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Feedback for 7-2 Journal: Wri!ng a Tense
Conversa!on
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Rubric Name: ENG 510 Module Seven Journal Rubric
Score
20.7 / 30 - F
Feedback Date
Mar 15, 2020 8:26 PM
Assignment
7-2 Journal: Wri!ng a Tense Conversa!on
SP
Sandy:
You cra"ed a scene in which you achieved the dual-layered argument. You wrote with passion and
convic!on which amplified the emo!onal he" embedded within the piece. However, you did forget
one major component of the assignment which resulted in a significant deduc!on. Please see the
rubric for more specific commentary.
Be well and have fun.
--S
Submission ID Submission(s) Turni!n® Similarity Date Submi#ed
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ENGR 102 Growth Mindset “Persistence and Grit”
ENGR 102 Growth Mindset “Persistence and Grit”
Growth Mindset
Task 1: Read the article Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn, by Carol S. Dweck, Winter 2008, (following pages)before coming to class. Highlight the things you find interesting as you read.
Task 2: Think about yourself and your own mindset about mathematics and Engineering. Think about your personal science history in light of what Carol S. Dweck and her graduate students have discovered about mindsets and learning.
Write a draft of a paragraph or two about your reaction to this article. You might include thoughts about the following.
· How did the article make you feel?
· Do you believe you have a fixed mindset or a growth mindset? Explain why.
· How might the article influence how your approach to your classes, particularly Engineering and Science classes, this semester? Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn Carol S. Dweck Winter 2008
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change constantly with learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my research in collaboration with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about their brains — whether they see their intelligence as something that's fixed or something that can grow and change — has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and school achievement (Dweck, 2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different psychological worlds: one in which students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which students relish challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated to students? And, most important, can they be changed? As we answer th.
Brainology Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn Ca.docxAASTHA76
Brainology
Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn
Carol S. Dweck
Winter 2008
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change constantly with
learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my research in collaboration
with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about their brains — whether they see their
intelligence as something that's fixed or something that can grow and change — has profound effects on their
motivation, learning, and school achievement (Dweck, 2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different
psychological worlds: one in which students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which
students relish challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated to students? And, most important, can they be
changed? As we answer these questions, you will understand why so many students do not achieve to their potential,
why so many bright students stop working when school becomes challenging, and why stereotypes have such
profound effects on students' achievement. You will also learn how praise can have a negative effect on students'
mindsets, harming their motivation to learn.
Mindsets and Achievement
Many students believe that intelligence is fixed, that each person has a certain amount and that's that. We call this
a fixed mindset, and, as you will see, students with this mindset worry about how much of this fixed intelligence they
possess. A fixed mindset makes challenges threatening for students (because they believe that their fixed ability may
not be up to the task) and it makes mistakes and failures demoralizing (because they believe that such setbacks
reflect badly on their level of fixed intelligence).
Other students believe that intelligence is something that can be cultivated through effort and education. They don't
necessarily believe that everyone has the same abilities or that anyone can be as smart as Einstein, but they do
believe that everyone can improve their abilities. And they understand that even Einstein wasn't Einstein until he put
in years of focused hard work. In short, students with this growth mindset believe that intelligence is a potential that
can be realized through learning. As a result, confronting challenges, profiting from mistakes, and persevering in the
face of setbacks become ways of getting smarter.
To understand the different worlds these mindsets create, we followed several hundred students across a difficult
school transition — the transition to seventh grade. This is when the academic work often gets much harder, the
grading gets stricter, and the school environment gets less personalized with students moving from class to class. As
the students entered seventh grade, w ...
NSG3036 W2 ProjectResearch Template NameCite both articles r.docxvannagoforth
NSG3036 W2 Project
Research Template Name
Cite both articles reviewed in APA style:
***In the template, any direct quotes from the articles needs to only include the page number.
Week 2 Template
Quantitative Article
Qualitative Article
Summarize the two assigned articles. In a paragraph, describe in your own words what the study was about and what the researchers found.
Identify and describe the problem for each article
Identified the purpose statement for each article
Identified hypothesis and/or research questions depending on the methodology used in the articles.
After analyzing, discuss
each article’s significance to nursing practice.
Identify two details to support the study being quantitative or qualitative
Name:
Growth Mindset
Task 1: Read the article Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn, by Carol S. Dweck, Winter 2008, (following pages)before coming to class. Highlight the things you find interesting as you read.
Task 2: Think about yourself and your own mindset about mathematics and Engineering. Think about your personal science history in light of what Carol S. Dweck and her graduate students have discovered about mindsets and learning.
Write a draft of a paragraph or two about your reaction to this article. You might include thoughts about the following.
· How did the article make you feel?
· Do you believe you have a fixed mindset or a growth mindset? Explain why.
· How might the article influence how your approach to your classes, particularly Engineering and Science classes, this semester?
Bring a copy of this with you to class next time we meet. We might / will use our responses to generate discussion and a list of things we can do to help us move toward and maintain a growth mindset.
Task 3: Review the draft of a paragraph or two you wrote before the class discussion next week. Revise these paragraphs if necessary and incorporate your thoughts on the mindset article in your Draft. Be sure to address the specific questions raised in Task 2.
Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn Carol S. DweckWinter 2008
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change constantly with learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my research in collaboration with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about their brains — whether they see their intelligence as something that's fixed or something that can grow and change — has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and school achievement (Dweck, 2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different psychological worlds: one in which students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which students relish challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated t ...
NSG3036 W2 ProjectResearch Template NameCite both articles r.docxgibbonshay
NSG3036 W2 Project
Research Template Name
Cite both articles reviewed in APA style:
***In the template, any direct quotes from the articles needs to only include the page number.
Week 2 Template
Quantitative Article
Qualitative Article
Summarize the two assigned articles. In a paragraph, describe in your own words what the study was about and what the researchers found.
Identify and describe the problem for each article
Identified the purpose statement for each article
Identified hypothesis and/or research questions depending on the methodology used in the articles.
After analyzing, discuss
each article’s significance to nursing practice.
Identify two details to support the study being quantitative or qualitative
Name:
Growth Mindset
Task 1: Read the article Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn, by Carol S. Dweck, Winter 2008, (following pages)before coming to class. Highlight the things you find interesting as you read.
Task 2: Think about yourself and your own mindset about mathematics and Engineering. Think about your personal science history in light of what Carol S. Dweck and her graduate students have discovered about mindsets and learning.
Write a draft of a paragraph or two about your reaction to this article. You might include thoughts about the following.
· How did the article make you feel?
· Do you believe you have a fixed mindset or a growth mindset? Explain why.
· How might the article influence how your approach to your classes, particularly Engineering and Science classes, this semester?
Bring a copy of this with you to class next time we meet. We might / will use our responses to generate discussion and a list of things we can do to help us move toward and maintain a growth mindset.
Task 3: Review the draft of a paragraph or two you wrote before the class discussion next week. Revise these paragraphs if necessary and incorporate your thoughts on the mindset article in your Draft. Be sure to address the specific questions raised in Task 2.
Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn Carol S. DweckWinter 2008
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change constantly with learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my research in collaboration with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about their brains — whether they see their intelligence as something that's fixed or something that can grow and change — has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and school achievement (Dweck, 2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different psychological worlds: one in which students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which students relish challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated t.
Brainology Transforming Students’ Motivation to LearnBy Carol S.docxAASTHA76
Brainology: Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn
By Carol S. Dweck
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change constantly with learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my research in collaboration with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about their brains — whether they see their intelligence as something that's fixed or something that can grow and change — has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and school achievement (Dweck, 2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different psychological worlds: one in which students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which students relish challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated to students? And, most important, can they be changed? As we answer these questions, you will understand why so many students do not achieve to their potential, why so many bright students stop working when school becomes challenging, and why stereotypes have such profound effects on students' achievement. You will also learn how praise can have a negative effect on students' mindsets, harming their motivation to learn.
Mindsets and Achievement
Many students believe that intelligence is fixed, that each person has a certain amount and that's that. We call this a fixed mindset, and, as you will see, students with this mindset worry about how much of this fixed intelligence they possess. A fixed mindset makes challenges threatening for students (because they believe that their fixed ability may not be up to the task) and it makes mistakes and failures demoralizing (because they believe that such setbacks reflect badly on their level of fixed intelligence).
It is the belief that intelligence can be developed that opens students to a love of learning, a belief in the power of effort and constructive, determined reactions to setbacks.
Other students believe that intelligence is something that can be cultivated through effort and education. They don't necessarily believe that everyone has the same abilities or that anyone can be as smart as Einstein, but they do believe that everyone can improve their abilities. And they understand that even Einstein wasn't Einstein until he put in years of focused hard work. In short, students with this growth mindset believe that intelligence is a potential that can be realized through learning. As a result, confronting challenges, profiting from mistakes, and persevering in the face of setbacks become ways of getting smarter.
To understand the different worlds these mindsets create, we followed several hundred students across a difficult school transition — the transition to seventh grade. This is when the academic work often gets much harder, the grading gets stricter, ...
Topic Example Dialectical Journal Directions .docxjuliennehar
Topic: Example: Dialectical Journal
Directions: Choose 5-10 Passages/Quotes from reading and input 1 response to each passage. Responses
can include: Analysis (describe the various parts), Ask a question, Interpreting (explain the meaning), Infer
(educated guess based on prior understanding), Reflecting, Personal Connection (relates to self, world
events, book/movie/etc), Summarizing, Predicting. Number your quotes and responses.
Passage or Quotation from the Text:
Example quote from text:
“The age when food finders became food makers”
Student Response:
Example response:
● Analysis: Describing the human transition
from hunter gatherers to farmers (humans
now produce/make food)
6/20/2019 NAIS - Brainology
https://www.nais.org/magazine/independent-school/winter-2008/brainology/ 1/9
HOME > MAGAZINE > INDEPENDENT SCHOOL > BRAINOLOGY
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Brainology
Winter 2008
By Carol S. Dweck
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change
constantly with learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my research
in collaboration with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about their
brains — whether they see their intelligence as something that's fixed or something that can grow
and change — has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and school achievement (Dweck,
2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different psychological worlds: one in which
students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which students relish
challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated to students? And, most
important, can they be changed? As we answer these questions, you will understand why so many
students do not achieve to their potential, why so many bright students stop working when school
becomes challenging, and why stereotypes have such profound effects on students' achievement.
You will also learn how praise can have a negative effect on students' mindsets, harming their
motivation to learn.
Mindsets and Achievement
Many students believe that intelligence is fixed, that each person has a certain amount and that's
that. We call this a fixed mindset, and, as you will see, students with this mindset worry about how
much of this fixed intelligence they possess. A fixed mindset makes challenges threatening for
students (because they believe that their fixed ability may not be up to the task) and it makes
mistakes and failures demoralizing (because they believe that such setbacks reflect badly on their
level of fixed intelligence).
To understand the different worlds these mindsets create, we followed several hundred students
across a difficult school transition — the transition to seventh grade. This is when the academic
LOGIN >
http://w ...
SCHOOL MATTERS BrainologyTransforming Students’ .docxMARRY7
SCHOOL MATTERS
Brainology
Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn
Carol S. Dweck
Winter 2008
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change constantly with learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my research in collaboration with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about their brains — whether they see their intelligence as something that's fixed or
Photoillustration: Michael Northrup
something that can grow and change — has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and school achievement (Dweck, 2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different psychological worlds: one in which students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which students relish challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated to students? And, most important, can they be changed? As we answer these questions, you will understand why so many students do not achieve to their potential, why so many bright students stop working when school becomes challenging, and why stereotypes have such profound effects on students' achievement. You will also learn how praise can have a negative effect on students' mindsets, harming their motivation to learn.
Mindsets and Achievement
Many students believe that intelligence is fixed, that each person has a certain amount and that's that. We call this a fixed mindset, and, as you will see, students with this mindset worry about how much of this fixed intelligence they possess. A fixed mindset makes challenges threatening for students (because they believe that their fixed ability may not be up to the task) and it makes mistakes and failures demoralizing (because they believe that such setbacks reflect badly on their level of fixed intelligence).
It is the belief that intelligence can be developed that opens students to a love of learning, a belief in the power of effort and constructive, determined reactions to setbacks.
Other students believe that intelligence is something that can be cultivated through effort and education. They don't necessarily believe that everyone has the same abilities or that anyone can be as smart as Einstein, but they do believe that everyone can improve their abilities. And they
understand that even Einstein wasn't Einstein until he put in years of focused hard work. In short, students with this growth mindset believe that intelligence is a potential that can be realized through learning. As a result, confronting challenges, profiting from mistakes, and persevering in the face of setbacks become ways of getting smarter.
To understand the different worlds these mindsets create, we followed several hundred students across a difficult school transition — the transition to seventh grade. This i ...
Brainology Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn .docxjackiewalcutt
This document summarizes Carol Dweck's research on student mindsets and motivation. She found that students who believe intelligence is fixed (fixed mindset) worry about their abilities and are afraid of challenges, while those who see intelligence as something that can grow (growth mindset) embrace challenges and persist in the face of setbacks. Praising students for effort rather than intelligence promotes a growth mindset and better academic performance over time. Dweck developed a computer program called Brainology to teach middle school students about the growth mindset and its benefits.
The red coler with file are very importantAttached Files Fixedv.docxhelen23456789
The red coler with file are very important
Attached Files:
FixedvsGrowth.pdf
(
384.466 KB
)
Read the short (seriously, it took me like 20 mins tops) article and do a write up (150 words minimum) on it.
Ideas for write up portion:
What kind of learner identity are you? Why do do you identify as that kind of learner? What is your relationship with struggling in school? How do you deal with struggle? When do you see things as a learning oportunity?
Points: 20 (which is a lot in this class)
(Do not forget I am international student, please)
http://www.nais.org/about/index.cfm?ItemNumber=145867
You can see these information on wibsite and I will put on this page because you have to read this a story.
