Out, Out—
“Out, Out—” was first published in the 1916 col-
lection Mountain Interval. Both the description of
a terrible accident and a comment on the human
need to resume one’s life after a tragedy, “Out,
Out—” is one of Frost’s most shocking and dis-
turbing performances. Like many of Frost’s poems,
“Out, Out—” is written in blank verse, with the
events described by an unnamed (yet characterized)
speaker.
The poem is based upon a real incident. In
1901, Michael Fitzgerald, one of Frost’s friends
and neighbors, lost his son Raymond during an ac-
cident with a buzzsaw; after accidentally hitting a
loose pulley, the saw descended and began cutting
his hand. He bled profusely and was rushed into
the house; a doctor was called, but the young man
went into shock and died of heart failure.
According to Jeffery Meyers (author of Robert
Frost: A Biography), Frost thought that the poem
was “too cruel to read in public.” For those read-
ers who associate Frost with folksy, homespun
philosophers observing the beauties of rural New
England, “Out, Out—” will be something of a sur-
prise—for the poem is, in a sense, cruel: the boy
dies a terrible death and all the speaker can say is,
“No more to build on there.” Even more shocking
is Frost’s depiction of the adults who watch the boy
take his final breaths. After his death, they “turned
to their affairs” since “they / Were not the one
dead.” Ultimately, Frost suggests, this “turning
away” from death is, sometimes, the only possible
reaction.
Robert Frost
1916
V o l u m e 1 0 2 1 1
2 1 2 P o e t r y f o r S t u d e n t s
Author Biography
Robert Frost was born in San Francisco in 1874;
his father, William, was a journalist and his mother,
Isabel, was a schoolteacher. After William’s death
(from tuberculosis) in 1885, Frost’s mother moved
herself, Robert, and his sister, Jeanie, to the east,
eventually settling in Salem, Massachusetts in
1886. Frost graduated as co-valedictorian of his
high school class in 1892. (He shared this auspi-
cious title with Elinor White, who he courted and
eventually married.) Frost enrolled in Dartmouth
College but did not complete his first semester.
(The school eventually awarded him two honorary
degrees.) After dropping out, he tried to persuade
Elinor to marry him, but she wanted to first finish
her studies at St. Lawrence University. Distraught,
Frost left New England and roamed about Vir-
ginia’s Dismal Swamp for a short time; Elinor man-
aged to graduate in three years and married Frost
in 1885. The couple had five children, although
their lives were marked by tragedy: Elliott, their
first son, died of cholera at the age of four; Mar-
jorie, their youngest daughter, died after giving
birth at the age of twenty-nine; Elinor died in 1938;
their son Carol committed suicide in 1940; and their
daughter Irma was committed to a psychiatric hos-
pital in 1947.
The history of Frost’s career as a poet is much
more a story of success and triumph. His first pub-
lished poem.
Robert Frost was an American poet who achieved both critical and popular success during his lifetime. He published his first collection of poems, A Boy's Will, in 1913 at age 39, though he had been writing poetry for decades prior. Over the following decades, Frost published numerous collections that earned him widespread acclaim and four Pulitzer Prizes. His poems, often set in rural New England, explored themes of nature, isolation, and community through precise language and form. Though he worked within traditional forms, Frost's innovative use of language and variation helped shape American poetry in the early 20th century.
The document provides details about 26 trivia questions related to literature, authors, and works. It includes the questions, answers, and in some cases additional context about the works or authors mentioned. The questions cover topics like famous poems, novels, authors, and literary terms from different time periods.
This document provides summaries of authors and literary works covered in Week 2 readings. It discusses Christopher Marlowe, his play Doctor Faustus, and his poem "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love." It also summarizes Elizabeth Barrett Browning's poem "Sonnet 43," Oscar Wilde's play The Importance of Being Earnest, poems by Thomas Hardy and Alice Munro, and brief biographies of Jane Austen and E.M. Forster.
The document provides an overview of several authors and works related to relationships and love from Week 2 readings. It summarizes biographical information on authors such as Christopher Marlowe, John Donne, Thomas Hardy, Oscar Wilde, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Jane Austen, and E.M. Forster. It also briefly describes poems including "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love," "The Flea," "Neutral Tones," and Sonnet 43 from "Sonnets from the Portuguese." Finally, it gives a short synopsis of Oscar Wilde's play "The Importance of Being Earnest."
American Literature Emily Dickinson &Walt WhitmanCCS University
Emily Dickinson describes hope as a bird that perches in the soul and sings without words. She says she hears the bird of hope even in harsh conditions like cold lands and stormy seas, and it never leaves her alone or asks for anything in return. Dickinson uses metaphors like describing hope as having feathers and personification by saying hope perches, sings, and asks.
Bells for John Whiteside's Daughter is written by the famous poet and New Critic John Crowe Ransom in an elegy form lamenting the death of a lively small girl of his neighbourhood. The PPT can provide a brief outline and analysis of the poem.
Robert Frost was an American poet born in 1874 in California. He published his first poem in 1890 and graduated co-valedictorian from Lawrence High School in 1892. He attended Dartmouth College and Harvard but did not complete degrees. He married in 1895 and had 6 children, though he suffered the tragic deaths of 4 children and his wife. Frost received numerous honors including 4 Pulitzer Prizes for his poetry. While often described as a pastoral poet focused on rural New England scenes, Frost's poetry explored deeper existential and philosophical themes through metaphor and examination of human psychology and struggle.
Robert Frost was an American poet who achieved both critical and popular success during his lifetime. He published his first collection of poems, A Boy's Will, in 1913 at age 39, though he had been writing poetry for decades prior. Over the following decades, Frost published numerous collections that earned him widespread acclaim and four Pulitzer Prizes. His poems, often set in rural New England, explored themes of nature, isolation, and community through precise language and form. Though he worked within traditional forms, Frost's innovative use of language and variation helped shape American poetry in the early 20th century.
The document provides details about 26 trivia questions related to literature, authors, and works. It includes the questions, answers, and in some cases additional context about the works or authors mentioned. The questions cover topics like famous poems, novels, authors, and literary terms from different time periods.
This document provides summaries of authors and literary works covered in Week 2 readings. It discusses Christopher Marlowe, his play Doctor Faustus, and his poem "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love." It also summarizes Elizabeth Barrett Browning's poem "Sonnet 43," Oscar Wilde's play The Importance of Being Earnest, poems by Thomas Hardy and Alice Munro, and brief biographies of Jane Austen and E.M. Forster.
The document provides an overview of several authors and works related to relationships and love from Week 2 readings. It summarizes biographical information on authors such as Christopher Marlowe, John Donne, Thomas Hardy, Oscar Wilde, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Jane Austen, and E.M. Forster. It also briefly describes poems including "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love," "The Flea," "Neutral Tones," and Sonnet 43 from "Sonnets from the Portuguese." Finally, it gives a short synopsis of Oscar Wilde's play "The Importance of Being Earnest."
American Literature Emily Dickinson &Walt WhitmanCCS University
Emily Dickinson describes hope as a bird that perches in the soul and sings without words. She says she hears the bird of hope even in harsh conditions like cold lands and stormy seas, and it never leaves her alone or asks for anything in return. Dickinson uses metaphors like describing hope as having feathers and personification by saying hope perches, sings, and asks.
Bells for John Whiteside's Daughter is written by the famous poet and New Critic John Crowe Ransom in an elegy form lamenting the death of a lively small girl of his neighbourhood. The PPT can provide a brief outline and analysis of the poem.
Robert Frost was an American poet born in 1874 in California. He published his first poem in 1890 and graduated co-valedictorian from Lawrence High School in 1892. He attended Dartmouth College and Harvard but did not complete degrees. He married in 1895 and had 6 children, though he suffered the tragic deaths of 4 children and his wife. Frost received numerous honors including 4 Pulitzer Prizes for his poetry. While often described as a pastoral poet focused on rural New England scenes, Frost's poetry explored deeper existential and philosophical themes through metaphor and examination of human psychology and struggle.
· Describe strategies to build rapport with inmates and offenders .docxgerardkortney
· Describe strategies to build rapport with inmates and offenders in a correctional treatment or supervision program.
· Describe the effect of group dynamics on facilitating programs.
· Describe techniques for establishing a therapeutic environment.
Generalist Case Management
Woodside and McClam
https://phoenix.vitalsource.com/books/9781483342047/pageid/44
https://phoenix.vitalsource.com/#/books/9781323128800
https://phoenix.vitalsource.com/#/books/9781483342047
https://phoenix.vitalsource.com/#/books/9781133795247
https://phoenix.vitalsource.com/#/books/1259760413
Use book and two outside sources.
At least 100 words per question
THANKS
1 The Role of the Correctional Counselor CHAPTER OBJECTIVES After reading this chapter, you will be able to: 1. Identify the functions and parameters of the counseling process. 2. Discuss the competing interests between security and counseling in the correctional counseling process. 3. Know common terms and concerns associated with custodial corrections. 4. Understand the role of the counselor as facilitator. 5. Identify the various personal characteristics associated with effective counselors. 6. Be aware of the impact that burnout can have on a counselor’s professional performance. 7. Identify the various means of training and supervision associated with counseling. PART ONE: A BRIEF INTRODUCTION TO COUNSELING AND CORRECTIONS There are many myths concerning the concept of counseling. Although the image of the counseling field has changed dramatically over the past two or three decades, much of society still views counseling and therapy as a mystic process reserved for those who lack the ability to handle life issues effectively. While the concept of counseling is often misunderstood, the problem is exacerbated when attempting to introduce the idea of correctional counseling. Therefore, the primary goal of this chapter is to provide a working definition of correctional counseling that includes descriptions of how and when it is carried out. In order to understand the concept of correctional counseling, however, the two words that derive the concept must first be defined: “corrections” and “counseling.” In addition, a concerted effort is made to identify the myriad of legal and ethical issues that pertain to counselors working with offenders. It is very difficult to identify a single starting point for the counseling profession. In essence, there were various movements occurring simultaneously that later evolved into what we now describe as counseling. One of the earliest connections to the origins of counseling took place in Europe during the Middle Ages (Brown & Srebalus, 2003). The primary objective was assisting individuals with career choices. This type of counseling service is usually described by the concept of “guidance.” In the late 1800s Wilhelm Wundt and G. Stanley Hall created two of the first known psychological laboratories aimed at studying and treating individuals with psychological and e.
· Debates continue regarding what constitutes an appropriate rol.docxgerardkortney
· Debates continue regarding what constitutes an appropriate role for the judiciary. Some argue that federal judges have become too powerful and that judges “legislate from the bench.”
1. What does it mean for a judge to be an activist?
2. What does it mean for a judge to be a restrainist?
· Although conservatives had long complained about the activism of liberal justices and judges, in recent years conservative judges and justices have been likely to overturn precedents and question the power of elected institutions of government.
3. When is judicial activism appropriate? Explain.
· To defenders of the right to privacy, it is implicitly embodied in the Constitution in the First, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendments. To opponents, it is judge-made law because there is no explicit reference to it under the Constitution. The right to privacy dates back to at least 1890, when Boston attorneys Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis equated it with the right to be left alone from journalists who engaged in yellow journalism.
4. In short, do you believe a right to privacy exists in the federal Constitution. Why or why not?
.
· Critical thinking paper · · · 1. A case study..docxgerardkortney
· Critical thinking paper
·
·
· 1.
A case study.
Deborah Shore, aged 45, works for a small corporation in the Research and Development department.
When she first became a member of the department 15 years ago, Deborah was an unusually creative and productive researcher; her efforts quickly resulted in raises and promotions within the department and earned her the respect of her colleagues. Now, Deborah finds herself less interested in doing research; she is no longer making creative contributions to her department, although she is making contributions to its administration.
She is still respected by the coworkers who have known her since she joined the firm, but not by her younger coworkers.
Analyze the case study from the psychoanalytic, learning, and contextual perspectives: how would a theorist from each perspective explain Deborah's development? Which perspective do you believe provides the most adequate explanation, and why?
2. Interview your mother (and grandmothers, if possible), asking about experiences with childbirth. Include your own experiences if you have had children. Write a paper summarizing these childbirth experiences and comparing them with the contemporary experiences described in the text.
3. Identify a "type" of parent (e.g., single parent, teenage parent, low-income parent, dual-career couple) who is most likely to be distressed because an infant has a "difficult" temperament. Explain why you believe that this type of parent would have particular problems with a difficult infant. Write an informational brochure for the selected type of parent. The brochure should include an explanation of temperament in general and of the difficult temperament in particular, and give suggestions for parents of difficult infants.
4. Plan an educational unit covering nutrition, health, and safety for use with preschoolers and kindergartners. Take into account young children's cognitive and linguistic characteristics. The project should include (1) an outline of the content of the unit; and (2) a description of how the content would be presented, given the intellectual abilities of preschoolers. For example, how long would each lesson be? What kinds of pictures or other audiovisual materials would be used? How would this content be integrated with the children's other activities in preschool or kindergarten?
5. Visit two day care centers and evaluate each center using the information from the text as a guide. Request a fee schedule from each center. Write a paper summarizing your evaluation of each center.
Note:
Unless you are an actual potential client of the center, contact the director beforehand to explain the actual purpose of the visit, obtain permission to visit, and schedule your visit so as to minimize disruption to the center's schedule.
6. Watch some children's television programs and advertising, examine some children's toys and their packaging, read some children's books, and listen to some children's recor.
· Coronel & Morris Chapter 7, Problems 1, 2 and 3
· Coronel & Morris Chapter 8, Problems 1 and 2
A People’s History of Modern Europe
“A fascinating journey across centuries towards the world as we experience it today. ... It is
the voice of the ordinary people, and women in particular, their ideas and actions, protests
and sufferings that have gone into the making of this alternative narrative.”
