citations. Eit

Any topic (writer’s choice)

Choose one of this
- What is a lesson being in nature has taught you? How did you learn that lesson?
-What ecological problems worry you most? Why? What are you doing about it?

Your final product should have a clearly conflict, and contain the elements of a narrative essay, as discussed in class and in the textbook. It should be a strong example of an open-form piece. Use the Question Asking Strategies in Chart 7.1 to help you devise your beginning, characters, setting, plot, and conclusion.
.
All essays must include:
A clear and concise theme holding the narrative together
Organized body paragraphs which tell the story vividly and logically through
showing (rather than telling), as well as other literary elements
MLA formatting (header, heading, title, font, spacing)
Active, direct language and strong, clear verbs
About three pages
Submission to turnitin.com for feedback and grading
Essays must NOT include:
Excessive pronoun usag

free topic read instructions

1. Commit to a topic (you can always change it, but the commitment will begin the seriousness of the brainstorm). You will be choosing a social, cultural, religious, biological, abstract conceptual, or complex (relational) norm.

What does this mean? Primarily it means that you can choose anything that has a robust set of beliefs, views, rules, actions, and practices that are either implicit or explicit to some group of human animals or non-human animals. That's a really detailed definition that should actually make your topic choice really really easy.

The only exclusions are simple concepts. For example, if I wanted to discuss the Zen Buddhist concept of 'nothingness', that's not a norm. But, Zen Buddhist practice has certain norms--e.g., the Rinzai sect of Buddhist practice. So, when choosing a norm, all you really have to watch out for is that you are not just choosing a smaller concept within a norm. Now if you're thinking, well how do I know if I've chosen a proper n

Essay

Defining a Concept My topic is concepts of management

6 pages essay

( 1 first page is a draft ) dont forget draft please
the rest 5 pages is the essay on CONCEPTS OF Management

APA format

*** 3rd person point of view ****

Using well-chosen, real-life examples to illustrate your definition, define and explain the meaning of a particular concept or phrase to someone unfamiliar with it (or unfamiliar with your understanding of it).  Remember to include your properly formatted APA cover page.


Narrative Essay: Recounting a meaningful moment

Tell a short, powerful, true story.
Remember: This is not an invitation to give us your opinion on a topic youre passionate about. Instead, your challenge is to tell a meaningful and interesting story something with a beginning, middle and end. Because youre telling a story rather than, say, simply reflecting on your feelings about a topic, there should be a conflict of some kind an obstacle, problem or tension that is resolved in some way.
Keep in mind, however, that any story can work. It doesnt have to be the most dramatic, life-altering thing that ever happened to you; it can, instead, be about baking brownies with your brother, or a conversation you had on Tuesdays bus ride to school. Its all in how you tell it.
Though the word narrative might make you think fiction, this story should be true. Tell us about a meaningful event from your real life.
You'll need to communicate not only what happened, but why it mattered to you. What is meaningful about this story? Why