SCHOOL MATTERS
Brainology
Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn
Carol S. Dweck
Winter 2008
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change
constantly with learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my
research in collaboration with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about
their brains — whether they see their intelligence as something that's fixed or
Photoillustration: Michael Northrup
something that can grow and change — has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and school
achievement (Dweck, 2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different psychological
worlds: one in which students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which
students relish challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated to students? And, most important, can
they be changed? As we answer these questions, you will understand why so many students do not
achieve to their potential, why so many bright students stop working when school becomes
challenging, and why stereotypes have such profound effects on students' achievement. You will also
learn how praise can have a negative effect on students' mindsets, harming their motivation to
learn.
Mindsets and Achievement
Many students believe that intelligence is fixed, that each person has a certain amount and that's
that. We call this a fixed mindset, and, as you will see, students with this mindset worry about
how much of this fixed intelligence they possess. A fixed mindset makes challenges threatening for
students (because they believe that their fixed ability may not be up to the task) and it makes
mistakes and failures demoralizing (because they believe that such setbacks reflect badly on their
level of fixed intelligence).
It is the belief that intelligence can be developed that opens students to a love of learning, a
belief in the power of effort and constructive, determined reactions to setbacks.
Other students believe that intelligence is something that can be cultivated through e.
Brainology Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn Ca.docxAASTHA76
Brainology
Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn
Carol S. Dweck
Winter 2008
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change constantly with
learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my research in collaboration
with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about their brains — whether they see their
intelligence as something that's fixed or something that can grow and change — has profound effects on their
motivation, learning, and school achievement (Dweck, 2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different
psychological worlds: one in which students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which
students relish challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated to students? And, most important, can they be
changed? As we answer these questions, you will understand why so many students do not achieve to their potential,
why so many bright students stop working when school becomes challenging, and why stereotypes have such
profound effects on students' achievement. You will also learn how praise can have a negative effect on students'
mindsets, harming their motivation to learn.
Mindsets and Achievement
Many students believe that intelligence is fixed, that each person has a certain amount and that's that. We call this
a fixed mindset, and, as you will see, students with this mindset worry about how much of this fixed intelligence they
possess. A fixed mindset makes challenges threatening for students (because they believe that their fixed ability may
not be up to the task) and it makes mistakes and failures demoralizing (because they believe that such setbacks
reflect badly on their level of fixed intelligence).
Other students believe that intelligence is something that can be cultivated through effort and education. They don't
necessarily believe that everyone has the same abilities or that anyone can be as smart as Einstein, but they do
believe that everyone can improve their abilities. And they understand that even Einstein wasn't Einstein until he put
in years of focused hard work. In short, students with this growth mindset believe that intelligence is a potential that
can be realized through learning. As a result, confronting challenges, profiting from mistakes, and persevering in the
face of setbacks become ways of getting smarter.
To understand the different worlds these mindsets create, we followed several hundred students across a difficult
school transition — the transition to seventh grade. This is when the academic work often gets much harder, the
grading gets stricter, and the school environment gets less personalized with students moving from class to class. As
the students entered seventh grade, w ...
NSG3036 W2 ProjectResearch Template NameCite both articles r.docxvannagoforth
NSG3036 W2 Project
Research Template Name
Cite both articles reviewed in APA style:
***In the template, any direct quotes from the articles needs to only include the page number.
Week 2 Template
Quantitative Article
Qualitative Article
Summarize the two assigned articles. In a paragraph, describe in your own words what the study was about and what the researchers found.
Identify and describe the problem for each article
Identified the purpose statement for each article
Identified hypothesis and/or research questions depending on the methodology used in the articles.
After analyzing, discuss
each article’s significance to nursing practice.
Identify two details to support the study being quantitative or qualitative
Name:
Growth Mindset
Task 1: Read the article Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn, by Carol S. Dweck, Winter 2008, (following pages)before coming to class. Highlight the things you find interesting as you read.
Task 2: Think about yourself and your own mindset about mathematics and Engineering. Think about your personal science history in light of what Carol S. Dweck and her graduate students have discovered about mindsets and learning.
Write a draft of a paragraph or two about your reaction to this article. You might include thoughts about the following.
· How did the article make you feel?
· Do you believe you have a fixed mindset or a growth mindset? Explain why.
· How might the article influence how your approach to your classes, particularly Engineering and Science classes, this semester?
Bring a copy of this with you to class next time we meet. We might / will use our responses to generate discussion and a list of things we can do to help us move toward and maintain a growth mindset.
Task 3: Review the draft of a paragraph or two you wrote before the class discussion next week. Revise these paragraphs if necessary and incorporate your thoughts on the mindset article in your Draft. Be sure to address the specific questions raised in Task 2.
Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn Carol S. DweckWinter 2008
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change constantly with learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my research in collaboration with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about their brains — whether they see their intelligence as something that's fixed or something that can grow and change — has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and school achievement (Dweck, 2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different psychological worlds: one in which students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which students relish challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated t ...
NSG3036 W2 ProjectResearch Template NameCite both articles r.docxgibbonshay
NSG3036 W2 Project
Research Template Name
Cite both articles reviewed in APA style:
***In the template, any direct quotes from the articles needs to only include the page number.
Week 2 Template
Quantitative Article
Qualitative Article
Summarize the two assigned articles. In a paragraph, describe in your own words what the study was about and what the researchers found.
Identify and describe the problem for each article
Identified the purpose statement for each article
Identified hypothesis and/or research questions depending on the methodology used in the articles.
After analyzing, discuss
each article’s significance to nursing practice.
Identify two details to support the study being quantitative or qualitative
Name:
Growth Mindset
Task 1: Read the article Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn, by Carol S. Dweck, Winter 2008, (following pages)before coming to class. Highlight the things you find interesting as you read.
Task 2: Think about yourself and your own mindset about mathematics and Engineering. Think about your personal science history in light of what Carol S. Dweck and her graduate students have discovered about mindsets and learning.
Write a draft of a paragraph or two about your reaction to this article. You might include thoughts about the following.
· How did the article make you feel?
· Do you believe you have a fixed mindset or a growth mindset? Explain why.
· How might the article influence how your approach to your classes, particularly Engineering and Science classes, this semester?
Bring a copy of this with you to class next time we meet. We might / will use our responses to generate discussion and a list of things we can do to help us move toward and maintain a growth mindset.
Task 3: Review the draft of a paragraph or two you wrote before the class discussion next week. Revise these paragraphs if necessary and incorporate your thoughts on the mindset article in your Draft. Be sure to address the specific questions raised in Task 2.
Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn Carol S. DweckWinter 2008
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change constantly with learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my research in collaboration with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about their brains — whether they see their intelligence as something that's fixed or something that can grow and change — has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and school achievement (Dweck, 2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different psychological worlds: one in which students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which students relish challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated t.
Brainology Transforming Students’ Motivation to LearnBy Carol S.docxAASTHA76
Brainology: Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn
By Carol S. Dweck
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change constantly with learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my research in collaboration with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about their brains — whether they see their intelligence as something that's fixed or something that can grow and change — has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and school achievement (Dweck, 2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different psychological worlds: one in which students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which students relish challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated to students? And, most important, can they be changed? As we answer these questions, you will understand why so many students do not achieve to their potential, why so many bright students stop working when school becomes challenging, and why stereotypes have such profound effects on students' achievement. You will also learn how praise can have a negative effect on students' mindsets, harming their motivation to learn.
Mindsets and Achievement
Many students believe that intelligence is fixed, that each person has a certain amount and that's that. We call this a fixed mindset, and, as you will see, students with this mindset worry about how much of this fixed intelligence they possess. A fixed mindset makes challenges threatening for students (because they believe that their fixed ability may not be up to the task) and it makes mistakes and failures demoralizing (because they believe that such setbacks reflect badly on their level of fixed intelligence).
It is the belief that intelligence can be developed that opens students to a love of learning, a belief in the power of effort and constructive, determined reactions to setbacks.
Other students believe that intelligence is something that can be cultivated through effort and education. They don't necessarily believe that everyone has the same abilities or that anyone can be as smart as Einstein, but they do believe that everyone can improve their abilities. And they understand that even Einstein wasn't Einstein until he put in years of focused hard work. In short, students with this growth mindset believe that intelligence is a potential that can be realized through learning. As a result, confronting challenges, profiting from mistakes, and persevering in the face of setbacks become ways of getting smarter.
To understand the different worlds these mindsets create, we followed several hundred students across a difficult school transition — the transition to seventh grade. This is when the academic work often gets much harder, the grading gets stricter, ...
Topic Example Dialectical Journal Directions .docxjuliennehar
Topic: Example: Dialectical Journal
Directions: Choose 5-10 Passages/Quotes from reading and input 1 response to each passage. Responses
can include: Analysis (describe the various parts), Ask a question, Interpreting (explain the meaning), Infer
(educated guess based on prior understanding), Reflecting, Personal Connection (relates to self, world
events, book/movie/etc), Summarizing, Predicting. Number your quotes and responses.
Passage or Quotation from the Text:
Example quote from text:
“The age when food finders became food makers”
Student Response:
Example response:
● Analysis: Describing the human transition
from hunter gatherers to farmers (humans
now produce/make food)
6/20/2019 NAIS - Brainology
https://www.nais.org/magazine/independent-school/winter-2008/brainology/ 1/9
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Brainology
Winter 2008
By Carol S. Dweck
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change
constantly with learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my research
in collaboration with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about their
brains — whether they see their intelligence as something that's fixed or something that can grow
and change — has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and school achievement (Dweck,
2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different psychological worlds: one in which
students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which students relish
challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated to students? And, most
important, can they be changed? As we answer these questions, you will understand why so many
students do not achieve to their potential, why so many bright students stop working when school
becomes challenging, and why stereotypes have such profound effects on students' achievement.
You will also learn how praise can have a negative effect on students' mindsets, harming their
motivation to learn.
Mindsets and Achievement
Many students believe that intelligence is fixed, that each person has a certain amount and that's
that. We call this a fixed mindset, and, as you will see, students with this mindset worry about how
much of this fixed intelligence they possess. A fixed mindset makes challenges threatening for
students (because they believe that their fixed ability may not be up to the task) and it makes
mistakes and failures demoralizing (because they believe that such setbacks reflect badly on their
level of fixed intelligence).
To understand the different worlds these mindsets create, we followed several hundred students
across a difficult school transition — the transition to seventh grade. This is when the academic
LOGIN >
http://w ...
SCHOOL MATTERS BrainologyTransforming Students’ .docxMARRY7
SCHOOL MATTERS
Brainology
Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn
Carol S. Dweck
Winter 2008
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change constantly with learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my research in collaboration with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about their brains — whether they see their intelligence as something that's fixed or
Photoillustration: Michael Northrup
something that can grow and change — has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and school achievement (Dweck, 2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different psychological worlds: one in which students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which students relish challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated to students? And, most important, can they be changed? As we answer these questions, you will understand why so many students do not achieve to their potential, why so many bright students stop working when school becomes challenging, and why stereotypes have such profound effects on students' achievement. You will also learn how praise can have a negative effect on students' mindsets, harming their motivation to learn.
Mindsets and Achievement
Many students believe that intelligence is fixed, that each person has a certain amount and that's that. We call this a fixed mindset, and, as you will see, students with this mindset worry about how much of this fixed intelligence they possess. A fixed mindset makes challenges threatening for students (because they believe that their fixed ability may not be up to the task) and it makes mistakes and failures demoralizing (because they believe that such setbacks reflect badly on their level of fixed intelligence).
It is the belief that intelligence can be developed that opens students to a love of learning, a belief in the power of effort and constructive, determined reactions to setbacks.
Other students believe that intelligence is something that can be cultivated through effort and education. They don't necessarily believe that everyone has the same abilities or that anyone can be as smart as Einstein, but they do believe that everyone can improve their abilities. And they
understand that even Einstein wasn't Einstein until he put in years of focused hard work. In short, students with this growth mindset believe that intelligence is a potential that can be realized through learning. As a result, confronting challenges, profiting from mistakes, and persevering in the face of setbacks become ways of getting smarter.
To understand the different worlds these mindsets create, we followed several hundred students across a difficult school transition — the transition to seventh grade. This i ...
Brainology Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn .docxjackiewalcutt
This document summarizes Carol Dweck's research on student mindsets and motivation. She found that students who believe intelligence is fixed (fixed mindset) worry about their abilities and are afraid of challenges, while those who see intelligence as something that can grow (growth mindset) embrace challenges and persist in the face of setbacks. Praising students for effort rather than intelligence promotes a growth mindset and better academic performance over time. Dweck developed a computer program called Brainology to teach middle school students about the growth mindset and its benefits.
The red coler with file are very importantAttached Files Fixedv.docxhelen23456789
The red coler with file are very important
Attached Files:
FixedvsGrowth.pdf
(
384.466 KB
)
Read the short (seriously, it took me like 20 mins tops) article and do a write up (150 words minimum) on it.
Ideas for write up portion:
What kind of learner identity are you? Why do do you identify as that kind of learner? What is your relationship with struggling in school? How do you deal with struggle? When do you see things as a learning oportunity?
Points: 20 (which is a lot in this class)
(Do not forget I am international student, please)
http://www.nais.org/about/index.cfm?ItemNumber=145867
You can see these information on wibsite and I will put on this page because you have to read this a story.
SCHOOL MATTERS
Brainology
Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn
Carol S. Dweck
Winter 2008
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research is showing that our brains change
constantly with learning and experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and learning? It certainly does. In my
research in collaboration with my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe about
their brains — whether they see their intelligence as something that's fixed or
Photoillustration: Michael Northrup
something that can grow and change — has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and school
achievement (Dweck, 2006). These different beliefs, or mindsets, create different psychological
worlds: one in which students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks, and one in which
students relish challenges and are resilient in the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets communicated to students? And, most important, can
they be changed? As we answer these questions, you will understand why so many students do not
achieve to their potential, why so many bright students stop working when school becomes
challenging, and why stereotypes have such profound effects on students' achievement. You will also
learn how praise can have a negative effect on students' mindsets, harming their motivation to
learn.