——Sobhanlal Datta Gupta, former Surendra Nath Banerjee
Professor of Political Science, University of Calcutta
“A history of Europe that doesn’t remove the Europeans. Here there are not only kings,
presidents and institutions but the pulse of the people and social organizations that shaped
Europe. A must-read.”
——Raquel Varela, Universidade Nova de Lisboa
“Lively and engaging. William A Pelz takes the reader through a thousand years of
European history from below. This is the not the story of lords, kings and rulers. It is the
story of the ordinary people of Europe and their struggles against those lords, kings and
rulers, from the Middle Ages to the present day. A fine introduction.”
——Francis King, editor, Socialist History
“This book is an exception to the rule that the winner takes all. It highlights the importance
of the commoners which often is only shown in the dark corners of mainstream history
books. From Hussites, Levellers and sans-culottes to the women who defended the Paris
Commune and the workers who occupied the shipyards during the Carnation revolution in
Portugal. The author gives them their deserved place in history just like Howard Zinn did
for the American people.”
——Sjaak van der Velden, International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam
“The author puts his focus on the lives and historical impact of those excluded from
power and wealth: peasants and serfs of the Middle Ages, workers during the Industrial
Revolution, women in a patriarchic order that transcended different eras. This focus not
only makes history relevant for contemporary debates on social justice, it also urges the
reader to develop a critical approach.”
——Ralf Hoffrogge, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
“An exciting story of generations of people struggling for better living conditions, and for
social and political rights. ... This story has to be considered now, when the very notions of
enlightenment, progress and social change are being questioned.”
——Boris Kagarlitsky, director of Institute for globalization studies and social
movements, Moscow, and author of From Empires to Imperialism
“A splendid antidote to the many European histories dominated by kings, businessmen
and generals. It should be on the shelves of both academics and activists ... A lively and
informative intellectual tour-de-force.”
——Marcel van der Linden, International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam
A People’s History
of Modern Europe
William A. Pelz
First published 2016 by Pluto Press
345 Archway Road, London N6 5AA
www.pluto.
· Complete the following problems from your textbook· Pages 378.docxgerardkortney
· Complete the following problems from your textbook:
· Pages 378–381: 10-1, 10-2, 10-16, and 10-20.
· Pages 443–444: 12-7 and 12-9.
· Page 469: 13-5.
· 10-1 How would each of the following scenarios affect a firm’s cost of debt, rd(1 − T); its cost of equity, rs; and its WACC? Indicate with a plus (+), a minus (−), or a zero (0) whether the factor would raise, lower, or have an indeterminate effect on the item in question. Assume for each answer that other things are held constant, even though in some instances this would probably not be true. Be prepared to justify your answer but recognize that several of the parts have no single correct answer. These questions are designed to stimulate thought and discussion.
Effect on
rd(1 − T)
rs
WACC
a. The corporate tax rate is lowered.
__
__
__
b. The Federal Reserve tightens credit.
__
__
__
c. The firm uses more debt; that is, it increases its debt ratio.
__
__
__
d. The dividend payout ratio is increased.
__
__
__
e. The firm doubles the amount of capital it raises during the year.
__
__
__
f. The firm expands into a risky new area.
__
__
__
g. The firm merges with another firm whose earnings are countercyclical both to those of the first firm and to the stock market.
__
__
__
h. The stock market falls drastically, and the firm’s stock price falls along with the rest.
__
__
__
i. Investors become more risk-averse.
__
__
__
j. The firm is an electric utility with a large investment in nuclear plants. Several states are considering a ban on nuclear power generation.
__
__
__
· 10-2 Assume that the risk-free rate increases, but the market risk premium
· 10-16COST OF COMMON EQUITY The Bouchard Company’s EPS was $6.50 in 2018, up from $4.42 in 2013. The company pays out 40% of its earnings as dividends, and its common stock sells for $36.00.
· a. Calculate the past growth rate in earnings. (Hint: This is a 5-year growth period.)
· b. The last dividend was D0 = 0.4($6.50) = $2.60. Calculate the next expected dividend, D1, assuming that the past growth rate continues.
· c. What is Bouchard’s cost of retained earnings, rs?
· 10-20WACC The following table gives Foust Company’s earnings per share for the last 10 years. The common stock, 7.8 million shares outstanding, is now (1/1/19) selling for $65.00 per share. The expected dividend at the end of the current year (12/31/19) is 55% of the 2018 EPS. Because investors expect past trends to continue, g may be based on the historical earnings growth rate. (Note that 9 years of growth are reflected in the 10 years of data.)
The current interest rate on new debt is 9%; Foust’s marginal tax rate is 40%, and its target capital structure is 40% debt and 60% equity.
· a. Calculate Foust’s after-tax cost of debt and common equity. Calculate the cost of equity as rs = D1/P0 + g.
· b. Find Foust’s WACC
· 12-7SCENARIO ANALYSIS Huang Industries is considering a proposed project whose estimated NPV is $12 million. This estimate assumes that economic conditions wi.
· Consider how different countries approach aging. As you consid.docxgerardkortney
· Consider how different countries approach aging. As you consider different countries, think about the following:
o Do older adults live with their children, or are they more likely to live in a nursing home?
o Are older adults seen as wise individuals to be respected and revered, or are they a burden to their family and to society?
· Next, select two different countries and compare and contrast their approaches to aging.
· Post and identify each of the countries you selected. Then, explain two similarities and two differences in how the countries approach aging. Be specific and provide examples. Use proper APA format and citation. LSW10
.
· Clarifying some things on the Revolution I am going to say som.docxgerardkortney
· Clarifying some things on the Revolution
I am going to say something, and I want you to hear me.
I am a scholar of the Revolution. That's the topic of my dissertation. Please believe me when I say that I know a lot about it.
I also happen to know--and this is well-supported by historians--that the Revolution was a civil war in which, for the first several years, Revolutionaries and Loyalists were evenly matched.
I will repeat that. Evenly matched. Loyalists were not merely too cowardly to fight, and they were not old fogies who hated the idea of freedom. Most had been in the Colonies for generations. Many of them took up arms for their King and their country. And when they lost, you confiscated their homes and they fled with the clothes on their back to Canada, England, and other places of the Empire. Both sides--both sides--committed unspeakable atrocities against civilians whom they disagreed with.
Now, a lot of you love to repeat some very fervent patriotic diatribe about how great the Revolution was. That's not history. That's propaganda. Know the difference.
History has shades of gray. History is complex and ambiguous. Washington, for instance, wore dentures made from the teeth of his slaves. Benjamin Franklin's son was the last royal governor of New Jersey. Did you know that the net tax rate for Americans--they always conveniently leave this out of the textbooks--was between 1.9 and 2.1%, depending on colony.? And that was if they had paid the extra taxes on tea and paper.
And, wait for it, people who support California independence use the same logic and arguments as they did in 1775. Did you know that the Los Angeles and Washington are only a few hundred miles closer than Boston and London? That many of the same issues, point by point, are repeating here in California? So put yourself in those shoes. How many of you would have sided with the Empire (whether American or British) based on the fact that you don't know how this will shake out? Would you call someone who supports Calexit a Patriot? Revolutionary? Nutcase? Who gets to own that word, anyway?
You can choose that you would have supported the revolutionaries--but think. Think about the other side. They matter, and their experiences got to be cleansed out of history to make you feel better about the way the revolutionaries behaved during the War. Acknowledge that they are there, and that their point of view has merit, even if you not agree with it.
· Clarifying Unit III's assignment
I have noticed a few consistent problems with the letter in the Unit III issue. Here are some pointers to make it better.
1. Read the clarifying note I wrote above. Note that the taxes aren't actually as high as you have been led to believe, but the point is that they should not be assigned at all without your consent.
2. Acknowledge that this is a debate, that a certain percentage are radicalized for independence, but there are is also a law-and-order group who find this horrific, and want .
· Chapter 9 – Review the section on Establishing a Security Cultur.docxgerardkortney
· Chapter 9 – Review the section on Establishing a Security Culture. Review the methods to reduce the chances of a cyber threat noted in the textbook. Research other peer-reviewed source and note additional methods to reduce cyber-attacks within an organization.
· Chapter 10 – Review the section on the IT leader in the digital transformation era. Note how IT professionals and especially leaders must transform their thinking to adapt to the constantly changing organizational climate. What are some methods or resources leaders can utilize to enhance their change attitude?
.
· Chapter 10 The Early Elementary Grades 1-3The primary grades.docxgerardkortney
· Chapter 10: The Early Elementary Grades: 1-3
The primary grades are grades 1-3.
Although educational reform has had an effect on all children, it is most apparent in the early elementary years. Reform and change comes from a number of sources and the chapter begins by reminding you of this. Let’s examine a few of these sources...
Diversity. There has been a rise in the number of racial and ethnic minority students enrolled in the nation's public schools; this number will (most likely) continue to rise. Teaching children from different cultures and backgrounds is an important piece to account for when planning curriculum.
Standards. Standards is a reason for reform. We've already looked at standards; these are something you must keep in mind when planning lessons.
Data-Driven Instruction may sound new, but it is not a new concept to you. We’ve done a great deal of discussing the outcomes of test-taking and assessments. You've probably all heard "teaching to the test."
Technology. Today’s students have had much experience with technology, therefore, it’s important to provide them with opportunities to learn with technology. It may take a while for you to be creative and think of ways to use it in your teaching (if you haven’ t been).
Health and Wellness. Obesity is a major concern in this country. Therefore, it is important to make sure that children have the opportunity to be active. Unfortunately, due to the pressure of academics, many schools have been taking physical education/activity time out of the curriculum.
Violence: One issue that I notice this new edition of the text has excluded is violence. However, I think that this topic is important; we need to keep children safe when they are at school. As a result of 9/11 (and, not to mention that many violent events have happened on school campuses in recent years), many school districts now have an emergency system in place that they can easily use if there is any type of incident in which the children’s safety is at risk.
WHAT ARE CHILDREN IN GRADES ONE TO THREE LIKE?
Your text explains that the best way to think of a child’s development during this time is: slow and steady. During this stage, there is not much difference between boys and girls when it comes to physical capabilities. Although it is always important to not stereotype based on one’s gender, it is especially important during these years. These children are also entering into their "tween" years, thus; being sensitive to the children's and parents' needs in regards to such changes is important.
It is important to remember that children in the primary grades are in the Concrete Operations Stage. This stage is children ages 7 to 12. The term operation refers to an action that can be carried out in thought as well as executed materially and that is mentally and physically reversible.
These children are at an age in which they can compare their abilities to their peers. And, therefore, children may develop learned helplessnes.
· Chap 2 and 3· what barriers are there in terms of the inter.docxgerardkortney
· Chap 2 and 3
· what barriers are there in terms of the interpersonal communication model?
Typically, communication breakdowns result from lack of understanding without clarification; often, there wasn't even an attempt at clarification. If barriers to interpersonal communication are not acknowledged and addressed, workplace productivity can suffer.
Language Differences
Interpersonal communication can go awry when the sender and receiver of the message speak a different language -- literally and figuratively. Not everyone in the workplace will understand slang, jargon, acronyms and industry terminology. Instead of seeking clarification, employees might guess at the meaning of the message and then act on mistaken assumptions. Also, misunderstandings may occur among workers who do not speak the same primary language. As a result, feelings may be hurt, based on misinterpretation of words or of body language.
Cultural Differences
Interpersonal communication may be adversely affected by lack of cultural understanding, mis-perception, bias and stereotypical beliefs. Workers may have limited skill or experience communicating with people from a different background. Many companies offer diversity training to help employees understand how to communicate more effectively across cultures and relate to those who may have different background experiences. Similarly, gender barriers can obstruct interpersonal communication if men and women are treated differently, and held to different standards, causing interpersonal conflicts in the workplace.
Personality Differences
Like any skill, some people are better at interpersonal communication than others. Personality traits also influence how well an individual interacts with subordinates, peers and supervisors. Extraversion can be an advantage when it comes to speaking out, sharing opinions and disseminating information. However, introverts may have the edge when it comes to listening, reflecting and remembering. Barriers to interpersonal communication may occur when employees lack self-awareness, sensitivity and flexibility. Such behavior undermines teamwork, which requires mutual respect, compromise and negotiation. Bullying, backstabbing and cut throat competition create a toxic workplace climate that will strain interpersonal relationships.
Generational Differences
Interpersonal communication can be complicated by generational differences in speech, dress, values, priorities and preferences. For instance, there may be a generational divide as to how team members prefer to communicate with one another. If younger workers sit in cubicles, using social networking as their primary channel of communication, it can alienate them from older workers who may prefer face-to-face communication. Broad generalizations and stereotypes can also cause interpersonal rifts when a worker from one generation feels superior to those who are younger or older. Biases against workers based on age can constitute a form of disc.
· Case Study 2 Improving E-Mail Marketing ResponseDue Week 8 an.docxgerardkortney
The document provides a case study and instructions for an assignment on improving the response rate of email marketing. Students are asked to: 1) conduct a design of experiment using the provided data to test cause-and-effect relationships, 2) determine an appropriate graphical display for the results and provide rationale, 3) recommend actions to increase email response rates with rationale, and 4) propose an overall strategy to develop a process model to increase response rates and obtain effective business processes with rationale. The assignment requires a 2-3 page paper following APA formatting guidelines.
· Briefly describe the technologies that are leading businesses in.docxgerardkortney
· Briefly describe the technologies that are leading businesses into the third wave of electronic commerce.
· In about 100 words, describe the function of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers. Include a discussion of the differences between gTLDs and sTLDs in your answer.
· In one or two paragraphs, describe how the Internet changed from a government research project into a technology for business users.
· In about 100 words, explain the difference between an extranet and an intranet. In your answer, describe when you might use a VPN in either.