Mindsets and Achievement
Many students believe that intelligence is fixed, that each person has a certain amount and that's
that. We call this a fixed mindset, and, as you will see, students with this mindset worry about
how much of this fixed intelligence they possess. A fixed mindset makes challenges threatening for
students (because they believe that their fixed ability may not be up to the task) and it makes
mistakes and failures demoralizing (because they believe that such setbacks reflect badly on their
level of fixed intelligence).
It is the belief that intelligence can be developed that opens students to a love of learning, a
belief in the power of effort and constructive, determined reactions to setbacks.
Other students believe that intelligence is something that can be cultivated through e.
October 2007 Volume 65 Number 2 Early Intervention .docxvannagoforth
October 2007 | Volume 65 | Number 2
Early Intervention at Every Age Pages 34-39
The Perils and Promises of Praise
Carol S. Dweck
We often hear these days that we've produced a generation of young people who can't get
through the day without an award. They expect success because they're special, not because
they've worked hard.
Is this true? Have we inadvertently done something to hold back our students?
I think educators commonly hold two beliefs that do just that. Many believe that (1) praising
students' intelligence builds their confidence and motivation to learn, and (2) students' inherent
intelligence is the major cause of their achievement in school. Our research has shown that the
first belief is false and that the second can be harmful—even for the most competent students.
Praise is intricately connected to how students view their intelligence. Some students believe that
their intellectual ability is a fixed trait. They have a certain amount of intelligence, and that's that.
Students with this fixed mind-set become excessively concerned with how smart they are,
seeking tasks that will prove their intelligence and avoiding ones that might not (Dweck, 1999,
2006). The desire to learn takes a backseat.
Other students believe that their intellectual ability is something they can develop through effort
and education. They don't necessarily believe that anyone can become an Einstein or a Mozart,
but they do understand that even Einstein and Mozart had to put in years of effort to become who
they were. When students believe that they can develop their intelligence, they focus on doing
just that. Not worrying about how smart they will appear, they take on challenges and stick to
them (Dweck, 1999, 2006).
More and more research in psychology and neuroscience supports the growth mind-set. We are
discovering that the brain has more plasticity over time than we ever imagined (Doidge, 2007);
that fundamental aspects of intelligence can be enhanced through learning (Sternberg, 2005); and
that dedication and persistence in the face of obstacles are key ingredients in outstanding
achievement (Ericsson, Charness, Feltovich, & Hoffman, 2006).
The fixed and growth mind-sets create two different psychological worlds. In the fixed mind-set,
students care first and foremost about how they'll be judged: smart or not smart. Repeatedly,
students with this mind-set reject opportunities to learn if they might make mistakes (Hong,
Chiu, Dweck, Lin, & Wan, 1999; Mueller & Dweck, 1998). When they do make mistakes or
reveal deficiencies, rather than correct them, they try to hide them (Nussbaum & Dweck, 2007).
They are also afraid of effort because effort makes them feel dumb. They believe that if you have
the ability, you shouldn't need effort (Blackwell, Trzesniewski, & Dweck, 2007), that ability
should bring success all by itself. This is one of the worst beliefs that students can hold. It can
cause many bright st ...
1 The Secret to Raising Smart Kids Hint Dont tel.docxShiraPrater50
1
The Secret to Raising Smart Kids
Hint: Don't tell your kids that they are. More than three decades of
research shows that a focus on effort—not on intelligence or ability—
is key to success in school and in life
By Carol S. Dweck, Scientific American Mind - November 28, 2007
A brilliant student, Jonathan sailed
through grade school. He completed his
assignments easily and routinely earned
As. Jonathan puzzled over why some of
his classmates struggled, and his
parents told him he had a special gift. In
the seventh grade, however, Jonathan
suddenly lost interest in school, refusing
to do homework or study for tests. As a
consequence, his grades plummeted.
His parents tried to boost their son’s
confidence by assuring him that he was
very smart. But their attempts failed to
motivate Jonathan (who is a composite
drawn from several children).
Schoolwork, their son maintained, was
boring and pointless.
Our society worships talent, and many
people assume that possessing superior
intelligence or ability—along with
confidence in that ability—is a recipe for
success. In fact, however, more than 30
years of scientific investigation suggests
that an overemphasis on intellect or
talent leaves people vulnerable to failure,
fearful of challenges and unwilling to
remedy their shortcomings.
The result plays out in children like
Jonathan, who coast through the early
grades under the dangerous notion that
no-effort academic achievement defines
them as smart or gifted. Such children
hold an implicit belief that intelligence is
innate and fixed, making striving to learn
seem far less important than being (or
looking) smart. This belief also makes
them see challenges, mistakes and
even the need to exert effort as threats
to their ego rather than as opportunities
to improve. And it causes them to lose
confidence and motivation when the
work is no longer easy for them.
Praising children’s innate abilities, as
Jonathan’s parents did, reinforces this
mind-set, which can also prevent young
athletes or people in the workforce and
even marriages from living up to their
potential. On the other hand, our studies
show that teaching people to have a
“growth mind-set,” which encourages a
focus on effort rather than on intelligence
or talent, helps make them into high
achievers in school and in life.
The Opportunity of Defeat I first
began to investigate the underpinnings
of human motivation—and how people
persevere after setbacks—as a
psychology graduate student at Yale
University in the 1960s. Animal
experiments by psychologists Martin
Seligman, Steven Maier and Richard
Solomon of the University of
Pennsylvania had shown that after
repeated failures, most animals
conclude that a situation is hopeless
and beyond their control. After such an
2
experience, the researchers found, an
animal often remains passive even when
it can affect change—a state they called
learned helplessness ...
Students perform better in school when they and their teachers believe that intelligence is not fixed, but can be developed. Teaching students that intelligence can be “grown” is especially powerful for students who belong to typically stereotyped groups. Growth mind-sets focus on effort and motivate students to overcome challenging work.
Motivating the Demotivated - Audrey McPhersonKenny Pieper
This document discusses motivating unmotivated students and cognitive theories of learning. It covers:
1. Cognitive theory assumes learning is an internal mental process where students actively organize new information. This implies teachers should consider students' cognitive development and help connect new ideas to prior knowledge.
2. Motivation comes from intrinsic enjoyment of an activity or extrinsic rewards/punishments. Intrinsic motivation is more effective for learning. Teachers can promote it by relating lessons to students' lives and interests.
3. Maslow's hierarchy suggests addressing students' basic needs for safety, belonging and esteem before focusing on learning. Covington's theory emphasizes the needs for competence, relatedness, approval and achievement. The document
Don’t tell your kids that they are. More than three decades
of research show that a focus on effort—not intelligence or
ability—is key to success in school and in life
This document discusses Carol Dweck's research on fixed and growth mindsets. It begins by defining mindset as a mental attitude that determines how one interprets and responds to situations. Those with a fixed mindset believe their intelligence is predetermined, while those with a growth mindset believe intelligence can be developed through effort. The document then provides examples of how mindsets influence responses to challenges. It suggests educators can promote a growth mindset through praise focused on effort rather than ability and emphasizing that failure provides learning opportunities.
This document discusses Carol Dweck's research on fixed and growth mindsets. It explains that children are born with traits like altruism, mastery, problem-solving and more, but many adult actions undermine these traits and turn children into non-learners. Dweck found that praising intelligence leads to a fixed mindset while praising effort leads to a growth mindset. A growth mindset is important for resilience after setbacks and improved performance. The document provides strategies for camp counselors to foster a growth mindset in campers.
This document discusses skills needed for 21st century learning and teaching. It explores how social and emotional skills are central to modern education. Characteristics of personalized learning are outlined, such as focusing on individual improvement rather than performance comparisons. The document also examines effective leadership and how to teach complex topics like the effects of puberty on development. Video, group work, and feedback are presented as ways to enhance learning.
Slidecast based on a presentation given on October 29th 2009. An attempt to drill down to find concrete strategies to encourage optimal motivation for learning. Far from being an expert on this, this was an opportunity for me to explore a topic of interest.
This document discusses creating a growth mindset classroom environment. It emphasizes that educators should have high expectations for all students and help students believe they can succeed through perseverance. A growth mindset classroom uses formative assessments, open-ended tasks, encourages risk-taking, and provides constructive feedback to support improvement. Explicitly teaching students about neuroplasticity and how their brains can change can boost perception, memory, intelligence and IQ over time with consistent practice. Developing hope and resilience in students is also important for promoting a growth mindset.
H παρουσίαση αυτή συνόδευσε ένα βιωματικό και συνεργαστικό σεμινάριο σχετικά με παιδαγωγικά μοντέλα και τεχνικές, με τίτλο: «Διαφοροποιημένη Διδασκαλία: Μία Ηράκλεια Προσπάθεια» (“Differentiated Instruction: A Herculean Task”).
Στo σεμινάριο αυτό, το οποίο διεξήχθει στην αγγλική γλώσσα, στις εγκαταστάσεις του 11ου Νηπιαγωγείου Χανίων, Κρήτης, τον Απρίλιο του 2016, συμμετείχαν εκπαιδευτικοί προερχόμενοι από τη Γαλλία, την Εστονία, την Ελλάδα, την Ισλανδία, την Ιταλία και την Τουρκία, στο πλαίσιο του Προγράμματος Erasmus+/Δράση ΚΑ2 «Συνεργασία για καινοτομία και ανταλλαγή καλών πρακτικών στον τομέα της Σχολικής Εκπαίδευσης» - Στρατηγικές Σύμπραξης αποκλειστικά μεταξύ σχολείων, με γενικό τίτλο «Ζώντας μαζί στο Σχολείο: Κοινωνικές αλληλεπιδράσεις, Μαθησιακές Ικανότητες και Ρυθμοί Παιδιού» (“Live together in the school: Social interactions, Learning skills & Child’s rhythms”).
A Vision For Elementary Learning - Tacoma School District Todd Ferking, AIA
1. The document outlines Tacoma Public Schools' vision for building elementary learning environments that foster the needs of 21st century learners.
2. The vision is guided by principles identified through workshops with thought leaders, including challenging and supporting students, engaging the community, and promoting health, safety, and lifelong learning.
3. The document emphasizes the importance of understanding the surrounding community through asset mapping and partnering with existing resources, in order to build schools that are integrated with and enhance the surrounding culture.
The document discusses cultivating a growth mindset in students. It emphasizes that the brain is malleable and can develop new connections through learning. It recommends focusing on learning over grades, putting in hard work, and using mistakes and feedback to improve. Praising effort rather than intelligence helps students adopt a growth mindset. Setting learning goals and regularly reflecting on progress also supports a growth mindset. Teachers should establish an environment of unconditional love, model growth mindset behaviors, allow student autonomy, and value student thoughts to build self-esteem.
This resource package provides scenario cards and role playing activities to teach students about managing conflicts in the home. The activities aim to help students develop skills like communication, anger management, and seeing different perspectives. This helps students build resilience and mental wellbeing by practicing how to handle challenging situations. The role plays give students hands-on experience with conflict resolution that they can draw from in their own lives. Teachers can use discussion and reflective journaling after the role plays to further develop students' skills.
This resource package provides scenario cards and role-playing activities to teach students about managing conflicts at home. The activities aim to help students develop communication, anger management, and resilience skills. Teachers can use the cards to stimulate role-plays of common family conflicts. Students then reflect on their performance using "thinking hats" to consider different perspectives. The resource promotes positive attitudes and mental health by helping students learn constructive ways to handle challenges.
Assist with first annotated bibliography. Assist with f.docxnormanibarber20063
Assist with first
annotated bibliography
.
Assist with first
annotated bibliography
.
(Thesis topic: Psychotherapy)
. Each submission must also include a brief critique of the source (e.g., how could the study be improved, criticism of the author(s) assertions, ideas for future studies, etc.).
summary of the article, including the purpose/hypothesis of the study, a statement about the participants and methods utilized in the study, results and implications for future research, as well as the methodological limitations/critique of the study.
.
Assistance needed with SQL commandsI need assistance with the quer.docxnormanibarber20063
Assistance needed with SQL commands
I need assistance with the query commands assigned to an assignment. I have the databases properly created and do not need assistance with the commands associated with creating the databases. Here is the complete assignment. I have attached the database information.
The structure of the movies database is as follows:
Director (
DIRNUB
, DIRNAME, DIRBORN, YR-DIRDIED)
STAR (
STARNUB
, STARNAME, BIRTHPLACE, STARBORN, YR-STARDIED)
MOVIE (
MVNUB
, MVTITLE, YRMDE, MVTYPE, CRIT, MPAA, NOMINATIONS, AWRD,
DIRNUB
)
MOVSTAR (
MVNUB
,
STARNUB
, AMTPAID)
MEMBER (
MMBNUB
, MMBNAME, MMBADD, MMBCITY, MMBST, NUMRENT, BONUS, JOINDATE)
TAPE (
TAPENUM,
MVNUB, PURDATE, TMSRNT,
MMBNUB
)
Create Video Store database as discussed in the class. Make sure to correct column widths/types before creating tables. Use SQL to form queries to produce the following reports
:
** List the names and numbers of directors whose names begin with the alphabet ‘K’.
List the tape no, movie title, and the membership number and name of members, who are currently borrowing tapes numbered below 20. Arrange the report in descending order by tape number.
List the names and respective numbers of stars and directors who have worked together.
** List the tape numbers for movies of movie type: ‘HORROR’.
List the name of the director who has received the maximum number of total awards considering all his/her movies: AWRD.
** List the names of all members who have not borrowed any movie currently.
List the movie type and number of tapes for each type in the database.
** For each movie list total how many times it has been rented: TMSRNT.
Report the total times rented (TMSRNT) for each movie type.
The database administrator discovers that the name of director whose number is 7 in the database should be spelt as ‘JOHNNY FORD’. Make corrections to the data.
Delete the movie number 14 and all its tapes. Print both tables to verify.
List all tape numbers and their movie titles, and indicate the member number and member name if the tape is currently rented out.
13. List all tape numbers, and also indicate the member’s city if a tape is currently rented out by a member.
14. Who is the youngest director?
How many movies did he/she direct?
15. Grant access to me (joshi) to your movstar table for select and update.
16. Create a unique index on movstar table.
17. For each movie type list the average age of movies given the current year is 2011.
18. ** Create a view MEMB_TAPES that includes the currently rented movies and the members who are renting them, include movie type.
19. ** Use the view MEMB_TAPES to find all currently rented “COMEDY” type movies and members who are renting them.
20. ** List all tape numbers, along with movie name and member name if rented out (leave member name blank if not rented out).
.
assingment Assignment Agenda Comparison Grid and Fact Sheet or .docxnormanibarber20063
assingment
Assignment: Agenda Comparison Grid and Fact Sheet or Talking Points Brief
It may seem to you that healthcare has been a national topic of debate among political leaders for as long as you can remember.
Healthcare has been a policy item and a topic of debate not only in recent times but as far back as the administration of the second U.S. president, John Adams. In 1798, Adams signed legislation requiring that 20 cents per month of a sailor’s paycheck be set aside for covering their medical bills. This represented the first major piece of U.S. healthcare legislation, and the topic of healthcare has been woven into presidential agendas and political debate ever since.
As a healthcare professional, you may be called upon to provide expertise, guidance and/or opinions on healthcare matters as they are debated for inclusion into new policy. You may also be involved in planning new organizational policy and responses to changes in legislation. For all of these reasons you should be prepared to speak to national healthcare issues making the news.
In this Assignment, you will analyze recent presidential healthcare agendas. You also will prepare a fact sheet to communicate the importance of a healthcare issue and the impact on this issue of recent or proposed policy.
To Prepare:
Review the agenda priorities of the
current/sitting U.S. president and the two previous presidential administrations.
Select an issue related to healthcare that was addressed by each of the last three U.S. presidential administrations.
Reflect on the focus of their respective agendas, including the allocation of financial resources for addressing the healthcare issue you selected.
Consider how you would communicate the importance of a healthcare issue to a legislator/policymaker or a member of their staff for inclusion on an agenda.
The Assignment: (1- to 2-page Comparison Grid, 1-Page Analysis, and 1-page Fact Sheet)
Part 1: Agenda Comparison Grid
Use the Agenda Comparison Grid Template found in the Learning Resources and complete the Part 1: Agenda Comparison Grid based on the current/sitting U.S. president and the two previous presidential administrations and their agendas related to the public health concern you selected. Be sure to address the following:
Identify and provide a brief description of the population health concern you selected and the factors that contribute to it.
Describe the administrative agenda focus related to the issue you selected.
Identify the allocations of financial and other resources that the current and two previous presidents dedicated to this issue.
Explain how each of the presidential administrations approached the issue.
Part 2: Agenda Comparison Grid Analysis
Using the information you recorded in Part 1: Agenda Comparison Grid on the template, complete the Part 2: Agenda Comparison Grid Analysis portion of the template, by addressing the following:
Which administrative agency would most likely be respons.
Assimilate the lessons learned from the dream sequences in Defense o.docxnormanibarber20063
Assimilate the lessons learned from the dream sequences in Defense of Duffer's Drift.
The Lieutenant's dream sequences help him understand his tactical problem and make decisions when faced with a new problem. The Lieutenant had virtually no knowledge of the terrain, the weather, civilians, enemy, etc. If an intelligence section had been made available to the Lieutenant, how might have he used such a staff to help him avoid the painful (and deadly) consequences of poor decision making in his dream sequences?
.
Assignmnt-500 words with 2 referencesRecognizing the fa.docxnormanibarber20063
Assignmnt:-
500 words with 2 references
Recognizing the fact usernames passwords are the weakest link in an organization’s security system because username and password are shareable, and most passwords and usernames are vulnerable and ready to be cracked with a variety of methods using adopting a record number of devices and platforms connected to the Internet of Things daily and at an alarming rate.
Provide the all-inclusive and systematic narratives of the impact of physical biometric operations on the current and future generation.
500 words with 2 references
Discussion:-
Discussion
Effective and efficient use of biometric technology will play a key role in automating method of identifying living persons based on individual physiological and behavioral characteristics.
Provide the comprehensive narratives on the advantages and disadvantages of a physical biometric system?
.
Assignmnt-700 words with 3 referencesToday, there is a crisi.docxnormanibarber20063
Assignmnt-700 words with 3 references
Today, there is a crisis about organizations’ inability to resolve the age-old problem of how to control the abuse of trust and confidence given to authorized officials to freely logon onto the organization’s system, Many such officials , turn around to betray the organization by committing cybercrimes. Vulnerability stems from interactions and communications among several system components and categorized as deficiency, weakness and security cavity on
network data center.
To what extent do internal threats constitute a key factor against any organization’s ability to battle insider threats caused by people who abuse assigned privilege?
What is the most effective mechanism for organizations to combat internal threats?
Why should disgruntled employees must be trained on the danger of throwing wastepaper and electronic media in a bin within and outside the facility?
Discussion:
400 words with 2 references
Per Fennelly (2017-182), “Why do Employees steal?” employee stealing is a multiple part operation.
Most organizations are often intolerant and impatient to verify employee’s identity and background and establish trust due to the time-consuming nature of daily assignments.
Most organizations often ignore to establish and adopt on-board ecological waste management action plans to deal with discarded materials, shredded left-over documents and magnetic media and placing fragments in isolated location.
Nonetheless, organizations must learn to support and train employers who are assigned to work and protect the organization data center, facilities and resources. Large segments of any organizations’ facility managers are often none-aggressive and choose short cuts in discharging assigned services by posting passwords on the screen and leaving confidential documents lying out on the table and uploading same document to associates, husbands, loved ones and competitors. Most authorized users within the organization are often the puniest linkage in any security operation.
Per Fennelly (2017-182), “Why do Employees steal?”
employee stealing is a multiple part operation.
Disgruntled employees can install sniffers on organizations’ data file server via polite phone calls
They can gain required user identification and password to access the organization’s secured data center.
Most organization retain an employee on the same salary for twenty years and they pay new a newly hired employee the salary of the actively existing employee.
Most organizations often ignore to establish and adopt on-board ecological waste management action plans to deal with discarded materials, shredded left-over documents and magnetic media and placing fragments in isolated location.
.
Assignment For Paper #2, you will pick two poems on a similar th.docxnormanibarber20063
Assignment:
For Paper #2, you will pick two poems on a similar theme to
compare and contrast
. Your paper will explain how the poems use some of the poetic devices we’ve been discussing to express distinct attitudes towards their common subject. It will point out the
similarities and differences
in the ways the two poems do
this
. Therefore, you will need to compare and contrast the general tones of the poems as well as how they use poetic devices to create those tones. Poetic devices you might want to consider include diction, imagery, figurative language, sound (including rhyme, alliteration, assonance, rhythm, and meter), and form.
Your
audience
for this paper is other students in the class who have read these poems. You can assume that your reader has the poems in front of him or her, so you don’t need to quote the whole poem, though a brief paraphrase might be useful. You will need to quote specific lines, phrases, or words in order to point out specific features of the poems. Your
purpose
is to help your reader see the
differences and similarities
in the two poems and, consequently, to better understand how each one works to create its particular effects or meanings.
Your paper should be
800 – 1000 words long, typed and double-spaced, with 1” margins all around
.
Use of secondary sources (other than our own textbook) is not allowed
for this assignment. If you have questions about the poem, ask other students or the instructor.
Here are some
suggested topics
:
1. Compare and contrast the ways Whitman’s “To a Locomotive in
Winter
” (p. 504) and Dickinson’s “I like to see it lap the Miles” (p. 504-05) represent their common subject: a locomotive. What claims does each poem make about the locomotive? What tone or attitude is taken towards the locomotive? How does each poem use specific poetic devices to create its tone?
2. Compare and contrast the ways Lovelace’s “To
Lucasta
” (p. 521) and Owens’ “
Dulce
et
Decorum
Est
” (p. 521-22) represent their common subject: war. What claims does each poem make about war? What tone or attitude is taken towards war? How does each poem use specific poetic devices to create its tone?
3. Compare and contrast the ways
any two
love poems in our reading represent their common subject. What claims does each poem make about love? What tone or attitude is taken towards love? How does each poem use specific poetic devices to create its tone? (Please check the two poems you pick with the instructor before proceeding.)
4. Compare and contrast the ways
any two
of the following poems represent God:
·
Donne’s “Batter my Heart, Three-
Personed
God” (p. 531),
·
Hopkins’ “God’s Grandeur” (p. 624),
·
Herbert’s “Easter Wings” (p. 676),
·
Blake’s “The
Tyger
” (p. 824-25).
What claims does each poem make about God? What tone or attitude is taken towards God? How does each poem use specific poetic devices to create its tone?
5. Compare and contrast the ways.
More Related Content
Similar to Assignments View FeedbackFeedback for 7-2 Journal Wri!ng .docx
October 2007 Volume 65 Number 2 Early Intervention .docxvannagoforth
October 2007 | Volume 65 | Number 2
Early Intervention at Every Age Pages 34-39
The Perils and Promises of Praise
Carol S. Dweck
We often hear these days that we've produced a generation of young people who can't get
through the day without an award. They expect success because they're special, not because
they've worked hard.
Is this true? Have we inadvertently done something to hold back our students?
I think educators commonly hold two beliefs that do just that. Many believe that (1) praising
students' intelligence builds their confidence and motivation to learn, and (2) students' inherent
intelligence is the major cause of their achievement in school. Our research has shown that the
first belief is false and that the second can be harmful—even for the most competent students.
Praise is intricately connected to how students view their intelligence. Some students believe that
their intellectual ability is a fixed trait. They have a certain amount of intelligence, and that's that.
Students with this fixed mind-set become excessively concerned with how smart they are,
seeking tasks that will prove their intelligence and avoiding ones that might not (Dweck, 1999,
2006). The desire to learn takes a backseat.
Other students believe that their intellectual ability is something they can develop through effort
and education. They don't necessarily believe that anyone can become an Einstein or a Mozart,
but they do understand that even Einstein and Mozart had to put in years of effort to become who
they were. When students believe that they can develop their intelligence, they focus on doing
just that. Not worrying about how smart they will appear, they take on challenges and stick to
them (Dweck, 1999, 2006).
More and more research in psychology and neuroscience supports the growth mind-set. We are
discovering that the brain has more plasticity over time than we ever imagined (Doidge, 2007);
that fundamental aspects of intelligence can be enhanced through learning (Sternberg, 2005); and
that dedication and persistence in the face of obstacles are key ingredients in outstanding
achievement (Ericsson, Charness, Feltovich, & Hoffman, 2006).
The fixed and growth mind-sets create two different psychological worlds. In the fixed mind-set,
students care first and foremost about how they'll be judged: smart or not smart. Repeatedly,
students with this mind-set reject opportunities to learn if they might make mistakes (Hong,
Chiu, Dweck, Lin, & Wan, 1999; Mueller & Dweck, 1998). When they do make mistakes or
reveal deficiencies, rather than correct them, they try to hide them (Nussbaum & Dweck, 2007).
They are also afraid of effort because effort makes them feel dumb. They believe that if you have
the ability, you shouldn't need effort (Blackwell, Trzesniewski, & Dweck, 2007), that ability
should bring success all by itself. This is one of the worst beliefs that students can hold. It can
cause many bright st ...
1 The Secret to Raising Smart Kids Hint Dont tel.docxShiraPrater50
1
The Secret to Raising Smart Kids
Hint: Don't tell your kids that they are. More than three decades of
research shows that a focus on effort—not on intelligence or ability—
is key to success in school and in life
By Carol S. Dweck, Scientific American Mind - November 28, 2007
A brilliant student, Jonathan sailed
through grade school. He completed his
assignments easily and routinely earned
As. Jonathan puzzled over why some of
his classmates struggled, and his
parents told him he had a special gift. In
the seventh grade, however, Jonathan
suddenly lost interest in school, refusing
to do homework or study for tests. As a
consequence, his grades plummeted.
His parents tried to boost their son’s
confidence by assuring him that he was
very smart. But their attempts failed to
motivate Jonathan (who is a composite
drawn from several children).
Schoolwork, their son maintained, was
boring and pointless.
Our society worships talent, and many
people assume that possessing superior
intelligence or ability—along with
confidence in that ability—is a recipe for
success. In fact, however, more than 30
years of scientific investigation suggests
that an overemphasis on intellect or
talent leaves people vulnerable to failure,
fearful of challenges and unwilling to
remedy their shortcomings.
The result plays out in children like
Jonathan, who coast through the early
grades under the dangerous notion that
no-effort academic achievement defines
them as smart or gifted. Such children
hold an implicit belief that intelligence is
innate and fixed, making striving to learn
seem far less important than being (or
looking) smart. This belief also makes
them see challenges, mistakes and
even the need to exert effort as threats
to their ego rather than as opportunities
to improve. And it causes them to lose
confidence and motivation when the
work is no longer easy for them.
Praising children’s innate abilities, as
Jonathan’s parents did, reinforces this
mind-set, which can also prevent young
athletes or people in the workforce and
even marriages from living up to their
potential. On the other hand, our studies
show that teaching people to have a
“growth mind-set,” which encourages a
focus on effort rather than on intelligence
or talent, helps make them into high
achievers in school and in life.