· Define “channel conflict” and describe in one or two paragraphs how a company might deal with this issue.
· In two paragraphs, explain why a customer-centric Web site design is so important, yet is so difficult to accomplish.
· In about two paragraphs, distinguish between outsourcing and offshoring as they relate to business processes.
· In about 200 words, explain how the achieved trust level of a company’s communications using blogs and social media compare with similar communication efforts conducted using mass media and personal contact.
· Write a paragraph in which you distinguish between a virtual community and a social networking Web site
· Write two or three paragraphs in which you describe the role that culture plays in the development of a country’s laws and ethical standards.
QUESTION 1
Lakota peoples of the Great Plains are notably:
nomadic and followed the buffalo herds
Sedentary farmers, raising corn, northern beans, and potatoes
peaceful people who tried to live in harmony with neighboring tribes and the environment
religious and employed a variety of psychoactive plants during religious ceremonies
QUESTION 2
Tribal peoples of the Great Plains experienced greater ease at hunting and warfare after the introduction of:
Hotchkiss guns
smokeless gunpowder
horses
Intertribal powwows
all of the above
QUESTION 3
The Apaches and Navajos (Dine’) of the southwestern region of North America speak a language similar to their relatives of northern California and western Canada called:
Yuman
Uto-Aztecan
Tanoan
Athabaskan
Algonkian
QUESTION 4
The Navajo lived in six or eight-sided domed earth dwellings called:
wickiups
kivas
hogans
roadhouses
sweat lodge
QUESTION 5
Pueblo Indians, such as the Zuni and Hopi tribes, are descendants of the ancient people known as the:
Anasazi
Ashkenazi
Athabaskan
Aztecanotewa
Atlantean
2 points
QUESTION 6
1. Kachinas, or spirits of nature, were believed to:
Assist in the growth of crops and send rain
Help defend the Navajo against all foreign invaders
Provide medical assistance to the Hopi when doctors were not available
Combat evil spirits such as Skin-walkers or Diablitos
All of the above
2 points
QUESTION 7
1. The preferred dwellings among the Lakota Sioux were:
wickiups
adobe pueblos
pit houses
teepees
buffalo huts
2 points
QUESTION 8
1. Native Americansbenef.
· Assignment List· My Personality Theory Paper (Week Four)My.docxgerardkortney
· Assignment List
· My Personality Theory Paper (Week Four)
My Personality Theory Paper (Week Four)
DUE: May 31, 2020 11:55 PM
Grade Details
Grade
N/A
Gradebook Comments
None
Assignment Details
Open Date
May 4, 2020 12:05 AM
Graded?
Yes
Points Possible
100.0
Resubmissions Allowed?
No
Attachments checked for originality?
Yes
Top of Form
Assignment Instructions
My Personality Theory Paper
Instructions:
For this assignment, you will write a paper no less than 7 pages in length, not including required cover and Reference pages, describing a single personality theory from the course readings that best explains your own personality and life choices. You are free to select from among the several theories covered in the course to date but only one theory may be used.
Your task is to demonstrate your knowledge of the theory you choose via descriptions of its key concepts and use of them to explain how you developed your own personality. It is recommended that you revisit the material covered to date to refresh your knowledge of theory details. This is a "midterm" assignment and you should show in your work that you have studied and comprehended the first four weeks of course material. Your submission should be double-spaced with 1 inch margins on all sides of each page and should be free of spelling and grammar errors. It must include source crediting of any materials used in APA format, including source citations in the body of your paper and in a Reference list attached to the end. Easy to follow guides to APA formatting can be found on the tutorial section of the APUS Online Library.
Your paper will include three parts:
I. A brief description of the premise and key components of the theory you selected. You should be thorough and concise in this section and not spend the bulk of the paper detailing the theory, but rather just give enough of a summary of the key points so that an intelligent but uniformed reader would be able to understand its basics. If you pick a more complicated theory, you should expect explaining its premise and key components to take longer than explaining the same for one of the simpler theories but, in either case, focus on the basics and keep in mind that a paper that is almost all theory description and little use of the theory described to explain your own personality will receive a significant point deduction as will the reverse case of the paper being largely personal experience sharing with little linkage to clearly described key theory components.
II. A description of how your chosen theory explains your personality and life choices with supporting examples.
III. A description of the limitations of the theory in explaining your personality or anyone else’s.
NOTE: Although only your instructor will be reading your paper, you should still think about how much personal information you want to disclose. The purpose of this paper is not to get you to share private information, but rather to bring one .
· Assignment List
· Week 7 - Philosophical Essay
Week 7 - Philosophical Essay
DUE: Mar 22, 2020 11:55 PM
Grade Details
Grade
N/A
Gradebook Comments
None
Assignment Details
Open Date
Feb 3, 2020 12:05 AM
Graded?
Yes
Points Possible
100.0
Resubmissions Allowed?
No
Attachments checked for originality?
Yes
Top of Form
Assignment Instructions
Objective: Students will write a Philosophical Essay for week 7 based on the course concepts.
Course Objectives: 2, 3, & 4
Task:
This 4 - 5 full page (not to exceed 6 pages) Philosophical Essay you will be writing due Week 7 is designed to be a thoughtful, reflective work. The 4 - 5 full pages does not include a cover page or a works cited page. It will be your premier writing assignment focused on the integration and assessment relating to the course concepts. Your paper should be written based on the outline you submitted during week 4 combined with your additional thoughts and instructor feedback. You will use at least three scholarly/reliable resources with matching in-text citations and a Works Cited page. All essays are double spaced, 12 New Times Roman font, paper title, along with all paragraphs indented five spaces.
Details:
You will pick one of the following topics only to do your paper on:
· According to Socrates, must one heed popular opinion about moral matters? Does Socrates accept the fairness of the laws under which he was tried and convicted? Would Socrates have been wrong to escape?
· Consider the following philosophical puzzle: “If a tree falls in the forest and there's no one around to hear it, does it make a sound?” (1) How is this philosophical puzzle an epistemological problem? And (2) how would John Locke answer it?
· Evaluate the movie, The Matrix, in terms of the philosophical issues raised with (1) skepticism and (2) the mind-body problem. Explain how the movie raises questions similar to those found in Plato’s and Descartes’ philosophy. Do not give a plot summary of the movie – focus on the philosophical issues raised in the movie as they relate to Plato and Descartes.
· Socrates asks Euthyphro, “Are morally good acts willed by God because they are morally good, or are they morally good because they are willed by God?” (1) How does this question relate to the Divine Command Theory of morality? (2) What are the philosophical implications associated with each option here?
· Explain (1) the process by which Descartes uses skepticism to refute skepticism, and (2) what first principle does this lead him to? (3) Explain why this project was important for Descartes to accomplish.
Your paper will be written at a college level with an introduction, body paragraphs, a conclusion, along with in-text citations/Works Cited page in MLA formatting. Students will follow MLA format as the sole citation and formatting style used in written assignments submitted as part of coursework to the Humanities Department. Remember - any resource that is listed on the Works Cited page must .
· Assignment 3 Creating a Compelling VisionLeaders today must be .docxgerardkortney
· Assignment 3: Creating a Compelling Vision
Leaders today must be able to create a compelling vision for the organization. They also must be able to create an aligned strategy and then execute it. Visions have two parts, the envisioned future and the core values that support that vision of the future. The ability to create a compelling vision is the primary distinction between leadership and management. Leaders need to create a vision that will frame the decisions and behavior of the organization and keep it focused on the future while also delivering on the short-term goals.
To learn more about organizational vision statements, do an Internet search and review various vision statements.
In this assignment, you will consider yourself as a leader of an organization and write a vision statement and supporting values statement.
Select an organization of choice. This could be an organization that you are familiar with, or a fictitious organization. Then, respond to the following:
· Provide the name and description of the organization. In the description, be sure to include the purpose of the organization, the products or services it provides, and the description of its customer base.
· Describe the core values of the organization. Why are these specific values important to the organization?
· Describe the benefits and purpose for an organizational vision statement.
· Develop a vision statement for this organization. When developing a vision statement, be mindful of the module readings and lecture materials.
· In the vision statement, be sure to communicate the future goals and aspirations of the organization.
· Once you have developed the vision statement, describe how you would communicate the statement to the organizational stakeholders, that is, the owners, employees, vendors, and customers.
· How would you incorporate the communication of the vision into the new employee on-boarding and ongoing training?
Write your response in approximately 3–5 pages in Microsoft Word. Apply APA standards to citation of sources.
Use the following file naming convention: LastnameFirstInitial_M1_A3.doc. For example, if your name is John Smith, your document will be named SmithJ_M1_A3.doc.
By the due date assigned, deliver your assignment to the Submissions Area.
Assignment 3 Grading Criteria
Maximum Points
Chose and described the organization. The description included the purpose of the organization, the products or services the organization provides, and the description of its customer base.
16
Developed a vision statement for the organization. Ensured to accurately communicate the goals and aspirations of the organization in the vision statement.
24
Ensured that the incorporation and communication strategy for the vision statement is clear, detailed, well thought out and realistic.
28
Evaluated and explained which values are most important to the organization.
24
Wrote in a clear, concise, and organized manner; demonstrated ethical scholarship in accurate r.
· Assignment 4
· Week 4 – Assignment: Explain Theoretical Perspectives for Real-life Scenarios
Assignment
Updated
Top of Form
Bottom of Form
For each of the following three scenarios, use a chart format to assess how each traditional theoretical perspective would best explain the situation that a social worker would need to address. You may create your charts in Word or another software program of your choice. An example chart follows the three scenarios.
Scenario 1
You are a hospital social worker who is working with a family whose older adult relative is in end-stage renal failure. There are no advanced directives and the family is conflicted over what the next steps should be.
Scenario 2
You are a caseworker in a drug court. Your client has had three consecutive dirty urine analyses. She is unemployed and has violated her probation order.
Scenario 3
You are a school social worker. A teacher sends her 9-year-old student to you because he reports that he has not eaten in 2 days and there are no adults at home to take care of him.
Chart Example:
Your client, an 11-year-old girl, was removed from home because of parental substance abuse. She is acting out in her foster home, disobeying her foster parents and not following their rules.
Theory
Explanation for Scenario – please respond to the questions below in your explanation
Systems Theory
What systems need to be developed or put in place to support the child? Would Child Protective Services need to become involved? What other systems would support her and a successful outcome for being in foster care?
Generalist Theory
What is the best intervention or therapy to use based on this child’s situation? Given her circumstances, how could you best improve her functioning?
Behavioral Theory
What behaviors are being reinforced? What behaviors are being ignored or punished? What would you suggest to maintain this placement? Would this involve working with the foster parents?
Cognitive Theory
How would you help your client to examine her thinking, emotions, and behavior? What would this entail from a cognitive developmental framework?
Support your assignment with a minimum of three resources.
Length: 3 charts, not including title and reference pages
Your assignment should demonstrate thoughtful consideration of the ideas and concepts presented in the course by providing new thoughts and insights relating directly to this topic. Your response should reflect scholarly writing and current APA standards where appropriate. Be sure to adhere to Northcentral University's Academic Integrity Policy.
Assignement 3
State the function of each of the following musculoskeletal system structures: Describe the structures of the musculoskeletal system.
Skeletal muscle
Tendons
Ligaments
Bone
Cartilage
Describe each of the following types of joints:
Ball-and-socket
Hinge
Pivot
Gliding
Saddle
Condyloid
Newspaper Rubric
CATEGORY
4
3
2
1
Headline & Byline & images
16 points
Article has a .
· Assignment 2 Leader ProfileMany argue that the single largest v.docxgerardkortney
· Assignment 2: Leader Profile
Many argue that the single largest variable in organizational success is leadership. Effective leadership can transform an organization and create a positive environment for all stakeholders. In this assignment, you will have the chance to evaluate a leader and identify what makes him/her effective.
Consider all the leaders who have affected your life in some way. Think of people with whom you work—community leaders, a family member, or anyone who has had a direct impact on you.
· Choose one leader you consider to be effective. This can be a leader you are personally aware of, or someone you don’t know, but have observed to be an effective leader. Write a paper addressing the following:
· Explain how this leader has influenced you and why you think he or she is effective.
· Analyze what characteristics or qualities this person possesses that affected you most.
· Rate this leader by using a leadership scorecard. This can be a developed scorecard, or one you develop yourself. If you use a developed scorecard, please be sure to cite the sources of the scorecard. Once you have identified your scorecard, rate your leader. You decide what scores to include (for example, scale of 1–5, 5 being the highest) but be sure to assess the leader holistically across the critical leadership competencies you feel are most important (for example, visioning, empowering, strategy development and communication).
· Critique this individual’s skills against what you have learned about leadership so far in this course. Consider the following:
· How well does he/she meet the practices covered in your required readings?
· How well has he/she adapted to the challenges facing leaders today?
· If you could recommend changes to his/her leadership approach, philosophy, and style, what would you suggest? Why?
· Using the assigned readings, the Argosy University online library resources, and the Internet including general organizational sources like the Wall Street Journal, BusinessWeek, or Harvard Business Review, build a leadership profile of the leader you selected. Include information from personal experiences as well as general postings on the selected leader from Internet sources such as blogs. Be sure to include 2–3 additional resources not already included in the required readings in support of your leadership profile.
Write a 3–5-page paper in Word format. Apply APA standards to citation of sources. Use the following file naming convention: LastnameFirstInitial_M2_A2.doc.
By the due date assigned, deliver your assignment to the Submissions Area.
Assignment 2 Grading Criteria
Maximum Points
Explained how this leader has been influential and why you think the leader is effective showing analysis of the leader’s characteristics or qualities.
16
Analyzed the characteristics or qualities the leader possesses that have affected you most..
16
Rated your leader using a leadership scorecard and supported your rationale for your rating.
32
Criti.