The Opportunity of Defeat I first
began to investigate the underpinnings
of human motivation—and how people
persevere after setbacks—as a
psychology graduate student at Yale
University in the 1960s. Animal
experiments by psychologists Martin
Seligman, Steven Maier and Richard
Solomon of the University of
Pennsylvania had shown that after
repeated failures, most animals
conclude that a situation is hopeless
and beyond their control. After such an
2
experience, the researchers found, an
animal often remains passive even when
it can affect change—a state they called
learned helplessness ...
Students perform better in school when they and their teachers believe that intelligence is not fixed, but can be developed. Teaching students that intelligence can be “grown” is especially powerful for students who belong to typically stereotyped groups. Growth mind-sets focus on effort and motivate students to overcome challenging work.
Motivating the Demotivated - Audrey McPhersonKenny Pieper
This document discusses motivating unmotivated students and cognitive theories of learning. It covers:
1. Cognitive theory assumes learning is an internal mental process where students actively organize new information. This implies teachers should consider students' cognitive development and help connect new ideas to prior knowledge.
2. Motivation comes from intrinsic enjoyment of an activity or extrinsic rewards/punishments. Intrinsic motivation is more effective for learning. Teachers can promote it by relating lessons to students' lives and interests.
3. Maslow's hierarchy suggests addressing students' basic needs for safety, belonging and esteem before focusing on learning. Covington's theory emphasizes the needs for competence, relatedness, approval and achievement. The document
Don’t tell your kids that they are. More than three decades
of research show that a focus on effort—not intelligence or
ability—is key to success in school and in life
This document discusses Carol Dweck's research on fixed and growth mindsets. It begins by defining mindset as a mental attitude that determines how one interprets and responds to situations. Those with a fixed mindset believe their intelligence is predetermined, while those with a growth mindset believe intelligence can be developed through effort. The document then provides examples of how mindsets influence responses to challenges. It suggests educators can promote a growth mindset through praise focused on effort rather than ability and emphasizing that failure provides learning opportunities.
This document discusses Carol Dweck's research on fixed and growth mindsets. It explains that children are born with traits like altruism, mastery, problem-solving and more, but many adult actions undermine these traits and turn children into non-learners. Dweck found that praising intelligence leads to a fixed mindset while praising effort leads to a growth mindset. A growth mindset is important for resilience after setbacks and improved performance. The document provides strategies for camp counselors to foster a growth mindset in campers.
This document discusses skills needed for 21st century learning and teaching. It explores how social and emotional skills are central to modern education. Characteristics of personalized learning are outlined, such as focusing on individual improvement rather than performance comparisons. The document also examines effective leadership and how to teach complex topics like the effects of puberty on development. Video, group work, and feedback are presented as ways to enhance learning.
Slidecast based on a presentation given on October 29th 2009. An attempt to drill down to find concrete strategies to encourage optimal motivation for learning. Far from being an expert on this, this was an opportunity for me to explore a topic of interest.
This document discusses creating a growth mindset classroom environment. It emphasizes that educators should have high expectations for all students and help students believe they can succeed through perseverance. A growth mindset classroom uses formative assessments, open-ended tasks, encourages risk-taking, and provides constructive feedback to support improvement. Explicitly teaching students about neuroplasticity and how their brains can change can boost perception, memory, intelligence and IQ over time with consistent practice. Developing hope and resilience in students is also important for promoting a growth mindset.
H παρουσίαση αυτή συνόδευσε ένα βιωματικό και συνεργαστικό σεμινάριο σχετικά με παιδαγωγικά μοντέλα και τεχνικές, με τίτλο: «Διαφοροποιημένη Διδασκαλία: Μία Ηράκλεια Προσπάθεια» (“Differentiated Instruction: A Herculean Task”).
Στo σεμινάριο αυτό, το οποίο διεξήχθει στην αγγλική γλώσσα, στις εγκαταστάσεις του 11ου Νηπιαγωγείου Χανίων, Κρήτης, τον Απρίλιο του 2016, συμμετείχαν εκπαιδευτικοί προερχόμενοι από τη Γαλλία, την Εστονία, την Ελλάδα, την Ισλανδία, την Ιταλία και την Τουρκία, στο πλαίσιο του Προγράμματος Erasmus+/Δράση ΚΑ2 «Συνεργασία για καινοτομία και ανταλλαγή καλών πρακτικών στον τομέα της Σχολικής Εκπαίδευσης» - Στρατηγικές Σύμπραξης αποκλειστικά μεταξύ σχολείων, με γενικό τίτλο «Ζώντας μαζί στο Σχολείο: Κοινωνικές αλληλεπιδράσεις, Μαθησιακές Ικανότητες και Ρυθμοί Παιδιού» (“Live together in the school: Social interactions, Learning skills & Child’s rhythms”).
A Vision For Elementary Learning - Tacoma School District Todd Ferking, AIA
1. The document outlines Tacoma Public Schools' vision for building elementary learning environments that foster the needs of 21st century learners.
2. The vision is guided by principles identified through workshops with thought leaders, including challenging and supporting students, engaging the community, and promoting health, safety, and lifelong learning.
3. The document emphasizes the importance of understanding the surrounding community through asset mapping and partnering with existing resources, in order to build schools that are integrated with and enhance the surrounding culture.
The document discusses cultivating a growth mindset in students. It emphasizes that the brain is malleable and can develop new connections through learning. It recommends focusing on learning over grades, putting in hard work, and using mistakes and feedback to improve. Praising effort rather than intelligence helps students adopt a growth mindset. Setting learning goals and regularly reflecting on progress also supports a growth mindset. Teachers should establish an environment of unconditional love, model growth mindset behaviors, allow student autonomy, and value student thoughts to build self-esteem.
This resource package provides scenario cards and role playing activities to teach students about managing conflicts in the home. The activities aim to help students develop skills like communication, anger management, and seeing different perspectives. This helps students build resilience and mental wellbeing by practicing how to handle challenging situations. The role plays give students hands-on experience with conflict resolution that they can draw from in their own lives. Teachers can use discussion and reflective journaling after the role plays to further develop students' skills.
This resource package provides scenario cards and role-playing activities to teach students about managing conflicts at home. The activities aim to help students develop communication, anger management, and resilience skills. Teachers can use the cards to stimulate role-plays of common family conflicts. Students then reflect on their performance using "thinking hats" to consider different perspectives. The resource promotes positive attitudes and mental health by helping students learn constructive ways to handle challenges.
Similar to Assignments View FeedbackFeedback for 7-2 Journal Wri!ng .docx (15)
Assist with first annotated bibliography. Assist with f.docxnormanibarber20063
Assist with first
annotated bibliography
.
Assist with first
annotated bibliography
.
(Thesis topic: Psychotherapy)
. Each submission must also include a brief critique of the source (e.g., how could the study be improved, criticism of the author(s) assertions, ideas for future studies, etc.).
summary of the article, including the purpose/hypothesis of the study, a statement about the participants and methods utilized in the study, results and implications for future research, as well as the methodological limitations/critique of the study.
.
Assistance needed with SQL commandsI need assistance with the quer.docxnormanibarber20063
Assistance needed with SQL commands
I need assistance with the query commands assigned to an assignment. I have the databases properly created and do not need assistance with the commands associated with creating the databases. Here is the complete assignment. I have attached the database information.
The structure of the movies database is as follows:
Director (
DIRNUB
, DIRNAME, DIRBORN, YR-DIRDIED)
STAR (
STARNUB
, STARNAME, BIRTHPLACE, STARBORN, YR-STARDIED)
MOVIE (
MVNUB
, MVTITLE, YRMDE, MVTYPE, CRIT, MPAA, NOMINATIONS, AWRD,
DIRNUB
)
MOVSTAR (
MVNUB
,
STARNUB
, AMTPAID)
MEMBER (
MMBNUB
, MMBNAME, MMBADD, MMBCITY, MMBST, NUMRENT, BONUS, JOINDATE)
TAPE (
TAPENUM,
MVNUB, PURDATE, TMSRNT,
MMBNUB
)
Create Video Store database as discussed in the class. Make sure to correct column widths/types before creating tables. Use SQL to form queries to produce the following reports
:
** List the names and numbers of directors whose names begin with the alphabet ‘K’.
List the tape no, movie title, and the membership number and name of members, who are currently borrowing tapes numbered below 20. Arrange the report in descending order by tape number.
List the names and respective numbers of stars and directors who have worked together.
** List the tape numbers for movies of movie type: ‘HORROR’.
List the name of the director who has received the maximum number of total awards considering all his/her movies: AWRD.
** List the names of all members who have not borrowed any movie currently.
List the movie type and number of tapes for each type in the database.
** For each movie list total how many times it has been rented: TMSRNT.
Report the total times rented (TMSRNT) for each movie type.
The database administrator discovers that the name of director whose number is 7 in the database should be spelt as ‘JOHNNY FORD’. Make corrections to the data.
Delete the movie number 14 and all its tapes. Print both tables to verify.
List all tape numbers and their movie titles, and indicate the member number and member name if the tape is currently rented out.
13. List all tape numbers, and also indicate the member’s city if a tape is currently rented out by a member.
14. Who is the youngest director?
How many movies did he/she direct?
15. Grant access to me (joshi) to your movstar table for select and update.
16. Create a unique index on movstar table.
17. For each movie type list the average age of movies given the current year is 2011.
18. ** Create a view MEMB_TAPES that includes the currently rented movies and the members who are renting them, include movie type.
19. ** Use the view MEMB_TAPES to find all currently rented “COMEDY” type movies and members who are renting them.
20. ** List all tape numbers, along with movie name and member name if rented out (leave member name blank if not rented out).
.
assingment Assignment Agenda Comparison Grid and Fact Sheet or .docxnormanibarber20063
assingment
Assignment: Agenda Comparison Grid and Fact Sheet or Talking Points Brief
It may seem to you that healthcare has been a national topic of debate among political leaders for as long as you can remember.
Healthcare has been a policy item and a topic of debate not only in recent times but as far back as the administration of the second U.S. president, John Adams. In 1798, Adams signed legislation requiring that 20 cents per month of a sailor’s paycheck be set aside for covering their medical bills. This represented the first major piece of U.S. healthcare legislation, and the topic of healthcare has been woven into presidential agendas and political debate ever since.
As a healthcare professional, you may be called upon to provide expertise, guidance and/or opinions on healthcare matters as they are debated for inclusion into new policy. You may also be involved in planning new organizational policy and responses to changes in legislation. For all of these reasons you should be prepared to speak to national healthcare issues making the news.
In this Assignment, you will analyze recent presidential healthcare agendas. You also will prepare a fact sheet to communicate the importance of a healthcare issue and the impact on this issue of recent or proposed policy.
To Prepare:
Review the agenda priorities of the
current/sitting U.S. president and the two previous presidential administrations.
Select an issue related to healthcare that was addressed by each of the last three U.S. presidential administrations.
Reflect on the focus of their respective agendas, including the allocation of financial resources for addressing the healthcare issue you selected.
Consider how you would communicate the importance of a healthcare issue to a legislator/policymaker or a member of their staff for inclusion on an agenda.
The Assignment: (1- to 2-page Comparison Grid, 1-Page Analysis, and 1-page Fact Sheet)
Part 1: Agenda Comparison Grid
Use the Agenda Comparison Grid Template found in the Learning Resources and complete the Part 1: Agenda Comparison Grid based on the current/sitting U.S. president and the two previous presidential administrations and their agendas related to the public health concern you selected. Be sure to address the following:
Identify and provide a brief description of the population health concern you selected and the factors that contribute to it.
Describe the administrative agenda focus related to the issue you selected.
Identify the allocations of financial and other resources that the current and two previous presidents dedicated to this issue.
Explain how each of the presidential administrations approached the issue.
Part 2: Agenda Comparison Grid Analysis
Using the information you recorded in Part 1: Agenda Comparison Grid on the template, complete the Part 2: Agenda Comparison Grid Analysis portion of the template, by addressing the following:
Which administrative agency would most likely be respons.
Assimilate the lessons learned from the dream sequences in Defense o.docxnormanibarber20063
Assimilate the lessons learned from the dream sequences in Defense of Duffer's Drift.
The Lieutenant's dream sequences help him understand his tactical problem and make decisions when faced with a new problem. The Lieutenant had virtually no knowledge of the terrain, the weather, civilians, enemy, etc. If an intelligence section had been made available to the Lieutenant, how might have he used such a staff to help him avoid the painful (and deadly) consequences of poor decision making in his dream sequences?
.
Assignmnt-500 words with 2 referencesRecognizing the fa.docxnormanibarber20063
Assignmnt:-
500 words with 2 references
Recognizing the fact usernames passwords are the weakest link in an organization’s security system because username and password are shareable, and most passwords and usernames are vulnerable and ready to be cracked with a variety of methods using adopting a record number of devices and platforms connected to the Internet of Things daily and at an alarming rate.
Provide the all-inclusive and systematic narratives of the impact of physical biometric operations on the current and future generation.
500 words with 2 references
Discussion:-
Discussion
Effective and efficient use of biometric technology will play a key role in automating method of identifying living persons based on individual physiological and behavioral characteristics.
Provide the comprehensive narratives on the advantages and disadvantages of a physical biometric system?
.
Assignmnt-700 words with 3 referencesToday, there is a crisi.docxnormanibarber20063
Assignmnt-700 words with 3 references
Today, there is a crisis about organizations’ inability to resolve the age-old problem of how to control the abuse of trust and confidence given to authorized officials to freely logon onto the organization’s system, Many such officials , turn around to betray the organization by committing cybercrimes. Vulnerability stems from interactions and communications among several system components and categorized as deficiency, weakness and security cavity on
network data center.
To what extent do internal threats constitute a key factor against any organization’s ability to battle insider threats caused by people who abuse assigned privilege?
What is the most effective mechanism for organizations to combat internal threats?
Why should disgruntled employees must be trained on the danger of throwing wastepaper and electronic media in a bin within and outside the facility?
Discussion:
400 words with 2 references
Per Fennelly (2017-182), “Why do Employees steal?” employee stealing is a multiple part operation.
Most organizations are often intolerant and impatient to verify employee’s identity and background and establish trust due to the time-consuming nature of daily assignments.
Most organizations often ignore to establish and adopt on-board ecological waste management action plans to deal with discarded materials, shredded left-over documents and magnetic media and placing fragments in isolated location.
Nonetheless, organizations must learn to support and train employers who are assigned to work and protect the organization data center, facilities and resources. Large segments of any organizations’ facility managers are often none-aggressive and choose short cuts in discharging assigned services by posting passwords on the screen and leaving confidential documents lying out on the table and uploading same document to associates, husbands, loved ones and competitors. Most authorized users within the organization are often the puniest linkage in any security operation.
Per Fennelly (2017-182), “Why do Employees steal?”
employee stealing is a multiple part operation.
Disgruntled employees can install sniffers on organizations’ data file server via polite phone calls
They can gain required user identification and password to access the organization’s secured data center.
Most organization retain an employee on the same salary for twenty years and they pay new a newly hired employee the salary of the actively existing employee.
Most organizations often ignore to establish and adopt on-board ecological waste management action plans to deal with discarded materials, shredded left-over documents and magnetic media and placing fragments in isolated location.
.
Assignment For Paper #2, you will pick two poems on a similar th.docxnormanibarber20063
Assignment:
For Paper #2, you will pick two poems on a similar theme to
compare and contrast
. Your paper will explain how the poems use some of the poetic devices we’ve been discussing to express distinct attitudes towards their common subject. It will point out the
similarities and differences
in the ways the two poems do
this
. Therefore, you will need to compare and contrast the general tones of the poems as well as how they use poetic devices to create those tones. Poetic devices you might want to consider include diction, imagery, figurative language, sound (including rhyme, alliteration, assonance, rhythm, and meter), and form.
Your
audience
for this paper is other students in the class who have read these poems. You can assume that your reader has the poems in front of him or her, so you don’t need to quote the whole poem, though a brief paraphrase might be useful. You will need to quote specific lines, phrases, or words in order to point out specific features of the poems. Your
purpose
is to help your reader see the
differences and similarities
in the two poems and, consequently, to better understand how each one works to create its particular effects or meanings.
Your paper should be
800 – 1000 words long, typed and double-spaced, with 1” margins all around
.
Use of secondary sources (other than our own textbook) is not allowed
for this assignment. If you have questions about the poem, ask other students or the instructor.
Here are some
suggested topics
:
1. Compare and contrast the ways Whitman’s “To a Locomotive in
Winter
” (p. 504) and Dickinson’s “I like to see it lap the Miles” (p. 504-05) represent their common subject: a locomotive. What claims does each poem make about the locomotive? What tone or attitude is taken towards the locomotive? How does each poem use specific poetic devices to create its tone?
2. Compare and contrast the ways Lovelace’s “To
Lucasta
” (p. 521) and Owens’ “
Dulce
et
Decorum
Est
” (p. 521-22) represent their common subject: war. What claims does each poem make about war? What tone or attitude is taken towards war? How does each poem use specific poetic devices to create its tone?
3. Compare and contrast the ways
any two
love poems in our reading represent their common subject. What claims does each poem make about love? What tone or attitude is taken towards love? How does each poem use specific poetic devices to create its tone? (Please check the two poems you pick with the instructor before proceeding.)
4. Compare and contrast the ways
any two
of the following poems represent God:
·
Donne’s “Batter my Heart, Three-
Personed
God” (p. 531),
·
Hopkins’ “God’s Grandeur” (p. 624),
·
Herbert’s “Easter Wings” (p. 676),
·
Blake’s “The
Tyger
” (p. 824-25).
What claims does each poem make about God? What tone or attitude is taken towards God? How does each poem use specific poetic devices to create its tone?
5. Compare and contrast the ways.
Assignment Write an essay comparingcontrasting two thingspeople.docxnormanibarber20063
Assignment:
Write an essay comparing/contrasting two things/people/places/ideas, etc. This should not simply be a list of their similarities and differences, but a cohesive essay written in paragraph form with a thesis, introduction, body, and conclusion.
Remember, a compare/contrast thesis can be formulated in one of the following ways:
1) One thing is better than another
2) Two things that seem to be similar are actually different
3) Two things that seem different are actually similar
Parameters:
*Typed
*Double-Spaced
*Times New Roman
*12 Point Font
*1 Inch Margin
*3 pages (not even a word shorter)
*2 outside sources
.
Assignment Travel Journal to Points of Interest from the Early Midd.docxnormanibarber20063
Assignment :Travel Journal to Points of Interest from the Early Middle Ages, Romanesque, and Gothic World
Travel Journal to Points of Interest from the Early Middle Ages, Romanesque, and Gothic World
Travel was one of the social characteristics that helped shape the Early Middle Ages and the Romanesque period—either to the Middle East to fight in the Crusades or throughout Europe as part of extensive pilgrimages.
For this assignment, put yourself in the place of a person living during this time who traveled extensively throughout Europe by selecting six pieces of art or architecture that you found personally to be the most interesting and important examples that date from this period in history. You should have 2 examples from each of the time periods specific to the Middle Ages: two examples from the Early Middle ages, two that represent the Romanesque, and two that represent Gothic art.
Your objects need to date between 400 CE and 1300 CE—the time span that encompasses the Early Middle Ages, Romanesque, and Gothic periods.
You are going to create a travel journal and itinerary for other students who will travel with you to your points of interest. Create a PowerPoint presentation of seven slides, including an introduction, your five destinations, and a conclusion. On each slide, include the image of the artwork or architecture, and the following information about the image:
Its location
Its name
The period of time it was created
Three interesting points about the artwork/building
What people viewing the image could learn about the Early Middle Ages, the Romanesque period, or Gothic art and architecture.
Why you selected this image
THIS MUST BE FOLLOWED
Assignment 2 Grading Criteria
Maximum Points
Selected two images representative of the early Middle Ages style, from between 400 CE and 1000 CE.
10
Provided location, name, and period of time created for the early Middle Ages images.
12
Explained why you selected each early Middle Ages image, and offered three interesting points about each image and what people could learn from viewing each image.
15
Selected two images representative of the Romanesque style, from between 1000 CE and 1100 CE.
10
Provided location, name, and period of time created for the Romanesque style images.
12
Explained why you selected each Romanesque style image, and offered three interesting points about each image and what people could learn from viewing each image.
15
Selected two images representative of the Gothic style, from between 1100 CE and 1300 CE.
10
Provided location, name, and period of time created for the Gothic style images.
12
Explained why you selected each Gothic style image, and offered three interesting points about each image and what people could learn from viewing each image.
15
The PowerPoint presentation meets length requirements and contains correct spelling and grammar.
.
Assignment What are the factors that influence the selection of .docxnormanibarber20063
Assignment
What are the factors that influence the selection of access control software and/ or hardware? Discuss all aspects of access control systems.
DQ requirement:
initial posting to be between 200-to-300 words.
All initial posts must contain a properly formatted in-text citation and scholarly reference.
Reply post 100-to-150 words.
No plagarism
.
Assignment Write a research paper that contains the following.docxnormanibarber20063
Assignment:
Write a research paper that contains the following:
Discuss the visual assets such as charts, interactive controls, and annotations that will occupy space in your work.
Discuss the best way to use space in terms of position, size, and shape of every visible property.
Data representation techniques that display overlapping connections also introduce the need to contemplate value sorting in the z-dimension, discuss which connections will be above and which will be below and why. Show example using any chart or diagram of your choice.
Your research paper should be at least 3 pages (800 words) excluding cover page and reference page. It should be double-spaced, have at least 2 APA references, and typed in Times New Roman 12 font. Include a cover page and a table of content.
.
Assignment Talk to friends, family, potential beneficiaries abou.docxnormanibarber20063
Assignment
Talk to friends, family, potential beneficiaries about your idea. Do they agree that you deeply understand what the proposed beneficiaries are doing currently to manage/endure their problem? Explain. What are your proposed beneficiaries doing currently to manage/endure their problem? How would you get buy-in from others to sign on to your proposed Beneficiary Experience table (reference Chapter 4)? Include research to support your social entrepreneurship idea.
Minimum 2 pages
Minimum 2 scholarly sources
APA formatted
.
Assignment The objective of assignment is to provide a Power .docxnormanibarber20063
Assignment:
The objective of assignment is to provide a
Power Point Presentation
about
all vaccines including the Flu vaccine in the pediatric population
. Your primary goal as a
Family Nurse Practitioner
is to educate parents about the importance of vaccination and understanding their beliefs and preference by being cultural sensitive in regards this controversial topic. This is an individual presentation and must include
a minimum of 8 slides with a maximum of 10 slides
.
This presentation must include a “Voice Presentation”. Please, this part includes
as a note in each slide
, so I can read it. Thank you.
and the following headings:
*Voice attached in all slides. Please use notes, so I can read it.
ALL REFERENCES FROM USA and within 5 years.
1.
Introduction
(Clearly identifies the topic and Establishes goals and objectives of presentation)
2.
Clinical Guidelines Evidence Based Practice per CDC
– (Presents an insightful and through analysis of the issue (s) identified. Excellent Clinical guidelines)
3.
Population and Risk Factors
(The population is identified and addressed as well the topic(s) and issue(s)
4.
Body and Content
: (Makes appropriate and powerful connections between the issue(s) identified and the concept(s) studied. Very creative and Supports the information with strong arguments and evidence.
5.
Education
– (Presents detailed, realistic, and appropriate recommendations and education including parents/patients)
6.
Conclusion
. Excellent Conclusion clearly supported by the information presented
.
Assignment During the on-ground, residency portion of Skill.docxnormanibarber20063
Assignment:
During the on-ground, residency portion of Skills Lab II, you will have attended sessions covering topics relevant to advanced clinical social work practice. During Skills Lab II, you join with a group of three to four students to present a clinical case. You will create your own case—this case will be a situation you have faced in practice or one you create. During the presentation, you and each group member are expected to demonstrate knowledge, awareness, and skills appropriate to a concentration-year master’s student.
The presentation should include the following:
· The identification of the individual/family or group with background information including:
o Presenting problem or concern
o History of the presenting problem
o Social history
o Family history
o Previous interventions
· Your assessment of the client/family/group
· Your engagement of the client/family/group
o Specify the specific social work practice skills that were or would be used in your engagement.
This is the right up about this project
Tiffany, a 17-year-old African American female resides in Huston Texas with her mother (48 years old) and 2 brothers (20 years old and 10 years old). Tiffany was raised by her mother. Her father went to prison for selling drugs when Tiffany was 5 years old. Tiffany has been having trouble sleeping, her grades have dropped, she is no longer interested in sports or her after school club activities. Tiffany is also afraid to go outside and she does not want to leave her mother’s side. Tiffany reports she gets nervous and has heart palpitations when she sees a police car or hears police sirens. Tiffany’s mother is concerned about the sudden change of behavior in her daughter and thus, took her in to see a therapist.
Tiffany was very active in school. She had good grades, active in sports and after school clubs. The teachers spoke very highly of Tiffany, however, expressed concerns to her mother when they noticed a change in her grades. Additionally, the school staff noticed Tiffany withdrawing from her friends appeared to be isolating herself from others. Tiffany and her family were active within their church community. Tiffany and her family live in a low-income community. Tiffany’s mother does work full time, however, she still receives SNAP and Medicaid services. They also live in Section 8 housing. Tiffany lives in a community with a high crime rate. She often witnesses and hears stories of police brutality. Tiffany’s mother had to explain to her children how to respond to a police officer with they are ever stopped. Tiffany’s other brother has a history of police involvement.
.
Assignment PurposeThe first part of this assignment will assist.docxnormanibarber20063
Assignment Purpose:
The first part of this assignment will assist you in identifying a topic which you will work with for subsequent activities in the course. The second part of the assignment helps you articulate what constitutes plagiarism.
Part 1:
In this course you will be using a variety of resources and research tools. This activity will guide you in formulating a topic to use for later assignments in this course.
1. What is something you are curious about? What is something you see out in the world that you want to know more about? Perhaps think of health, business, or socio-cultural issues. Write it here:
_______________________________________________________________________
(Need help selecting a topic? Review the Research Topic Starting Points for EN 104, EN 106, EN 111, and EN 116 guide from the Herzing University Library. Browse some of the resources linked there for generating topic ideas. http://herzing.libguides.com/research_topic_starting_points)
2. Create a Mind Map for your topic in the Credo Reference Database available through the Herzing University Library. You can access the link to that database and view a brief tutorial in the Research Topics Starting Points guide at http://herzing.libguides.com/research_topic_starting_pointsIf you need assistance using this tool, contact the Herzing University Librarians using the contact information in that guide. You might need to play around with how you word your topic.
Did the Mind Map help you narrow your topic? Describe your experience with the Mind Map feature and indicate your narrowed topic:
3. Write at least three research questions related to your topic and circle or somehow indicate the one you are most interested in answering:
4. Create a thesis statement for your research project. Be sure it meets the characteristics of a “strong” thesis statement as described in the reading for this unit.
Characteristics of a Strong Thesis Statement
· Answers the research question and is adequate for the assignment.
· Takes a position – doesn’t just state facts.
· It is specific and provable.
· It passes the “so what?” test.
Include your thesis statement here:
Part 2:
The following paragraph is from this source:Spiranec, S., &Mihaela, B. Z. (2010). Information literacy 2.0: Hype or discourse refinement? Journal of Documentation, 66(1), 140-153. doi:http://dx.doi.org.prx-herzing.lirn.net/10.1108/00220411011016407
Web 2.0 is currently changing what it means to be an information literate person or community…. The erosion did not begin with Web 2.0 but had started considerably earlier and became evident with the first web document without an identifiable author or indication of origin. Generally, this erosion comes naturally with the advancement towards electronic environments. In the era of print culture the information context was based on textual permanence, unity and identifiable authorship, and was therefore stable. The appearance of Web 1.0 has already undermined .