· Assignment 1 Diversity Issues in Treating AddictionThe comple.docxgerardkortney
· Assignment 1: Diversity Issues in Treating Addiction
The complexities of working with diverse populations in treating disorders, such as addictions, require special considerations. Some approaches work better with some populations than with others. For example, Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) programs are spiritually based and focus on a higher power. Some populations have difficulty with these concepts and are averse to participating in such groups.
Select a population—for example, African Americans; Native Americans; or lesbians, gays, or bisexual individuals. Research your topic by using articles from the supplemental readings for this course or from other resources such as the Web, texts, experience, or other journal articles related to diversity issues and addictions.
Write a three- to five-page paper discussing the following:
· Some specific considerations for working with your chosen population in the area of addiction treatment
· Whether your research indicates that 12-step groups work with this population
· Any special problems associated with this population that make acknowledging the addiction and seeking treatment more difficult
· Any language or other barriers that this population faces when seeking treatment
Prepare your paper in Microsoft Word document format. Name your file M4_A1_LastName_Research.doc, and submit it to the Submissions Area by the due date assigned Follow APA guidelines for writing and citing text.
Assignment 1 Grading Criteria
Maximum Points
Discussed some specific considerations for working with your chosen population in the area of addiction.
8
Discussed whether your research indicates that 12-step groups work with your chosen population.
8
Discussed any special problems associated with this population that make acknowledging the addiction and seeking treatment more difficult .
8
Discussed any language or other barriers that this population faces when seeking treatment.
8
Wrote in a clear, concise, and organized manner; demonstrated ethical scholarship in accurate representation and attribution of sources, displayed accurate spelling, grammar, and punctuation.
4
Total:
36
· M4 Assignment 2 Discussion
Discussion Topic
Top of Form
Due February 9 at 11:59 PM
Bottom of Form
Assignment 2: Discussion Questions
Your facilitator will guide you in the selection of two of the three discussion questions. Submit your responses to these questions to the appropriate Discussion Area by the due date assigned. Through the end of the module, comment on the responses of others.
All written assignments and responses should follow APA rules for attributing sources.
You will be attempting two discussion questions in this module; each worth 28 points. The total number of points that can be earned for this assignment is 56.
Minority Groups
Many minority groups experience stress secondary to their social surroundings. For example, a family living in poverty may face frequent violence. Limited income makes meeting the day-to-day need.
How to Add Chatter in the odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
In Odoo, the chatter is like a chat tool that helps you work together on records. You can leave notes and track things, making it easier to talk with your team and partners. Inside chatter, all communication history, activity, and changes will be displayed.
· Describe strategies to build rapport with inmates and offenders .docxgerardkortney
· Describe strategies to build rapport with inmates and offenders in a correctional treatment or supervision program.
· Describe the effect of group dynamics on facilitating programs.
· Describe techniques for establishing a therapeutic environment.
Generalist Case Management
Woodside and McClam
https://phoenix.vitalsource.com/books/9781483342047/pageid/44
https://phoenix.vitalsource.com/#/books/9781323128800
https://phoenix.vitalsource.com/#/books/9781483342047
https://phoenix.vitalsource.com/#/books/9781133795247
https://phoenix.vitalsource.com/#/books/1259760413
Use book and two outside sources.
At least 100 words per question
THANKS
1 The Role of the Correctional Counselor CHAPTER OBJECTIVES After reading this chapter, you will be able to: 1. Identify the functions and parameters of the counseling process. 2. Discuss the competing interests between security and counseling in the correctional counseling process. 3. Know common terms and concerns associated with custodial corrections. 4. Understand the role of the counselor as facilitator. 5. Identify the various personal characteristics associated with effective counselors. 6. Be aware of the impact that burnout can have on a counselor’s professional performance. 7. Identify the various means of training and supervision associated with counseling. PART ONE: A BRIEF INTRODUCTION TO COUNSELING AND CORRECTIONS There are many myths concerning the concept of counseling. Although the image of the counseling field has changed dramatically over the past two or three decades, much of society still views counseling and therapy as a mystic process reserved for those who lack the ability to handle life issues effectively. While the concept of counseling is often misunderstood, the problem is exacerbated when attempting to introduce the idea of correctional counseling. Therefore, the primary goal of this chapter is to provide a working definition of correctional counseling that includes descriptions of how and when it is carried out. In order to understand the concept of correctional counseling, however, the two words that derive the concept must first be defined: “corrections” and “counseling.” In addition, a concerted effort is made to identify the myriad of legal and ethical issues that pertain to counselors working with offenders. It is very difficult to identify a single starting point for the counseling profession. In essence, there were various movements occurring simultaneously that later evolved into what we now describe as counseling. One of the earliest connections to the origins of counseling took place in Europe during the Middle Ages (Brown & Srebalus, 2003). The primary objective was assisting individuals with career choices. This type of counseling service is usually described by the concept of “guidance.” In the late 1800s Wilhelm Wundt and G. Stanley Hall created two of the first known psychological laboratories aimed at studying and treating individuals with psychological and e.
· Debates continue regarding what constitutes an appropriate rol.docxgerardkortney
· Debates continue regarding what constitutes an appropriate role for the judiciary. Some argue that federal judges have become too powerful and that judges “legislate from the bench.”
1. What does it mean for a judge to be an activist?
2. What does it mean for a judge to be a restrainist?
· Although conservatives had long complained about the activism of liberal justices and judges, in recent years conservative judges and justices have been likely to overturn precedents and question the power of elected institutions of government.
3. When is judicial activism appropriate? Explain.
· To defenders of the right to privacy, it is implicitly embodied in the Constitution in the First, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendments. To opponents, it is judge-made law because there is no explicit reference to it under the Constitution. The right to privacy dates back to at least 1890, when Boston attorneys Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis equated it with the right to be left alone from journalists who engaged in yellow journalism.
4. In short, do you believe a right to privacy exists in the federal Constitution. Why or why not?
.
· Critical thinking paper · · · 1. A case study..docxgerardkortney
· Critical thinking paper
·
·
· 1.
A case study.
Deborah Shore, aged 45, works for a small corporation in the Research and Development department.
When she first became a member of the department 15 years ago, Deborah was an unusually creative and productive researcher; her efforts quickly resulted in raises and promotions within the department and earned her the respect of her colleagues. Now, Deborah finds herself less interested in doing research; she is no longer making creative contributions to her department, although she is making contributions to its administration.
She is still respected by the coworkers who have known her since she joined the firm, but not by her younger coworkers.
Analyze the case study from the psychoanalytic, learning, and contextual perspectives: how would a theorist from each perspective explain Deborah's development? Which perspective do you believe provides the most adequate explanation, and why?
2. Interview your mother (and grandmothers, if possible), asking about experiences with childbirth. Include your own experiences if you have had children. Write a paper summarizing these childbirth experiences and comparing them with the contemporary experiences described in the text.
3. Identify a "type" of parent (e.g., single parent, teenage parent, low-income parent, dual-career couple) who is most likely to be distressed because an infant has a "difficult" temperament. Explain why you believe that this type of parent would have particular problems with a difficult infant. Write an informational brochure for the selected type of parent. The brochure should include an explanation of temperament in general and of the difficult temperament in particular, and give suggestions for parents of difficult infants.
4. Plan an educational unit covering nutrition, health, and safety for use with preschoolers and kindergartners. Take into account young children's cognitive and linguistic characteristics. The project should include (1) an outline of the content of the unit; and (2) a description of how the content would be presented, given the intellectual abilities of preschoolers. For example, how long would each lesson be? What kinds of pictures or other audiovisual materials would be used? How would this content be integrated with the children's other activities in preschool or kindergarten?
5. Visit two day care centers and evaluate each center using the information from the text as a guide. Request a fee schedule from each center. Write a paper summarizing your evaluation of each center.
Note:
Unless you are an actual potential client of the center, contact the director beforehand to explain the actual purpose of the visit, obtain permission to visit, and schedule your visit so as to minimize disruption to the center's schedule.
6. Watch some children's television programs and advertising, examine some children's toys and their packaging, read some children's books, and listen to some children's recor.
· Coronel & Morris Chapter 7, Problems 1, 2 and 3
· Coronel & Morris Chapter 8, Problems 1 and 2
A People’s History of Modern Europe
“A fascinating journey across centuries towards the world as we experience it today. ... It is
the voice of the ordinary people, and women in particular, their ideas and actions, protests
and sufferings that have gone into the making of this alternative narrative.”
——Sobhanlal Datta Gupta, former Surendra Nath Banerjee
Professor of Political Science, University of Calcutta
“A history of Europe that doesn’t remove the Europeans. Here there are not only kings,
presidents and institutions but the pulse of the people and social organizations that shaped
Europe. A must-read.”
——Raquel Varela, Universidade Nova de Lisboa
“Lively and engaging. William A Pelz takes the reader through a thousand years of
European history from below. This is the not the story of lords, kings and rulers. It is the
story of the ordinary people of Europe and their struggles against those lords, kings and
rulers, from the Middle Ages to the present day. A fine introduction.”
——Francis King, editor, Socialist History
“This book is an exception to the rule that the winner takes all. It highlights the importance
of the commoners which often is only shown in the dark corners of mainstream history
books. From Hussites, Levellers and sans-culottes to the women who defended the Paris
Commune and the workers who occupied the shipyards during the Carnation revolution in
Portugal. The author gives them their deserved place in history just like Howard Zinn did
for the American people.”
——Sjaak van der Velden, International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam
“The author puts his focus on the lives and historical impact of those excluded from
power and wealth: peasants and serfs of the Middle Ages, workers during the Industrial
Revolution, women in a patriarchic order that transcended different eras. This focus not
only makes history relevant for contemporary debates on social justice, it also urges the
reader to develop a critical approach.”
——Ralf Hoffrogge, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
“An exciting story of generations of people struggling for better living conditions, and for
social and political rights. ... This story has to be considered now, when the very notions of
enlightenment, progress and social change are being questioned.”
——Boris Kagarlitsky, director of Institute for globalization studies and social
movements, Moscow, and author of From Empires to Imperialism
“A splendid antidote to the many European histories dominated by kings, businessmen
and generals. It should be on the shelves of both academics and activists ... A lively and
informative intellectual tour-de-force.”
——Marcel van der Linden, International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam
A People’s History
of Modern Europe
William A. Pelz
First published 2016 by Pluto Press
345 Archway Road, London N6 5AA
www.pluto.
· Complete the following problems from your textbook· Pages 378.docxgerardkortney
· Complete the following problems from your textbook:
· Pages 378–381: 10-1, 10-2, 10-16, and 10-20.
· Pages 443–444: 12-7 and 12-9.
· Page 469: 13-5.
· 10-1 How would each of the following scenarios affect a firm’s cost of debt, rd(1 − T); its cost of equity, rs; and its WACC? Indicate with a plus (+), a minus (−), or a zero (0) whether the factor would raise, lower, or have an indeterminate effect on the item in question. Assume for each answer that other things are held constant, even though in some instances this would probably not be true. Be prepared to justify your answer but recognize that several of the parts have no single correct answer. These questions are designed to stimulate thought and discussion.
Effect on
rd(1 − T)
rs
WACC
a. The corporate tax rate is lowered.
__
__
__
b. The Federal Reserve tightens credit.
__
__
__
c. The firm uses more debt; that is, it increases its debt ratio.
__
__
__
d. The dividend payout ratio is increased.
__
__
__
e. The firm doubles the amount of capital it raises during the year.
__
__
__
f. The firm expands into a risky new area.
__
__
__
g. The firm merges with another firm whose earnings are countercyclical both to those of the first firm and to the stock market.
__
__
__
h. The stock market falls drastically, and the firm’s stock price falls along with the rest.
__
__
__
i. Investors become more risk-averse.
__
__
__
j. The firm is an electric utility with a large investment in nuclear plants. Several states are considering a ban on nuclear power generation.
__
__
__
· 10-2 Assume that the risk-free rate increases, but the market risk premium
· 10-16COST OF COMMON EQUITY The Bouchard Company’s EPS was $6.50 in 2018, up from $4.42 in 2013. The company pays out 40% of its earnings as dividends, and its common stock sells for $36.00.
· a. Calculate the past growth rate in earnings. (Hint: This is a 5-year growth period.)
· b. The last dividend was D0 = 0.4($6.50) = $2.60. Calculate the next expected dividend, D1, assuming that the past growth rate continues.
· c. What is Bouchard’s cost of retained earnings, rs?
· 10-20WACC The following table gives Foust Company’s earnings per share for the last 10 years. The common stock, 7.8 million shares outstanding, is now (1/1/19) selling for $65.00 per share. The expected dividend at the end of the current year (12/31/19) is 55% of the 2018 EPS. Because investors expect past trends to continue, g may be based on the historical earnings growth rate. (Note that 9 years of growth are reflected in the 10 years of data.)
The current interest rate on new debt is 9%; Foust’s marginal tax rate is 40%, and its target capital structure is 40% debt and 60% equity.
· a. Calculate Foust’s after-tax cost of debt and common equity. Calculate the cost of equity as rs = D1/P0 + g.
· b. Find Foust’s WACC
· 12-7SCENARIO ANALYSIS Huang Industries is considering a proposed project whose estimated NPV is $12 million. This estimate assumes that economic conditions wi.
· Consider how different countries approach aging. As you consid.docxgerardkortney
· Consider how different countries approach aging. As you consider different countries, think about the following:
o Do older adults live with their children, or are they more likely to live in a nursing home?
o Are older adults seen as wise individuals to be respected and revered, or are they a burden to their family and to society?
· Next, select two different countries and compare and contrast their approaches to aging.
· Post and identify each of the countries you selected. Then, explain two similarities and two differences in how the countries approach aging. Be specific and provide examples. Use proper APA format and citation. LSW10
.