Assignment PowerPoint Based on what you have learned so .docxnormanibarber20063
Assignment:
PowerPoint:
Based on what you have learned so far in this course, create a PowerPoint presentation that addresses each of the following points. Be sure to completely answer all the questions for each bullet point. Use clear headings that allow your professor to know which bullet you are addressing on the slides in your presentation. Support your content with at least four (4) citations throughout your presentation. Make sure to reference the citations using the APA writing style for the presentation. Include a slide for your references at the end. Follow best practices for PowerPoint presentations related to text size, color, images, effects, wordiness, and multimedia enhancements.
Title Slide (1 slide)
At each stage of development, culture can have a distinct impact on basic aspects of life. Based on your reading thus far, describe how cultural influences impact development throughout the lifespan. Include the following aspects of life:
Cognition (2-3 slides)
Acceptance of cultural traditions (2-3 slides)
Biological health (2-3 slides)
Personality(2-3 slides)
Relationships (2-3 slides)
References (1 slide)
Each slide should have a graphic and very few words. In a separate Word file, create a script to use when giving this presentation (about 50 words per content slide - 500 words total). Submit both files to the dropbox.
.
Assignment In essay format, please answer the following quest.docxnormanibarber20063
Assignment: In essay format, please answer the following questions:
On your second In-Class Assignment, which was on John Stuart Mill's freedom of thought and discussion, you were asked to provide your own opinion on any moral issue.
1) Your task is to write an essay
DEFENDING
the
the OPPOSITE opinion.
2) Please structure your essay in the following format: (SEE ATTACHED FILE FOR MORE DETAILS ON WHAT EACH OF THESE MEAN)
I. Introduction/Thesis Statement
II. Body - Include at least two reasons why one would support this position
III. Counter-Argument - What is the argument against that position?
IV. Reply to Counter-Argument - Why could the counter-argument be wrong?
V. Conclusion
.
Assignment Name:
Unit 2 Discussion Board
Deliverable Length:
150-500 words (not including references) 2 Peer Responses
Details:
The Discussion Board (DB) is part of the core of online learning. Classroom discussion in an online environment requires the active participation of students and the instructor to create robust interaction and dialogue. Every student is expected to create an original response to the open-ended DB question as well as engage in dialogue by responding to posts created by others throughout the week. At the end of each unit, DB participation will be assessed based on both level of engagement and the quality of the contribution to the discussion.
At a minimum, each student will be expected to post an original and thoughtful response to the DB question and contribute to the weekly dialogue by responding to at least two other posts from students. The first contribution must be posted before midnight (Central Time) on Wednesday of each week. Two additional responses are required after Wednesday of each week. Students are highly encouraged to engage on the Discussion Board early and often, as that is the primary way the university tracks class attendance and participation.
The purpose of the Discussion Board is to allow students to learn through sharing ideas and experiences as they relate to course content and the DB question. Because it is not possible to engage in two-way dialogue after a conversation has ended, no posts to the DB will be accepted after the end of each unit.
A. Questions for weekly discussions and conversations (not part of the required Discussion Board assignment)
These questions can serve as the starting point for your discussions during the week. They are “thought starters,” so that you can explore some ideas associated with the discussion board and unit topics. Answers are not required, and should not be submitted with your required assignment. Answers are not graded.
1. What images do we use today that originated from creations by early civilizations for religious ceremonies?
2. What historical art images do we use today, from creations by early civilizations, for cultural celebrations?
B. Required Discussion Board assignment.
From the list below, choose one Greek work of art and one Roman work of art and
compare and contrast
them according to the criteria listed:
Greek Art
Roman Art
The
Doryphoros
(Polykleitos, 450 BCE)
Augustus of Primaporta
(c. 20 BCE)
The Laocoon Group
(1
st
Century, CE)
Marcus Agrippa with Imperial Family
(South frieze from the Ara Pacis, 13-9 CE)
Nike of Samothrace
(c. 190 BCE)
She-Wolf
(c. 500 BCE)
The Temple of Athena
(427–424 BCE)
The Colosseum
(72–80 CE)
The Parthenon
(447–438 BCE)
The Arch of Constantine
(313 CE)
Answer the following list of questions in a comparative essay to evaluate your choices. Be sure to introduce the works you have chosen.
What is the FORM of the work?
Is it a two-dimensional or three-dimensional work of art?
What materials are us.
Assignment In essay format, please answer the following questions.docxnormanibarber20063
Assignment: In essay format, please answer the following questions:
1) Briefly summarize Stirner's Egoism.
2) Look at some contemporary moral issues in the news, either current or past, and apply his Egoist theory to the issue. How would he view the issue?
3) Do you agree with the way Stirner would view the issue? Why or why not?
All together, the answers must total up to about 500-700 words. Assignments
MUST
have the following format: Name, Class, and Essay Subject & Date in the upper left hand corner.
Double Spaced
, 12pt Times New Roman or Arial font. If you use outside sources, it must include a works cited page.
.
Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
The event will cover the following::
Walmart Business + (https://business.walmart.com/plus) is a new shopping experience for nonprofits, schools, and local business customers that connects an exclusive online shopping experience to stores. Benefits include free delivery and shipping, a 'Spend Analytics” feature, special discounts, deals and tax-exempt shopping.
Special TechSoup offer for a free 180 days membership, and up to $150 in discounts on eligible orders.
Spark Good (walmart.com/sparkgood) is a charitable platform that enables nonprofits to receive donations directly from customers and associates.
Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
How to Setup Warehouse & Location in Odoo 17 InventoryCeline George
In this slide, we'll explore how to set up warehouses and locations in Odoo 17 Inventory. This will help us manage our stock effectively, track inventory levels, and streamline warehouse operations.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Find out more about ISO training and certification services
Training: ISO/IEC 27001 Information Security Management System - EN | PECB
ISO/IEC 42001 Artificial Intelligence Management System - EN | PECB
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) - Training Courses - EN | PECB
Webinars: https://pecb.com/webinars
Article: https://pecb.com/article
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more information about PECB:
Website: https://pecb.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pecb/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PECBInternational/
Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/PECBCERTIFICATION
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
In this webinar, participants learned how to utilize Generative AI to streamline operations and elevate member engagement. Amazon Web Service experts provided a customer specific use cases and dived into low/no-code tools that are quick and easy to deploy through Amazon Web Service (AWS.)
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
বাংলাদেশ অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা (Economic Review) ২০২৪ UJS App.pdf
Assignments View FeedbackFeedback for 7-2 Journal Wri!ng .docx
1. Assignments View Feedback
Feedback for 7-2 Journal: Wri!ng a Tense
Conversa!on
Submission Feedback
Rubric Name: ENG 510 Module Seven Journal Rubric
Score
20.7 / 30 - F
Feedback Date
Mar 15, 2020 8:26 PM
Assignment
7-2 Journal: Wri!ng a Tense Conversa!on
SP
Sandy:
You cra"ed a scene in which you achieved the dual-layered
argument. You wrote with passion and
convic!on which amplified the emo!onal he" embedded within
the piece. However, you did forget
one major component of the assignment which resulted in a
significant deduc!on. Please see the
2. rubric for more specific commentary.
Be well and have fun.
--S
Submission ID Submission(s) Turni!n® Similarity Date
Submi#ed
https://learn.snhu.edu/d2l/lms/dropbox/user/folders_List.d2l?ou
=344913
javascript:void(0)
10441957 journal 7.docx (9.03 KB) 0 % Mar 7, 2020 3:10 PM
Done
https://learn.snhu.edu/d2l/le/dropbox/344913/turnitin/747269/su
bmission/10441957/13684361/RetrieveOriginalityReport
https://learn.snhu.edu/d2l/common/viewFile.d2lfile/Database/M
TM2ODQzNjE/journal%207.docx?ou=344913
ENGR 102 Growth Mindset “Persistence and Grit”
ENGR 102 Growth Mindset “Persistence and Grit”
Growth Mindset
Task 1: Read the article Transforming Students’ Motivation to
Learn, by Carol S. Dweck, Winter 2008, (following
pages)before coming to class. Highlight the things you find
interesting as you read.
Task 2: Think about yourself and your own mindset about
mathematics and Engineering. Think about your personal
science history in light of what Carol S. Dweck and her
graduate students have discovered about mindsets and learning.
Write a draft of a paragraph or two about your reaction to this
article. You might include thoughts about the following.
3. · How did the article make you feel?
· Do you believe you have a fixed mindset or a growth mindset?
Explain why.
· How might the article influence how your approach to your
classes, particularly Engineering and Science classes, this
semester? Transforming Students’ Motivation to Learn Carol S.
Dweck Winter 2008
This is an exciting time for our brains. More and more research
is showing that our brains change constantly with learning and
experience and that this takes place throughout our lives.
Does this have implications for students' motivation and
learning? It certainly does. In my research in collaboration with
my graduate students, we have shown that what students believe
about their brains — whether they see their intelligence as
something that's fixed or something that can grow and change
— has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and
school achievement (Dweck, 2006). These different beliefs, or
mindsets, create different psychological worlds: one in which
students are afraid of challenges and devastated by setbacks,
and one in which students relish challenges and are resilient in
the face of setbacks.
How do these mindsets work? How are the mindsets
communicated to students? And, most important, can they be
changed? As we answer these questions, you will understand
why so many students do not achieve to their potential, why so
many bright students stop working when school becomes
challenging, and why stereotypes have such profound effects on
students' achievement. You will also learn how praise can have
a negative effect on students' mindsets, harming their
motivation to learn.
Mindsets and Achievement
Many students believe that intelligence is fixed, that each
person has a certain amount and that's that. We call this a fixed
mindset, and, as you will see, students with this mindset worry
about how much of this fixed intelligence they possess. A fixed
mindset makes challenges threatening for students (because they
4. believe that their fixed ability may not be up to the task) and it
makes mistakes and failures demoralizing (because they believe
that such setbacks reflect badly on their level of fixed
intelligence).
Other students believe that intelligence is something that can be
cultivated through effort and education. They don't necessarily
believe that everyone has the same abilities or that anyone can
be as smart as Einstein, but they do believe that everyone can
improve their abilities. And they understand that even Einstein
wasn't Einstein until he put in years of focused hard work. In
short, students with this growth mindset believe that
intelligence is a potential that can be realized through learning.
As a result, confronting challenges, profiting from mistakes,
and persevering in the face of setbacks become ways of getting
smarter.
To understand the different worlds these mindsets create, we
followed several hundred students across a difficult school
transition — the transition to seventh grade. This is when the
academic work often gets much harder, the grading gets stricter,
and the school environment gets less personalized with students
moving from class to class. As the students entered seventh
grade, we measured their mindsets (along with a number of
other things) and then we monitored their grades over the next
two years.
The first thing we found was that students with different
mindsets cared about different things in school. Those with a
growth mindset were much more interested in learning than in
just looking smart in school. This was not the case for students
with a fixed mindset. In fact, in many of our studies with
students from preschool age to college age, we find that
students with a fixed mindset care so much about how smart
they will appear that they often reject learning opportunities —
even ones that are critical to their success (Cimpian, et al.,
2007; Hong, et al., 1999; Nussbaum and Dweck, 2008; Mangels,
et al., 2006).
Next, we found that students with the two mindsets had
5. radically different beliefs about effort. Those with a growth
mindset had a very straightforward (and correct) idea of effort
— the idea that the harder you work, the more your ability will
grow and that even geniuses have had to work hard for their
accomplishments. In contrast, the students with the fixed
mindset believed that if you worked hard it meant that you
didn't have ability, and that things would just come naturally to
you if you did. This means that every time something is hard for
them and requires effort, it's both a threat and a bind. If they
work hard at it that means that they aren't good at it, but if they
don't work hard they won't do well. Clearly, since just about
every worthwhile pursuit involves effort over a long period of
time, this is a potentially crippling belief, not only in school but
also in life.
Students with different mindsets also had very different
reactions to setbacks. Those with growth mindsets reported that,
after a setback in school, they would simply study more or
study differently the next time. But those with fixed mindsets
were more likely to say that they would feel dumb, study less
the next time, and seriously consider cheating. If you feel dumb
— permanently dumb — in an academic area, there is no good
way to bounce back and be successful in the future. In a growth
mindset, however, you can make a plan of positive action that
can remedy a deficiency. (Hong. et al., 1999; Nussbaum and
Dweck, 2008; Heyman, et al., 1992)
Finally, when we looked at the math grades they went on to
earn, we found that the students with a growth mindset had
pulled ahead. Although both groups had started seventh grade
with equivalent achievement test scores, a growth mindset
quickly propelled students ahead of their fixed-mindset peers,
and this gap only increased over the two years of the study.
In short, the belief that intelligence is fixed dampened students'
motivation to learn, made them afraid of effort, and made them
want to quit after a setback. This is why so many bright students
stop working when school becomes hard. Many bright students
find grade school easy and coast to success early on. But later
6. on, when they are challenged, they struggle. They don't want to
make mistakes and feel dumb — and, most of all, they don't
want to work hard and feel dumb. So they simply retire.
It is the belief that intelligence can be developed that opens
students to a love of learning, a belief in the power of effort and
constructive, determined reactions to setbacks.
How Do Students Learn These Mindsets?
In the 1990s, parents and schools decided that the most
important thing for kids to have was selfesteem. If children felt
good about themselves, people believed, they would be set for
life. In some quarters, self-esteem in math seemed to become
more important than knowing math, and self-esteem in English
seemed to become more important than reading and writing. But
the biggest mistake was the belief that you could simply hand
children self-esteem by telling them how smart and talented
they are. Even though this is such an intuitively appealing idea,
and even though it was exceedingly wellintentioned, I believe it
has had disastrous effects.