· Clarifying some things on the Revolution I am going to say som.docxgerardkortney
· Clarifying some things on the Revolution
I am going to say something, and I want you to hear me.
I am a scholar of the Revolution. That's the topic of my dissertation. Please believe me when I say that I know a lot about it.
I also happen to know--and this is well-supported by historians--that the Revolution was a civil war in which, for the first several years, Revolutionaries and Loyalists were evenly matched.
I will repeat that. Evenly matched. Loyalists were not merely too cowardly to fight, and they were not old fogies who hated the idea of freedom. Most had been in the Colonies for generations. Many of them took up arms for their King and their country. And when they lost, you confiscated their homes and they fled with the clothes on their back to Canada, England, and other places of the Empire. Both sides--both sides--committed unspeakable atrocities against civilians whom they disagreed with.
Now, a lot of you love to repeat some very fervent patriotic diatribe about how great the Revolution was. That's not history. That's propaganda. Know the difference.
History has shades of gray. History is complex and ambiguous. Washington, for instance, wore dentures made from the teeth of his slaves. Benjamin Franklin's son was the last royal governor of New Jersey. Did you know that the net tax rate for Americans--they always conveniently leave this out of the textbooks--was between 1.9 and 2.1%, depending on colony.? And that was if they had paid the extra taxes on tea and paper.
And, wait for it, people who support California independence use the same logic and arguments as they did in 1775. Did you know that the Los Angeles and Washington are only a few hundred miles closer than Boston and London? That many of the same issues, point by point, are repeating here in California? So put yourself in those shoes. How many of you would have sided with the Empire (whether American or British) based on the fact that you don't know how this will shake out? Would you call someone who supports Calexit a Patriot? Revolutionary? Nutcase? Who gets to own that word, anyway?
You can choose that you would have supported the revolutionaries--but think. Think about the other side. They matter, and their experiences got to be cleansed out of history to make you feel better about the way the revolutionaries behaved during the War. Acknowledge that they are there, and that their point of view has merit, even if you not agree with it.
· Clarifying Unit III's assignment
I have noticed a few consistent problems with the letter in the Unit III issue. Here are some pointers to make it better.
1. Read the clarifying note I wrote above. Note that the taxes aren't actually as high as you have been led to believe, but the point is that they should not be assigned at all without your consent.
2. Acknowledge that this is a debate, that a certain percentage are radicalized for independence, but there are is also a law-and-order group who find this horrific, and want .
· Chapter 9 – Review the section on Establishing a Security Cultur.docxgerardkortney
· Chapter 9 – Review the section on Establishing a Security Culture. Review the methods to reduce the chances of a cyber threat noted in the textbook. Research other peer-reviewed source and note additional methods to reduce cyber-attacks within an organization.
· Chapter 10 – Review the section on the IT leader in the digital transformation era. Note how IT professionals and especially leaders must transform their thinking to adapt to the constantly changing organizational climate. What are some methods or resources leaders can utilize to enhance their change attitude?
.
· Chapter 10 The Early Elementary Grades 1-3The primary grades.docxgerardkortney
· Chapter 10: The Early Elementary Grades: 1-3
The primary grades are grades 1-3.
Although educational reform has had an effect on all children, it is most apparent in the early elementary years. Reform and change comes from a number of sources and the chapter begins by reminding you of this. Let’s examine a few of these sources...
Diversity. There has been a rise in the number of racial and ethnic minority students enrolled in the nation's public schools; this number will (most likely) continue to rise. Teaching children from different cultures and backgrounds is an important piece to account for when planning curriculum.
Standards. Standards is a reason for reform. We've already looked at standards; these are something you must keep in mind when planning lessons.
Data-Driven Instruction may sound new, but it is not a new concept to you. We’ve done a great deal of discussing the outcomes of test-taking and assessments. You've probably all heard "teaching to the test."
Technology. Today’s students have had much experience with technology, therefore, it’s important to provide them with opportunities to learn with technology. It may take a while for you to be creative and think of ways to use it in your teaching (if you haven’ t been).
Health and Wellness. Obesity is a major concern in this country. Therefore, it is important to make sure that children have the opportunity to be active. Unfortunately, due to the pressure of academics, many schools have been taking physical education/activity time out of the curriculum.
Violence: One issue that I notice this new edition of the text has excluded is violence. However, I think that this topic is important; we need to keep children safe when they are at school. As a result of 9/11 (and, not to mention that many violent events have happened on school campuses in recent years), many school districts now have an emergency system in place that they can easily use if there is any type of incident in which the children’s safety is at risk.
WHAT ARE CHILDREN IN GRADES ONE TO THREE LIKE?
Your text explains that the best way to think of a child’s development during this time is: slow and steady. During this stage, there is not much difference between boys and girls when it comes to physical capabilities. Although it is always important to not stereotype based on one’s gender, it is especially important during these years. These children are also entering into their "tween" years, thus; being sensitive to the children's and parents' needs in regards to such changes is important.
It is important to remember that children in the primary grades are in the Concrete Operations Stage. This stage is children ages 7 to 12. The term operation refers to an action that can be carried out in thought as well as executed materially and that is mentally and physically reversible.
These children are at an age in which they can compare their abilities to their peers. And, therefore, children may develop learned helplessnes.
· Chap 2 and 3· what barriers are there in terms of the inter.docxgerardkortney
· Chap 2 and 3
· what barriers are there in terms of the interpersonal communication model?
Typically, communication breakdowns result from lack of understanding without clarification; often, there wasn't even an attempt at clarification. If barriers to interpersonal communication are not acknowledged and addressed, workplace productivity can suffer.
Language Differences
Interpersonal communication can go awry when the sender and receiver of the message speak a different language -- literally and figuratively. Not everyone in the workplace will understand slang, jargon, acronyms and industry terminology. Instead of seeking clarification, employees might guess at the meaning of the message and then act on mistaken assumptions. Also, misunderstandings may occur among workers who do not speak the same primary language. As a result, feelings may be hurt, based on misinterpretation of words or of body language.
Cultural Differences
Interpersonal communication may be adversely affected by lack of cultural understanding, mis-perception, bias and stereotypical beliefs. Workers may have limited skill or experience communicating with people from a different background. Many companies offer diversity training to help employees understand how to communicate more effectively across cultures and relate to those who may have different background experiences. Similarly, gender barriers can obstruct interpersonal communication if men and women are treated differently, and held to different standards, causing interpersonal conflicts in the workplace.
Personality Differences
Like any skill, some people are better at interpersonal communication than others. Personality traits also influence how well an individual interacts with subordinates, peers and supervisors. Extraversion can be an advantage when it comes to speaking out, sharing opinions and disseminating information. However, introverts may have the edge when it comes to listening, reflecting and remembering. Barriers to interpersonal communication may occur when employees lack self-awareness, sensitivity and flexibility. Such behavior undermines teamwork, which requires mutual respect, compromise and negotiation. Bullying, backstabbing and cut throat competition create a toxic workplace climate that will strain interpersonal relationships.
Generational Differences
Interpersonal communication can be complicated by generational differences in speech, dress, values, priorities and preferences. For instance, there may be a generational divide as to how team members prefer to communicate with one another. If younger workers sit in cubicles, using social networking as their primary channel of communication, it can alienate them from older workers who may prefer face-to-face communication. Broad generalizations and stereotypes can also cause interpersonal rifts when a worker from one generation feels superior to those who are younger or older. Biases against workers based on age can constitute a form of disc.
· Case Study 2 Improving E-Mail Marketing ResponseDue Week 8 an.docxgerardkortney
The document provides a case study and instructions for an assignment on improving the response rate of email marketing. Students are asked to: 1) conduct a design of experiment using the provided data to test cause-and-effect relationships, 2) determine an appropriate graphical display for the results and provide rationale, 3) recommend actions to increase email response rates with rationale, and 4) propose an overall strategy to develop a process model to increase response rates and obtain effective business processes with rationale. The assignment requires a 2-3 page paper following APA formatting guidelines.
· Briefly describe the technologies that are leading businesses in.docxgerardkortney
· Briefly describe the technologies that are leading businesses into the third wave of electronic commerce.
· In about 100 words, describe the function of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers. Include a discussion of the differences between gTLDs and sTLDs in your answer.
· In one or two paragraphs, describe how the Internet changed from a government research project into a technology for business users.
· In about 100 words, explain the difference between an extranet and an intranet. In your answer, describe when you might use a VPN in either.
· Define “channel conflict” and describe in one or two paragraphs how a company might deal with this issue.
· In two paragraphs, explain why a customer-centric Web site design is so important, yet is so difficult to accomplish.
· In about two paragraphs, distinguish between outsourcing and offshoring as they relate to business processes.
· In about 200 words, explain how the achieved trust level of a company’s communications using blogs and social media compare with similar communication efforts conducted using mass media and personal contact.
· Write a paragraph in which you distinguish between a virtual community and a social networking Web site
· Write two or three paragraphs in which you describe the role that culture plays in the development of a country’s laws and ethical standards.
QUESTION 1
Lakota peoples of the Great Plains are notably:
nomadic and followed the buffalo herds
Sedentary farmers, raising corn, northern beans, and potatoes
peaceful people who tried to live in harmony with neighboring tribes and the environment
religious and employed a variety of psychoactive plants during religious ceremonies
QUESTION 2
Tribal peoples of the Great Plains experienced greater ease at hunting and warfare after the introduction of:
Hotchkiss guns
smokeless gunpowder
horses
Intertribal powwows
all of the above
QUESTION 3
The Apaches and Navajos (Dine’) of the southwestern region of North America speak a language similar to their relatives of northern California and western Canada called:
Yuman
Uto-Aztecan
Tanoan
Athabaskan
Algonkian
QUESTION 4
The Navajo lived in six or eight-sided domed earth dwellings called:
wickiups
kivas
hogans
roadhouses
sweat lodge
QUESTION 5
Pueblo Indians, such as the Zuni and Hopi tribes, are descendants of the ancient people known as the:
Anasazi
Ashkenazi
Athabaskan
Aztecanotewa
Atlantean
2 points
QUESTION 6
1. Kachinas, or spirits of nature, were believed to:
Assist in the growth of crops and send rain
Help defend the Navajo against all foreign invaders
Provide medical assistance to the Hopi when doctors were not available
Combat evil spirits such as Skin-walkers or Diablitos
All of the above
2 points
QUESTION 7
1. The preferred dwellings among the Lakota Sioux were:
wickiups
adobe pueblos
pit houses
teepees
buffalo huts
2 points
QUESTION 8
1. Native Americansbenef.
· Assignment List· My Personality Theory Paper (Week Four)My.docxgerardkortney
· Assignment List
· My Personality Theory Paper (Week Four)
My Personality Theory Paper (Week Four)
DUE: May 31, 2020 11:55 PM
Grade Details
Grade
N/A
Gradebook Comments
None
Assignment Details
Open Date
May 4, 2020 12:05 AM
Graded?
Yes
Points Possible
100.0
Resubmissions Allowed?
No
Attachments checked for originality?
Yes
Top of Form
Assignment Instructions
My Personality Theory Paper
Instructions:
For this assignment, you will write a paper no less than 7 pages in length, not including required cover and Reference pages, describing a single personality theory from the course readings that best explains your own personality and life choices. You are free to select from among the several theories covered in the course to date but only one theory may be used.
Your task is to demonstrate your knowledge of the theory you choose via descriptions of its key concepts and use of them to explain how you developed your own personality. It is recommended that you revisit the material covered to date to refresh your knowledge of theory details. This is a "midterm" assignment and you should show in your work that you have studied and comprehended the first four weeks of course material. Your submission should be double-spaced with 1 inch margins on all sides of each page and should be free of spelling and grammar errors. It must include source crediting of any materials used in APA format, including source citations in the body of your paper and in a Reference list attached to the end. Easy to follow guides to APA formatting can be found on the tutorial section of the APUS Online Library.
Your paper will include three parts:
I. A brief description of the premise and key components of the theory you selected. You should be thorough and concise in this section and not spend the bulk of the paper detailing the theory, but rather just give enough of a summary of the key points so that an intelligent but uniformed reader would be able to understand its basics. If you pick a more complicated theory, you should expect explaining its premise and key components to take longer than explaining the same for one of the simpler theories but, in either case, focus on the basics and keep in mind that a paper that is almost all theory description and little use of the theory described to explain your own personality will receive a significant point deduction as will the reverse case of the paper being largely personal experience sharing with little linkage to clearly described key theory components.
II. A description of how your chosen theory explains your personality and life choices with supporting examples.
III. A description of the limitations of the theory in explaining your personality or anyone else’s.
NOTE: Although only your instructor will be reading your paper, you should still think about how much personal information you want to disclose. The purpose of this paper is not to get you to share private information, but rather to bring one .
· Assignment List
· Week 7 - Philosophical Essay
Week 7 - Philosophical Essay
DUE: Mar 22, 2020 11:55 PM
Grade Details
Grade
N/A
Gradebook Comments
None
Assignment Details
Open Date
Feb 3, 2020 12:05 AM
Graded?
Yes
Points Possible
100.0
Resubmissions Allowed?
No
Attachments checked for originality?
Yes
Top of Form
Assignment Instructions
Objective: Students will write a Philosophical Essay for week 7 based on the course concepts.
Course Objectives: 2, 3, & 4
Task:
This 4 - 5 full page (not to exceed 6 pages) Philosophical Essay you will be writing due Week 7 is designed to be a thoughtful, reflective work. The 4 - 5 full pages does not include a cover page or a works cited page. It will be your premier writing assignment focused on the integration and assessment relating to the course concepts. Your paper should be written based on the outline you submitted during week 4 combined with your additional thoughts and instructor feedback. You will use at least three scholarly/reliable resources with matching in-text citations and a Works Cited page. All essays are double spaced, 12 New Times Roman font, paper title, along with all paragraphs indented five spaces.
Details:
You will pick one of the following topics only to do your paper on:
· According to Socrates, must one heed popular opinion about moral matters? Does Socrates accept the fairness of the laws under which he was tried and convicted? Would Socrates have been wrong to escape?
· Consider the following philosophical puzzle: “If a tree falls in the forest and there's no one around to hear it, does it make a sound?” (1) How is this philosophical puzzle an epistemological problem? And (2) how would John Locke answer it?
· Evaluate the movie, The Matrix, in terms of the philosophical issues raised with (1) skepticism and (2) the mind-body problem. Explain how the movie raises questions similar to those found in Plato’s and Descartes’ philosophy. Do not give a plot summary of the movie – focus on the philosophical issues raised in the movie as they relate to Plato and Descartes.
· Socrates asks Euthyphro, “Are morally good acts willed by God because they are morally good, or are they morally good because they are willed by God?” (1) How does this question relate to the Divine Command Theory of morality? (2) What are the philosophical implications associated with each option here?
· Explain (1) the process by which Descartes uses skepticism to refute skepticism, and (2) what first principle does this lead him to? (3) Explain why this project was important for Descartes to accomplish.
Your paper will be written at a college level with an introduction, body paragraphs, a conclusion, along with in-text citations/Works Cited page in MLA formatting. Students will follow MLA format as the sole citation and formatting style used in written assignments submitted as part of coursework to the Humanities Department. Remember - any resource that is listed on the Works Cited page must .
· Assignment 3 Creating a Compelling VisionLeaders today must be .docxgerardkortney
· Assignment 3: Creating a Compelling Vision
Leaders today must be able to create a compelling vision for the organization. They also must be able to create an aligned strategy and then execute it. Visions have two parts, the envisioned future and the core values that support that vision of the future. The ability to create a compelling vision is the primary distinction between leadership and management. Leaders need to create a vision that will frame the decisions and behavior of the organization and keep it focused on the future while also delivering on the short-term goals.
To learn more about organizational vision statements, do an Internet search and review various vision statements.
In this assignment, you will consider yourself as a leader of an organization and write a vision statement and supporting values statement.
Select an organization of choice. This could be an organization that you are familiar with, or a fictitious organization. Then, respond to the following:
· Provide the name and description of the organization. In the description, be sure to include the purpose of the organization, the products or services it provides, and the description of its customer base.
· Describe the core values of the organization. Why are these specific values important to the organization?
· Describe the benefits and purpose for an organizational vision statement.
· Develop a vision statement for this organization. When developing a vision statement, be mindful of the module readings and lecture materials.
· In the vision statement, be sure to communicate the future goals and aspirations of the organization.
· Once you have developed the vision statement, describe how you would communicate the statement to the organizational stakeholders, that is, the owners, employees, vendors, and customers.
· How would you incorporate the communication of the vision into the new employee on-boarding and ongoing training?
Write your response in approximately 3–5 pages in Microsoft Word. Apply APA standards to citation of sources.
Use the following file naming convention: LastnameFirstInitial_M1_A3.doc. For example, if your name is John Smith, your document will be named SmithJ_M1_A3.doc.
By the due date assigned, deliver your assignment to the Submissions Area.
Assignment 3 Grading Criteria
Maximum Points
Chose and described the organization. The description included the purpose of the organization, the products or services the organization provides, and the description of its customer base.
16
Developed a vision statement for the organization. Ensured to accurately communicate the goals and aspirations of the organization in the vision statement.
24
Ensured that the incorporation and communication strategy for the vision statement is clear, detailed, well thought out and realistic.
28
Evaluated and explained which values are most important to the organization.
24
Wrote in a clear, concise, and organized manner; demonstrated ethical scholarship in accurate r.
· Assignment 4
· Week 4 – Assignment: Explain Theoretical Perspectives for Real-life Scenarios
Assignment
Updated
Top of Form
Bottom of Form
For each of the following three scenarios, use a chart format to assess how each traditional theoretical perspective would best explain the situation that a social worker would need to address. You may create your charts in Word or another software program of your choice. An example chart follows the three scenarios.
Scenario 1
You are a hospital social worker who is working with a family whose older adult relative is in end-stage renal failure. There are no advanced directives and the family is conflicted over what the next steps should be.
Scenario 2
You are a caseworker in a drug court. Your client has had three consecutive dirty urine analyses. She is unemployed and has violated her probation order.
Scenario 3
You are a school social worker. A teacher sends her 9-year-old student to you because he reports that he has not eaten in 2 days and there are no adults at home to take care of him.
Chart Example:
Your client, an 11-year-old girl, was removed from home because of parental substance abuse. She is acting out in her foster home, disobeying her foster parents and not following their rules.
Theory
Explanation for Scenario – please respond to the questions below in your explanation
Systems Theory
What systems need to be developed or put in place to support the child? Would Child Protective Services need to become involved? What other systems would support her and a successful outcome for being in foster care?
Generalist Theory
What is the best intervention or therapy to use based on this child’s situation? Given her circumstances, how could you best improve her functioning?
Behavioral Theory
What behaviors are being reinforced? What behaviors are being ignored or punished? What would you suggest to maintain this placement? Would this involve working with the foster parents?
Cognitive Theory
How would you help your client to examine her thinking, emotions, and behavior? What would this entail from a cognitive developmental framework?
Support your assignment with a minimum of three resources.
Length: 3 charts, not including title and reference pages
Your assignment should demonstrate thoughtful consideration of the ideas and concepts presented in the course by providing new thoughts and insights relating directly to this topic. Your response should reflect scholarly writing and current APA standards where appropriate. Be sure to adhere to Northcentral University's Academic Integrity Policy.
Assignement 3
State the function of each of the following musculoskeletal system structures: Describe the structures of the musculoskeletal system.
Skeletal muscle
Tendons
Ligaments
Bone
Cartilage
Describe each of the following types of joints:
Ball-and-socket
Hinge
Pivot
Gliding
Saddle
Condyloid
Newspaper Rubric
CATEGORY
4
3
2
1
Headline & Byline & images
16 points
Article has a .
· Assignment 2 Leader ProfileMany argue that the single largest v.docxgerardkortney
· Assignment 2: Leader Profile
Many argue that the single largest variable in organizational success is leadership. Effective leadership can transform an organization and create a positive environment for all stakeholders. In this assignment, you will have the chance to evaluate a leader and identify what makes him/her effective.
Consider all the leaders who have affected your life in some way. Think of people with whom you work—community leaders, a family member, or anyone who has had a direct impact on you.
· Choose one leader you consider to be effective. This can be a leader you are personally aware of, or someone you don’t know, but have observed to be an effective leader. Write a paper addressing the following:
· Explain how this leader has influenced you and why you think he or she is effective.
· Analyze what characteristics or qualities this person possesses that affected you most.
· Rate this leader by using a leadership scorecard. This can be a developed scorecard, or one you develop yourself. If you use a developed scorecard, please be sure to cite the sources of the scorecard. Once you have identified your scorecard, rate your leader. You decide what scores to include (for example, scale of 1–5, 5 being the highest) but be sure to assess the leader holistically across the critical leadership competencies you feel are most important (for example, visioning, empowering, strategy development and communication).
· Critique this individual’s skills against what you have learned about leadership so far in this course. Consider the following:
· How well does he/she meet the practices covered in your required readings?
· How well has he/she adapted to the challenges facing leaders today?
· If you could recommend changes to his/her leadership approach, philosophy, and style, what would you suggest? Why?
· Using the assigned readings, the Argosy University online library resources, and the Internet including general organizational sources like the Wall Street Journal, BusinessWeek, or Harvard Business Review, build a leadership profile of the leader you selected. Include information from personal experiences as well as general postings on the selected leader from Internet sources such as blogs. Be sure to include 2–3 additional resources not already included in the required readings in support of your leadership profile.
Write a 3–5-page paper in Word format. Apply APA standards to citation of sources. Use the following file naming convention: LastnameFirstInitial_M2_A2.doc.
By the due date assigned, deliver your assignment to the Submissions Area.
Assignment 2 Grading Criteria
Maximum Points
Explained how this leader has been influential and why you think the leader is effective showing analysis of the leader’s characteristics or qualities.
16
Analyzed the characteristics or qualities the leader possesses that have affected you most..
16
Rated your leader using a leadership scorecard and supported your rationale for your rating.
32
Criti.
· Assignment 1 Diversity Issues in Treating AddictionThe comple.docxgerardkortney
· Assignment 1: Diversity Issues in Treating Addiction
The complexities of working with diverse populations in treating disorders, such as addictions, require special considerations. Some approaches work better with some populations than with others. For example, Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) programs are spiritually based and focus on a higher power. Some populations have difficulty with these concepts and are averse to participating in such groups.
Select a population—for example, African Americans; Native Americans; or lesbians, gays, or bisexual individuals. Research your topic by using articles from the supplemental readings for this course or from other resources such as the Web, texts, experience, or other journal articles related to diversity issues and addictions.
Write a three- to five-page paper discussing the following:
· Some specific considerations for working with your chosen population in the area of addiction treatment
· Whether your research indicates that 12-step groups work with this population
· Any special problems associated with this population that make acknowledging the addiction and seeking treatment more difficult
· Any language or other barriers that this population faces when seeking treatment
Prepare your paper in Microsoft Word document format. Name your file M4_A1_LastName_Research.doc, and submit it to the Submissions Area by the due date assigned Follow APA guidelines for writing and citing text.
Assignment 1 Grading Criteria
Maximum Points
Discussed some specific considerations for working with your chosen population in the area of addiction.
8
Discussed whether your research indicates that 12-step groups work with your chosen population.
8
Discussed any special problems associated with this population that make acknowledging the addiction and seeking treatment more difficult .
8
Discussed any language or other barriers that this population faces when seeking treatment.
8
Wrote in a clear, concise, and organized manner; demonstrated ethical scholarship in accurate representation and attribution of sources, displayed accurate spelling, grammar, and punctuation.
4
Total:
36
· M4 Assignment 2 Discussion
Discussion Topic
Top of Form
Due February 9 at 11:59 PM
Bottom of Form
Assignment 2: Discussion Questions
Your facilitator will guide you in the selection of two of the three discussion questions. Submit your responses to these questions to the appropriate Discussion Area by the due date assigned. Through the end of the module, comment on the responses of others.
All written assignments and responses should follow APA rules for attributing sources.
You will be attempting two discussion questions in this module; each worth 28 points. The total number of points that can be earned for this assignment is 56.
Minority Groups
Many minority groups experience stress secondary to their social surroundings. For example, a family living in poverty may face frequent violence. Limited income makes meeting the day-to-day need.
How to Add Chatter in the odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
In Odoo, the chatter is like a chat tool that helps you work together on records. You can leave notes and track things, making it easier to talk with your team and partners. Inside chatter, all communication history, activity, and changes will be displayed.
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.
This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
LAND USE LAND COVER AND NDVI OF MIRZAPUR DISTRICT, UPRAHUL
This Dissertation explores the particular circumstances of Mirzapur, a region located in the
core of India. Mirzapur, with its varied terrains and abundant biodiversity, offers an optimal
environment for investigating the changes in vegetation cover dynamics. Our study utilizes
advanced technologies such as GIS (Geographic Information Systems) and Remote sensing to
analyze the transformations that have taken place over the course of a decade.
The complex relationship between human activities and the environment has been the focus
of extensive research and worry. As the global community grapples with swift urbanization,
population expansion, and economic progress, the effects on natural ecosystems are becoming
more evident. A crucial element of this impact is the alteration of vegetation cover, which plays a
significant role in maintaining the ecological equilibrium of our planet.Land serves as the foundation for all human activities and provides the necessary materials for
these activities. As the most crucial natural resource, its utilization by humans results in different
'Land uses,' which are determined by both human activities and the physical characteristics of the
land.
The utilization of land is impacted by human needs and environmental factors. In countries
like India, rapid population growth and the emphasis on extensive resource exploitation can lead
to significant land degradation, adversely affecting the region's land cover.
Therefore, human intervention has significantly influenced land use patterns over many
centuries, evolving its structure over time and space. In the present era, these changes have
accelerated due to factors such as agriculture and urbanization. Information regarding land use and
cover is essential for various planning and management tasks related to the Earth's surface,
providing crucial environmental data for scientific, resource management, policy purposes, and
diverse human activities.
Accurate understanding of land use and cover is imperative for the development planning
of any area. Consequently, a wide range of professionals, including earth system scientists, land
and water managers, and urban planners, are interested in obtaining data on land use and cover
changes, conversion trends, and other related patterns. The spatial dimensions of land use and
cover support policymakers and scientists in making well-informed decisions, as alterations in
these patterns indicate shifts in economic and social conditions. Monitoring such changes with the
help of Advanced technologies like Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems is
crucial for coordinated efforts across different administrative levels. Advanced technologies like
Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems
9
Changes in vegetation cover refer to variations in the distribution, composition, and overall
structure of plant communities across different temporal and spatial scales. These changes can
occur natural.
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.
Pollock and Snow "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape, Session One: Setting Expec...
Out, Out—Out, Out—” was first published in the 1916 col-l.docx
1. Out, Out—
“Out, Out—” was first published in the 1916 col-
lection Mountain Interval. Both the description of
a terrible accident and a comment on the human
need to resume one’s life after a tragedy, “Out,
Out—” is one of Frost’s most shocking and dis-
turbing performances. Like many of Frost’s poems,
“Out, Out—” is written in blank verse, with the
events described by an unnamed (yet characterized)
speaker.
The poem is based upon a real incident. In
1901, Michael Fitzgerald, one of Frost’s friends
and neighbors, lost his son Raymond during an ac-
cident with a buzzsaw; after accidentally hitting a
loose pulley, the saw descended and began cutting
his hand. He bled profusely and was rushed into
the house; a doctor was called, but the young man
went into shock and died of heart failure.