In the 1990s, we took a poll among parents and found that
almost 85 percent endorsed the notion that it was necessary to
praise their children's abilities to give them confidence and help
them achieve. Their children are now in the workforce and we
are told that young workers cannot last through the day without
being propped up by praise, rewards, and recognition. Coaches
are asking me where all the coachable athletes have gone.
Parents ask me why their children won't work hard in school.
Could all of this come from well-meant praise? Well, we were
suspicious of the praise movement at the time. We had already
seen in our research that it was the most vulnerable children
who were already obsessed with their intelligence and
chronically worried about how smart they were. What if
praising intelligence made all children concerned about their
intelligence? This kind of praise might tell them that having
high intelligence and talent is the most important thing and is
what makes you valuable. It might tell them that intelligence is
just something you have and not something you develop. It
7. might deny the role of effort and dedication in achievement. In
short, it might promote a fixed mindset with all of its
vulnerabilities.
The wonderful thing about research is that you can put
questions like this to the test — and we did (Kamins and
Dweck, 1999; Mueller and Dweck, 1998). We gave two groups
of children problems from an IQ test, and we praised them. We
praised the children in one group for their intelligence, telling
them, "Wow, that's a really good score. You must be smart at
this." We praised the children in another group for their effort:
"Wow, that's a really good score. You must have worked really
hard." That's all we did, but the results were dramatic. We did
studies like this with children of different ages and ethnicities
from around the country, and the results were the same.
Here is what happened with fifth graders. The children praised
for their intelligence did not want to learn. When we offered
them a challenging task that they could learn from, the majority
opted for an easier one, one on which they could avoid making
mistakes. The children praised for their effort wanted the task
they could learn from.
The children praised for their intelligence lost their confidence
as soon as the problems got more difficult. Now, as a group,
they thought they weren't smart. They also lost their enjoyment,
and, as a result, their performance plummeted. On the other
hand, those praised for effort maintained their confidence, their
motivation, and their performance. Actually, their performance
improved over time such that, by the end, they were performing
substantially better than the intelligence-praised children on
this IQ test.
Finally, the children who were praised for their intelligence lied
about their scores more often than the children who were
praised for their effort. We asked children to write something
(anonymously) about their experience to a child in another
school and we left a little space for them to report their scores.
Almost 40 percent of the intelligence-praised children elevated
their scores, whereas only 12 or 13 percent of children in the
8. other group did so. To me this suggests that, after students are
praised for their intelligence, it's too humiliating for them to
admit mistakes.
The results were so striking that we repeated the study five
times just to be sure, and each time roughly the same things
happened. Intelligence praise, compared to effort (or "process")
praise, puts children into a fixed mindset. Instead of giving
them confidence, it made them fragile, so much so that a brush
with difficulty erased their confidence, their enjoyment, and
their good performance, and made them ashamed of their work.
This can hardly be the self-esteem that parents and educators
have been aiming for.
Often, when children stop working in school, parents deal with
this by reassuring their children how smart they are. We can
now see that this simply fans the flames. It confirms the fixed
mindset and makes kids all the more certain that they don't want
to try something difficult — something that could lose them
their parents' high regard.
How should we praise our students? How should we reassure
them? By focusing them on the process they engaged in — their
effort, their strategies, their concentration, their perseverance,
or their improvement.
"You really stuck to that until you got it. That's wonderful!"
"It was a hard project, but you did it one step at a time and it
turned out great!"
"I like how you chose the tough problems to solve. You're really
going to stretch yourself and learn new things."
"I know that school used to be a snap for you. What a waste that
was. Now you really have an opportunity to develop your
abilities."
Brainology
Can a growth mindset be taught directly to kids? If it can be
taught, will it enhance their motivation and grades? We set out
to answer this question by creating a growth mindset workshop
(Blackwell, et al., 2007). We took seventh graders and divided
them into two groups. Both groups got an eightsession
9. workshop full of great study skills, but the "growth mindset
group" also got lessons in the growth mindset — what it was
and how to apply it to their schoolwork. Those lessons began
with an article called "You Can Grow Your Intelligence: New
Research Shows the Brain Can Be Developed Like a Muscle."
Students were mesmerized by this article and its message. They
loved the idea that the growth of their brains was in their hands.
This article and the lessons that followed changed the terms of
engagement for students. Many students had seen school as a
place where they performed and were judged, but now they
understood that they had an active role to play in the
development of their minds. They got to work, and by the end of
the semester the growth-mindset group showed a significant
increase in their math grades. The control group — the group
that had gotten eight sessions of study skills — showed no
improvement and continued to decline. Even though they had
learned many useful study skills, they did not have the
motivation to put them into practice.
The teachers, who didn't even know there were two different
groups, singled out students in the growth-mindset group as
showing clear changes in their motivation. They reported that
these students were now far more engaged with their
schoolwork and were putting considerably more effort into their
classroom learning, homework, and studying.
Joshua Aronson, Catherine Good, and their colleagues had
similar findings (Aronson, Fried, and Good, 2002; Good,
Aronson, and Inzlicht, 2003). Their studies and ours also found
that negatively stereotyped students (such as girls in math, or
African-American and Hispanic students in math and verbal
areas) showed substantial benefits from being in a growth-
mindset workshop. Stereotypes are typically fixed-mindset
labels. They imply that the trait or ability in question is fixed
and that some groups have it and others don't. Much of the harm
that stereotypes do comes from the fixed-mindset message they
send. The growth mindset, while not denying that performance
differences might exist, portrays abilities as acquirable and
10. sends a particularly encouraging message to students who have
been negatively stereotyped — one that they respond to with
renewed motivation and engagement.
Inspired by these positive findings, we started to think about
how we could make a growth mindset workshop more widely
available. To do this, we have begun to develop a computer-
based program called "Brainology." In six computer modules,
students learn about the brain and how to make it work better.
They follow two hip teens through their school day, learn how
to confront and solve schoolwork problems, and create study
plans. They visit a state-of-the-art virtual brain lab, do brain
experiments, and find out such things as how the brain changes
with learning — how it grows new connections every time
students learn something new. They also learn how to use this
idea in their schoolwork by putting their study skills to work to
make themselves smarter.
We pilot-tested Brainology in 20 New York City schools.
Virtually all of the students loved it and reported
(anonymously) the ways in which they changed their ideas
about learning and changed their learning and study habits.
Here are some things they said in response to the question, "Did
you change your mind about anything?"
“I did change my mind about how the brain works…I will try
harder because I know that the more you try, the more your
brain works.”
“Yes... I imagine neurons making connections in my brain and I
feel like I am learning something.”
“My favorite thing from Brainology is the neurons part where
when u learn something, there are connections and they keep
growing. I always picture them when I'm in school.”
Teachers also reported changes in their students, saying that
they had become more active and eager learners: "They offer to
practice, study, take notes, or pay attention to ensure that
connections will be made."
What Do We Value?
In our society, we seem to worship talent — and we often
11. portray it as a gift. Now we can see that this is not motivating
to our students. Those who think they have this gift expect to sit
there with it and be successful. When they aren't successful,
they get defensive and demoralized, and often opt out. Those
who don't think they have the gift also become defensive and
demoralized, and often opt out as well.
We need to correct the harmful idea that people simply have
gifts that transport them to success, and to teach our students
that no matter how smart or talented someone is — be it
Einstein, Mozart, or Michael Jordan — no one succeeds in a big
way without enormous amounts of dedication and effort. It is
through effort that people build their abilities and realize their
potential. More and more research is showing there is one thing
that sets the great successes apart from their equally talented
peers — how hard they've worked (Ericsson, et al., 2006).
Next time you're tempted to praise your students' intelligence or
talent, restrain yourself. Instead, teach them how much fun a
challenging task is, how interesting and informative errors are,
and how great it is to struggle with something and make
progress. Most of all, teach them that by taking on challenges,
making mistakes, and putting forth effort, they are making
themselves smarter.
Carol S. Dweck is the Lewis and Virginia Eaton Professor of
Psychology at Stanford University and the author of Mindset:
The New Psychology of Success (Random House, 2006).
References
Aronson, J., Fried, C., & Good, C. (2002). Reducing the effects
of stereotype threat on African American college students by
shaping theories of intelligence.Journal of Experimental Social
Psychology, 38, 113–125.
Binet, A. (1909/1973). Les idées modernes sur les enfants
[Modern ideas on children]. Paris: Flamarion.
Blackwell, L., Trzesniewski, K., & Dweck, C.S. (2007). Implicit
Theories of Intelligence Predict Achievement Across an
Adolescent Transition: A Longitudinal Study and an
Intervention. Child Development, 78, 246–263.
12. Cimpian, A., Arce, H., Markman, E.M., & Dweck, C.S. (2007).
Subtle linguistic cues impact children's motivation.
Psychological Science, 18, 314-316.
Dweck, C.S. (2006). Mindset. New York: Random House.
Ericsson, K.A., Charness, N., Feltovich, P.J., & Hoffman, R.R.
(Eds.) (2006). The Cambridge Handbook of Expertise and
Expert Performance. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Good, C. Aronson, J., & Inzlicht, M. (2003). Improving
adolescents' standardized test performance: An Intervention to
reduce the effects of stereotype threat. Journal of Applied
Developmental Psychology, 24, 645-662.
Hong, Y.Y., Chiu, C., Dweck, C.S., Lin, D., & Wan, W. (1999)
Implicit theories, attributions, and coping: A meaning system
approach. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 77,
588–599.
Kamins, M., & Dweck, C.S. (1999). Person vs. process praise
and criticism: Implications for contingent self-worth and
coping. Developmental Psychology, 35,835–847.
Mangels, J. A., Butterfield, B., Lamb, J., Good, C.D., & Dweck,
C.S. (2006). Why do beliefs about intelligence influence
learning success? A social-cognitive-neuroscience model.
Social, Cognitive, and Affective Neuroscience, 1, 75–86.
Mueller, C. M., & Dweck, C. S. (1998). Intelligence praise can
undermine motivation and performance. Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology, 75, 33–52.
Nussbaum, A.D., & Dweck, C.S. (2007, in press).
Defensiveness vs. Remediation: Self-Theories and Modes of
Self-Esteem Maintenance. Personality and Social Psychology
Bulletin.
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Assignments View Feedback
13. Feedback for 7-2 Journal: Wri!ng a Tense
Conversa!on
Submission Feedback
Rubric Name: ENG 510 Module Seven Journal Rubric
Score
20.7 / 30 - F
Feedback Date
Mar 15, 2020 8:26 PM
Assignment
7-2 Journal: Wri!ng a Tense Conversa!on
SP
Sandy:
You cra"ed a scene in which you achieved the dual-layered
argument. You wrote with passion and
convic!on which amplified the emo!onal he" embedded within
the piece. However, you did forget
one major component of the assignment which resulted in a
significant deduc!on. Please see the
rubric for more specific commentary.
Be well and have fun.
--S
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ENG 510 Module Seven Journal Guidelines and Rubric
Overview: Journal activities in this course are private between
you and the instructor. A course journal is generally made up of
many individual assignments.
The journals in this course will help to prepare you for Final
Project II, the creative writing tool kit. In this final project, you
will select creative writing styles and
techniques that you believe will be most effective in both
expressing your goals as a writer and reaching the audiences
you plan to target in your work.
Prompt: For this journal assignment, compose a short scene, a
15. poem, or an excerpt from a screenplay where two people argue
about “something” but are really
arguing about “something else.” For instance, perhaps the
characters are arguing about whose responsibility it was to do a
household task, when they are really
arguing about one of the character’s immaturity. By the end of
this short scene, the meaning of this “something else” should be
clear to the reader—perhaps by
using dialogue, thought, or one or both characters’ gestures or
actions in a setting.
Specifically, the following critical elements must be addressed:
dialogue (direct, indirect, or a combination of the two). Make
sure you deliberately choose a
setting that is not one or both of the characters’ home(s).
argument. What is the “something else”? What were the two
characters really arguing
about? What writing techniques did you use to convey this?
Guidelines for Submission: Submit assignment as a Word
document with double spacing, 12-point Times New Roman
font, and one-inch margins. Your journal
assignment should be no more than 400 words and any sources
should be cited in MLA format.
Critical Elements Exemplary Proficient Needs Improvement
Not Evident Value
Scene Meets "Proficient" criteria and
16. provides exceptional detail in
composing a short scene, a
poem, or an excerpt from a
screenplay where two people
argue about “something” but
are really arguing about
“something else” (100%)
Composes a short scene, a
poem, or an excerpt from a
screenplay where two people
argue about “something” but
are really arguing about
“something else” (90%)
Composes a short scene, a
poem, or an excerpt from a
screenplay where two people
argue about “something” but
are really arguing about
“something else,” but
composition is unclear or lacks
details (70%)
Does not compose a short
scene, a poem, or an excerpt
from a screenplay where two
people argue about
“something” but are really
arguing about “something else”
(0%)
30
Setting Meets "Proficient" criteria and
17. provides exceptional detail in
communicating the details of
the setting through action and
dialogue (100%)
Communicates the details of
the setting through action and
dialogue (90%)
Communicates the details of
the setting through action and
dialogue, but communication is
unclear or lacks details (70%)
Does not communicate the
details of the setting through
action and dialogue (0%)
30
Writing
Techniques
Justifies choices for the writing
techniques used to convey the
argument (100%)
Justifies choices for the writing
techniques used to convey the
argument, but justification is
unclear or lacks details (70%)
18. Does not justify choices for the
writing techniques used to
convey the argument (0%)
30
Articulation of
Response
Journal assignment is free of
errors in organization and
grammar (100%)
Journal assignment is mostly
free of errors of organization
and grammar, which are
marginal and rarely interrupt
the flow (90%)
Journal assignment contains
errors of organization and
grammar but they are limited
enough so that assignment can
be understood (70%)
Journal assignment contains
errors of organization and
grammar that make the journal
difficult to understand (0%)
10
Total 100%