According to Jeffery Meyers (author of Robert
Frost: A Biography), Frost thought that the poem
was “too cruel to read in public.” For those read-
ers who associate Frost with folksy, homespun
philosophers observing the beauties of rural New
England, “Out, Out—” will be something of a sur-
prise—for the poem is, in a sense, cruel: the boy
dies a terrible death and all the speaker can say is,
“No more to build on there.” Even more shocking
is Frost’s depiction of the adults who watch the boy
take his final breaths. After his death, they “turned
to their affairs” since “they / Were not the one
2. dead.” Ultimately, Frost suggests, this “turning
away” from death is, sometimes, the only possible
reaction.
Robert Frost
1916
V o l u m e 1 0 2 1 1
2 1 2 P o e t r y f o r S t u d e n t s
Author Biography
Robert Frost was born in San Francisco in 1874;
his father, William, was a journalist and his mother,
Isabel, was a schoolteacher. After William’s death
(from tuberculosis) in 1885, Frost’s mother moved
herself, Robert, and his sister, Jeanie, to the east,
eventually settling in Salem, Massachusetts in
1886. Frost graduated as co-valedictorian of his
high school class in 1892. (He shared this auspi-
cious title with Elinor White, who he courted and
eventually married.) Frost enrolled in Dartmouth
College but did not complete his first semester.
(The school eventually awarded him two honorary
degrees.) After dropping out, he tried to persuade
Elinor to marry him, but she wanted to first finish
her studies at St. Lawrence University. Distraught,
Frost left New England and roamed about Vir-
ginia’s Dismal Swamp for a short time; Elinor man-
aged to graduate in three years and married Frost
in 1885. The couple had five children, although
their lives were marked by tragedy: Elliott, their
first son, died of cholera at the age of four; Mar-
3. jorie, their youngest daughter, died after giving
birth at the age of twenty-nine; Elinor died in 1938;
their son Carol committed suicide in 1940; and their
daughter Irma was committed to a psychiatric hos-
pital in 1947.
The history of Frost’s career as a poet is much
more a story of success and triumph. His first pub-
lished poem was “My Butterfly: An Elegy,” col-
lected in a little book of five poems called Twilight
(1894) which Frost had privately printed. (He had
only two copies made—one for Elinor and one for
himself.) After an unsuccessful attempt at farming
and struggling to have his poems read by a wider
audience, Frost moved his family to England in
1912. It was there that Frost published his first two
“real” books of poetry: A Boy’s Will (1913) and
North of Boston (1914). These books showed
tremendous promise and were reviewed favorably
by the American poet Ezra Pound.
In part because of World War I, Frost moved
back to the United States in 1915 and continued to
fulfill the promise of his first two books. In 1916
he published Mountain Interval, containing
“Birches,” “The Road Not Taken,” and “Out,
Out–.” 1923 saw the publication of West Running
Brook and New Hampshire, containing “Stopping
By Woods on a Snowy Evening,” and in 1924 Frost
won the first of his four Pulitzer Prizes. Other col-
lections followed: A Further Range (1936), A Wit-
ness Tree (1942), Steeple Bush (1947), and In The
Clearing (1962).
Frost cultivated a public persona that his stu-
dents, critics, and biographers have found, by turns,
4. irritable, fascinating, and impenetrable—as the
number of books on Frost’s life and work makes
clear. His most notable moment in the public eye
was when he read “The Gift Outright” at the inau-
guration of John F. Kennedy in 1961. Frost died in
1963 two months before his eighty-ninth birthday.
As household a name as any poet could hope to be-
come, Frost enjoyed universal fame for both his
cheerful observations and his dark, often disturb-
ing, ambiguities. His Complete Poems appeared in
1967.
Poem Text
The buzz saw snarled and rattled in the yard
And made dust and dropped stove-length sticks of
wood,
Sweet-scented stuff when the breeze drew across it.
And from there those that lifted eyes could count
5Five mountain ranges one behind the other
Under the sunset far into Vermont.
And the saw snarled and rattled, snarled and
rattled,
As it ran light, or had to bear a load.
And nothing happened: day was all but done.
10Call it a day, I wish they might have said
To please the boy by giving him the half hour
O u t , O u t —
Robert Frost
5. V o l u m e 1 0 2 1 3
That a boy counts so much when saved from work.
His sister stood beside them in her apron
To tell them “Supper.” At the word, the saw,
15As if to prove saws knew what supper meant,
Leaped out at the boy’s hand, or seemed to leap—
He must have given the hand. However it was,
Neither refused the meeting. But the hand!
The boy’s first outcry was a rueful laugh,
20As he swung toward them holding up the hand
Half in appeal, but half as if to keep
The life from spilling. Then the boy saw all—
Since he was old enough to know, big boy
Doing a man’s work, though a child at heart—
25He saw all spoiled. “Don’t let him cut my hand
off—
The doctor, when he comes. Don’t let him, sister!”
So. But the hand was gone already.
The doctor put him in the dark of ether.
He lay and puffed his lips out with his breath.
30And then—the watcher at his pulse took fright.
No one believed. They listened at his heart.
Little—less—nothing!—and that ended it.
No more to build on there. And they, since they
Were not the one dead, turned to their affairs.
Poem Summary
Lines 1-3:
6. The poem begins with a description of the buzz
saw that later “attacks” the unnamed boy. Frost per-
sonifies the saw, saying it “snarled and rattled.” He
also contrasts the harsh noise of the saw with the
“sweet” scent of the wood that the saw cuts into
pieces. This is the first of the poem’s several con-
trasts (including serenity and violence, youth and
adulthood, panic and calm, speech and silence, and,
of course, life and death).
Lines 4-8:
Frost clarifies the setting in these lines: the ac-
tion is occurring in rural Vermont, and from where
the boy is working one can see five mountain
ranges. This peaceful and picturesque sight, like the
“sweet-scented” wood mentioned earlier, contrasts
the horrors that are about to occur. The sun is set-
ting and day is ending—as the boy’s life will end
at the conclusion of the poem. Frost reminds the
reader of the saw’s power by repeating the words
“snarled and rattled.”
Lines 9-12:
The speaker expresses his wish that some-
one—presumably an adult—would have told the
boy to “Call it a day”; doing so would have pre-
vented the accident. The speaker’s wish raises the
issue of the boy behaving (and eventually dying)
like a man, an issue that becomes more pronounced
as the poem proceeds. A boy loves to gain a half
hour and be “saved from work,” but this boy did
not (as the speaker hints) receive such a lucky re-
7. prieve.
Lines 13-18:
The section describes the accident as well as
the speaker’s attempt to make sense of why it hap-
pened in the first place. The image of the girl in an
apron yelling, “Supper!” recalls the idea of the boy
behaving like an adult—like her brother, she is
helping with the chores and, in doing so, entering
the world of adulthood. After her announcement,
the speaker first suggests that the saw, in an attempt
to show its intelligence, “Leaped out at the boy’s
hand.” Again, personification is used to imply that
the saw has a mind of its own. However, the
speaker realizes that this is simply impossible, and
qualifies his initial description of the saw’s “leap”
with the phrase, “or seemed to leap.” His confu-
sion over why such a thing happened increases in
the next lines: “He must have given the hand. How-
ever it was, / Neither refused the meeting.” Ulti-
mately, all the speaker can conclude is that both
the boy and the saw had a “meeting,” which itself
is an odd term, since “meeting” usually describes
a meeting of people with other people, not inani-
mate objects. Thus, the speaker cannot wholly
abandon the notion of the personified saw and, al-
though he has already discounted such an idea (with
“or seemed to leap”), he clings to it as one possi-
ble way to explain the boy’s otherwise meaning-
less death.
Lines 19-22:
As the previous lines depict the speaker’s re-
action to the accident, these lines depict the boy’s
8. reaction. The reader learns that the boy’s “first out-
cry was a rueful laugh”—a decidedly adult reac-
tion combining immense sorrow, disbelief, and an
ironic commentary on the situation. The image of
the boy trying to keep his hand balanced on his arm
“to keep / The life from spilling” contrasts that of
the “Five mountain ranges one behind the other”
first presented to the reader.
Lines 22-27:
After his initial panic, the boy becomes
prophetic. (According to many old legends and
mythologies, dying people could suddenly have vi-
sions of the future.) Since the boy is about to die
a “man’s” death, he is “old enough to know” that
nothing will save him after losing so much blood.
O u t , O u t —
2 1 4 P o e t r y f o r S t u d e n t s
The speaker recalls the idea of the boy’s entering
the world of adulthood when he calls him a “big
boy / Doing a man’s work, though a child at heart.”
The boy’s pleadings to his sister—his only spoken
words in the poem—reflect his age and create a
sense of the pathetic nature of his death. The reader
is moved, but the speaker seems cold: his reaction
to the boy’s plea is, “So. But the hand was gone
already.” This decidedly detached response re-
flects the speaker giving up his search for expla-
nations for the accident. All he can say is, “So”
(for the boy’s expression of terror needs no ex-
9. planation) and “But the hand was gone already.”
While the speaker earlier dwelled on the possibil-
ity of personification, he has now retreated into the
world of facts. There is, ultimately, nothing to say
about the boy’s death other than the facts that led
up to it.
Lines 28-32:
These lines describe the doctor’s attempts at
saving the boy and the boy’s final breaths. The
“dark of ether” into which the doctor guides the
boy is like the underworld to which many mytho-
logical heroes journey—another of the poem’s
ironies. When told that the boy “puffed out his lips
with his breath,” the reader is invited to contrast
this image with the earlier one of the boy running
and yelling to his sister. Like all living things, he
has moved from a world of noisy action to one of
quiet stillness. Like the earlier statement, “But the
hand was gone already,” the description of the
boy’s final moments is shocking because of the de-
tached tone in which it is described: “Little—less—
nothing!—and that ended it.”
Lines 33-34:
The final lines reflect the speaker’s turning
wholly toward an attitude of detachment and seem-
ing indifference. His final remark of how both the
doctor and the family “turned to their affairs” seems
callous and almost offensive (especially with he
word “affairs,” implying that they all began riffling
through their social calendars)—but one must keep
in mind that the language here is more figurative
10. than literal. Eventually they “turned to their af-
fairs,” since there is simply nothing else for them
to do. Since there is “No more to build on there”
and “they / Were not the one dead,” the adults must
continue their lives, bereft of both the boy and any
solid explanation for why he had to die such a ter-
rible death.
Themes
Childhood versus Adulthood
“Out, Out—” concerns a boy who loses his
hand—and then his life—in an accident involving
a buzz saw with which he is working on a rural
Vermont farm. The boy is initially portrayed as a
“big boy / Doing a man’s work.” He is using the
buzz saw in an attempt to behave in a grown-up
way, as children will often become their parents’
“little helpers” in an attempt to assert their inde-
pendence and maturity. (This is what his sister is
doing by wearing an apron and announcing “Sup-
per” as if she is the matriarch of the family.) The
fact that he is cutting wood with a buzz saw—truly
a dangerous and “adult” piece of machinery—at-
tests to his desire to be a “big boy,” helping with
the chores. Despite that fact, the boy would be
pleased with having been given “the half hour /
That a boy counts so much when saved from work,”
he continues sawing the wood for his family’s
stove, willingly contributing to the literal and fig-
urative warmth of his home.
However, once the accident occurs, the boy be-
gins figuratively “Doing a man’s work” by dying
like a man. In the second it takes the saw to “leap”
11. at his hand, the boy enters an adulthood marked by
violence, fear, and death. Although the boy wanted
to behave like a “big boy,” once the accident oc-
curs, he betrays his age by crying like a terrified
child:
O u t , O u t —
Media
Adaptations
• A double audiocassette set titled Robert Frost
Reads was released in 1997 by HarperCollins
Publishers.
• Another audio edition of Frost reading his work
is The Robert Frost Poetry Collection, released
in 2000 by Harper Audio.
• The Poetry of Robert Frost is an audiocassette
featuring poems read by Carl Reiner and Susan
Anspach. It was released in 1996 by Dove
Audio.
V o l u m e 1 0 2 1 5
“Don’t let him cut my hand off— The doctor, when
he comes. Don’t let him, sister!”
His subsequent death is met with shock, for
“No one believed” that such a random accident
could so quickly snuff out the life of a boy. But
these same adults eventually view the death in a
way that shocks the reader: “And they, since they
12. / Were not the one dead, turned to their affairs.”
This “turning away” from the boy is not literal, but
metaphorical—adults know that grief must be con-
trolled, lest it consume one’s life. According to
“Out, Out—,” adulthood demands this kind of
eventual response. A conclusion in which Frost de-
scribed the sorrow of the parents, for example,
would imply that their grief could never be
abated—and although Frost is not implying that the
parents’ grief will only be a temporary feeling, he
does suggest that, ultimately, all people “turn to
their affairs” to some degree after a tragedy in or-
der to resume their lives.
The Meaninglessness of Life
Upon learning of the death of his wife, Shake-
speare’s Macbeth remarks, “Out, out, brief candle”
and compares human life to
a tale Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, Sig-
nifying nothing.
Macbeth sees life as a series of events tumul-
tuous in themselves but not leading up to any
greater theme or ideal. A tale literally “told by an
idiot” would be contradictory and illogical—which
is exactly how he views all human endeavor when
he speaks these lines.
Frost’s poem evokes Macbeth’s pessimistic
philosophy through its descriptions of the buzz saw,
the boy’s terror, and the adults when faced with the
boy’s death. The saw is, indeed, “full of sound”
from the very first lines of the poem:
13. The buzz saw snarled and rattled in the yard And
made dust and dropped stove-length sticks of wood.
—and the personification is repeated when the
speaker states
And the saw snarled and rattled, snarled and rattled,
As it ran light, or had to bear a load.
The “fury” of the saw, of course, is seen in its
“attack” upon the boy, when it “Leaped out at the
boy’s hand, or seemed to leap.” Similarly, the boy
is full of “sound and fury,” offering first a “rueful
laugh” and then a series of pleas as he tries to pre-
vent “The life from spilling” out of his arm.
All of this noise and motion, however, ulti-
mately builds to no great event or insight on the part
of the characters. The boy dies in a noticeably quiet
moment (“They listened at his heart”) and all the
reader is told of this death is that there is “No more
to build on there.” Flights of angels do not sing the
boy to his rest, nor do any of the adults pause to
consider the tenuous nature of human life. The boy
dies for no reason at all (for surely a self-aware saw
is no real reason), and his death leaves the adults
silent. The “sound and fury” of both the boy and
the saw have “signified nothing,” which accounts
for the chilling effect of the poem’s final lines.
Style
“Out, Out—” is written in blank verse: unrhymed
iambic pentameter, which is five feet of one iamb
(an unstressed followed by a stressed syllable)
each. Of course, Frost varies the accented syllables
14. throughout the poem to avoid having his speaker’s
voice become too regular and stilted; thus the poem
is still in blank verse, but blank verse that is highly
O u t , O u t —
Topics for
Further
Study
• Rewrite a section of the poem in rhymed, rather
than unrhymed, iambic pentameter. Then ex-
plain how the new sound of the poem changes
its tone.
• Research what daily life was like on American
farms at the beginning of the twentieth century.
How does Frost’s poem depict the sometimes
brutal nature of farm life?
• Consider the poem’s title. What weight does
Frost’s allusion lend to the poem as a whole?
How does recognizing Frost’s allusion affect the
reader’s understanding of the poem’s issues?
• Compose a poem about a terrible accident or
event for which there seems to be no explana-
tion. Be sure that you end it with some kind of
reaction to the event—as Frost does with the
adults “turning to their affairs.”
• “Home Burial” is another of Frost’s poems deal-
ing with the death of a child. Compare and con-
trast the reactions of the parents in that poem
with those of the parents in “Out, Out—.”
15. 2 1 6 P o e t r y f o r S t u d e n t s
modulated to emphasize the importance of partic-
ular words and ideas. (The best examples of mod-
ulated blank verse are Shakespeare’s plays.) An ex-
ample of Frost altering the strict iambic pentameter
to make the sound echo the sense occurs in the
boy’s pleadings to his sister:
He saw all spoiled. “Don’t let him cut my hand off—
The doctor, when he comes. Don’t let him, sister!”
So. But the hand was gone already.
In the fist line above, Frost substitutes a spondee
(two stressed syllables) in the second foot to em-
phasize the gravity of the boy’s sudden recognition
of his own death. Frost also dangles an extra sylla-
ble at the end of the line; the rhythm is therefore
somewhat uneven, reflecting the boy’s panic. The
next line is regular blank verse (again with an extra
syllable at the end); Frost lulls the reader back into
the expected meter, only to upset him again with the
next line, which begins with a trochee, adding more
shock value to the speaker’s comment (“So”) before
again resuming the expected meter. A reader with a
sensitive ear can detect this kind of metrical varia-
tion in almost every line of the poem.
Frost also uses personification when describing
the saw. Phrases like “snarled and rattled” emphasize
the saw’s apparent ferocity; the lines, “the saw, / As
if to prove saws knew what supper meant, / Leaped
out at the boy’s hand, or seemed to leap—” reinforce
16. the idea that the saw is a sentient machine, suddenly
tempted into revealing its intelligence by “eating” the
boy’s hand. Ironically, the poem as a whole depicts
a personified thing attacking a living boy—who, at
the end of the poem, becomes as inanimate as the
thing that seemed to attack him.
The poem’s final couplet features a number of
important metrical maneuvers. “No more to build
on there” is strictly iambic, which creates the sense
of the speaker citing some adage or easily-remem-
bered piece of wisdom. The repetition of “they” re-
inforces the idea that the family is considering what
to do with themselves now that the boy is dead—
a major issue of the poem. In the poem’s final line,
Frost substitutes a spondee in the third foot, em-
phasizing the “one dead” about whom nobody
seems to know what to say, as well as the verb
“turned,” which suggests a physical and emotional
retreat from the horror at hand.
Historical Context
The assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand of
Austria by a Serbian nationalist on July 28, 1914,
was a shocking enough event—but no one alive at
that time could have predicted the immense and ter-
rible ramifications of this single act of violence. Fer-
dinand’s assassination sparked World War I, a con-
flict so complex, bloody, and demoralizing that
historians still debate some of its causes and long-
term ramifications. The tensions leading to the war
had been brewing for years, and when the war fi-
nally broke out, the Central Powers (Germany, the
Ottoman Empire, Austria-Hungary, and Bulgaria)
17. battled the Allies (England, France, Russia, Italy,
and the United States) until the armistice was de-
clared on November 11, 1918. (In total, thirty-two
nations participated in the War.) The four years of
fighting brought with them over thirty-seven million
casualties, the deaths of approximately ten million
civilians, terrible economic ruin for a number of na-
tions, and, most ironically, the sparks (in the Treaty
of Versailles) that would later ignite World War II.
The devastation brought by the war had an un-
derstandably large effect on European and Ameri-
can values and assumptions. Many people (artists
and writers among them) saw the war as the end
of an era—the end of a time where the world, for
all its mystery, still made sense in fundamental
ways. The scale of death that people witnessed dur-
ing the war caused them to question their long-held
beliefs about government, religion, and the horrors
of which the human race is capable. England, for
example, no longer seemed the Edwardian paradise
many believed it to have been—now it was a rav-
aged nation, mourning the deaths of almost a mil-
lion of its soldiers. (As William Butler Yeats wrote
in “The Second Coming” (1919), “Things fall
apart, the center cannot hold.”) This doubting and
questioning of “old world” values gave birth to the
artistic movement known as Modernism a move-
ment whose practitioners explored the decay of au-
thority and the often-fragmentary nature of modern
life. Modernist poets created new forms and broke
with longstanding literary traditions. For example,
T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land (1922) is a free-verse
examination of hopelessness and despair; this
wildly experimental poem is, in part, Eliot’s por-
trayal of life after World War I. Other Modernist
18. poets who employed experimental forms and tech-
niques were Ezra Pound (whose Cantos were first
published in 1917), Edgar Lee Masters (whose
Spoon River Anthology appeared in 1915), D. H.
Lawrence (whose New Poems appeared in 1918),
and e.e. cummings (whose Tulips and Chimneys
appeared in 1923).
Not all poets, however, embraced Modernist
ideas and forms—the reading public was still en-
O u t , O u t —
V o l u m e 1 0 2 1 7
amored with many “old-style” poets, such as
Thomas Hardy, Rupert Brooke, Carl Sandburg, and
Edwin Arlington Robinson. Poetry in English was
thus at a turning point, with several of its practi-
tioners demanding that a poet must (in Ezra
Pound’s words) “Make it new,” while other poets
focused on a world that seemed to exist only in
their verse. It was in the midst of this artistic “Great
War” that Frost entered the literary scene. He was
forty years old when World War I began and had
just published A Boy’s Will (1913) and North of
Boston (1914) in England. (These were published
in the United States in 1915.) A reader who skims
the surface of Frost’s poetry may find him far from
experimental, since many of his poems recall a
seemingly idyllic life in rural New England—a pas-
toral paradise free from the terrors that had just
gripped the globe. Such an opinion, however, falls
19. flat when one considers that Frost’s poetry is often
a combination of traditional verse forms and the
dark, ironic sentiments often found in Modernist
works. In other words, Frost was able to explore
modern fears with deceptively “traditional” set-
tings, perhaps best seen in his conclusion to “Stop-
ping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” (1923):
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have
promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And
miles to go before I sleep.
As history would reveal, the modern world did,
indeed, have “miles to go” before it took the rest
it needed after the even greater war which was to
begin in 1939.
O u t , O u t —
Compare
&
Contrast
• 1916: World War I continues, with Germany
declaring war on Portugal and Italy declaring
war on Germany. The war will continue until
1918.
1939: World War II begins when Germany in-
vades Poland and Britain and France declare war
on Germany. President Franklin Delano Roo-
sevelt initially declares that the Unites States
will remain neutral, but the U.S. enters the war
in 1941 after the Japanese attack on Pearl Har-
bor. The war will continue until 1945.
20. 1990: Iraq invades Kuwait, prompting President
George Bush to begin Operation Desert Storm
and defeat the Iraqi Army in less than a year.
• 1915: Robert Frost publishes A Boy’s Will and
North of Boston, his two groundbreaking books
of verse.
1943: Frost publishes A Witness Tree and is
awarded the Pulitzer Prize.
1961: Frost reads “The Gift Outright” at the in-
auguration of President John F. Kennedy.
1963: Frost publishes In the Clearing and dies
later this year.
• 1916: Democrat Woodrow Wilson continues the
first of his two terms as President; a Democrat
will not be reelected to the White House again
until 1933, when Franklin Delano Roosevelt be-
gins his three terms.
1963: Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson is elected
President; his administration will be marked by
the outbreak of the Vietnam War.
1993: Democrat William (“Bill”) Clinton
elected President: after he completes two terms
in office, his Vice President, Albert Gore, will
run for President against Republican George W.
Bush in one of the nation’s most intense and ex-
plosive political contests.
• 1929: “Black Friday” occurs on October 28
21. when the U.S. stock market collapses and ush-
ers in the Great Depression, the worst economic
disaster in U.S. history.
1941: With the U.S. entrance into World War
II, industry expands at great speeds, and the
country is pulled out of the depression.
1991: With the end of the Cold War and the sub-
sequent phasing down of military spending, the
U.S. enters a sustained period of prosperity.
2 1 8 P o e t r y f o r S t u d e n t s
Critical Overview
Since the publication of his first book (A Boy’s
Will) in 1913, Frost’s reputation and worldwide
fame grew tremendously, and his death in 1963 has
done nothing to lessen the number of admirers his
verse gains every year. When his poetry first be-
gan to be noticed, many readers and critics thought
of Frost as a gruff Yankee philosopher—an image
that Frost was very much responsible for cultivat-
ing. However, by the mid-1960s, critics began re-
assessing Frost’s work and finding it much less
simple than they first assumed. According to
William Pritchard, author of Robert Frost: A Lit-
erary Life Reconsidered, “The popular view of [the
poems] as essentially spirit-warming tributes to
man and nature had been replaced by a presumably
more sophisticated view of them as ‘dark’ parables
rather, ironic meditations played out behind de-
ceptively simple surfaces.” Today, Frost is admired
22. for his ambiguities and ironies more than for po-
ems like “The Road Not Taken” and “Birches,”
which, although among his most famous, are gen-
erally thought to pale in comparison with darker
poems such as “Home Burial,” “Acquainted with
the Night,” and “My Desert Places.”
“Out, Out—” has fared very well in the opin-
ions of modern scholars. Pritchard praises it as “one
of Frost’s grimmer poems” not so much because of
its subject as much as “the way its narrator pro-
vides no guiding tone of response—tragic or oth-
erwise—to the event.” Jeffrey Meyers, in his book
Robert Frost: A Biography, calls “Out, Out—”
“one of his greatest poems” but feels that its end-
ing is not a figurative depiction of resuming one’s
life after tragedy; instead, he calls it a “bitter com-
ment on the callous indifference to human suffer-
ing.” Finally, in his book Robert Frost: A Life, Jay
Parini calls “Out, Out—” one of Frost’s “most af-
fecting poems” because he “allows the poem to
open into a complex and suggestive ambiguity” and
“leaves a good deal of interpretive work for the
reader to accomplish.”
Criticism
Daniel Moran
Daniel Moran is a secondary-school teacher
of English and American Literature. He has con-
tributed several entries and essays to the Gale se-
ries Drama for Students. In the following essay,
Moran examines the ways in which “Out, Out—”
dramatizes, in an American setting, the ideas of the
23. Shakespearean passage from which Frost took his
poem’s title.
The title of Frost’s poem is an allusion to
Shakespeare’s Macbeth, the tragedy of a man
who—prompted by his insatiable ambition—mur-
ders his king and several others who threaten his
tenuous rule. Near the end of the play, Macbeth
learns from a servant that the queen, his wife, is
dead. After all of his scheming and surrendering to
the most base and evil parts of his own nature, this
news prompts Macbeth to utter one of Shake-
speare’s most sobering and pessimistic soliloquies:
She should have died hereafter;
There would have been time for such a word.
Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow
Creeps in this petty pace from day to day
To the last syllable of recorded time;
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
The way to dusky death. Out, out, brief candle!
Life’s a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more. It is a tale,
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.
The death of his wife suggests to Macbeth the
ultimate meaninglessness of his ambition and the
folly of all ambition everywhere. Experience
teaches us nothing, since the past only lights “fools
/ The way to dusky death.” And although time
seems to crawl for the duration of one’s life, that
same life can be snuffed out in an instant, as the
flame of a candle burns brightly for hours but is
extinguished in a second. This paradox causes Mac-
24. beth to ruminate on the meaningless of all human
endeavor: ultimately, despite its “sound and fury,”
human life signifies “nothing.” She “should have
died hereafter”—in her old age—but has instead
died now and reduced all of their ambition to dust.
The achievement of Frost’s “Out, Out—” is
that he replicates not the situation of Shakespeare’s
play, but the feeling of Macbeth when he learns
about the death of his wife. Using his trademark
locale (rural New England), Frost dramatizes Mac-
beth’s manifesto of hopelessness in a distinctly
American setting to explore the ways in which the
thoughts of a defeated and solitary Scottish king
are equally at home in a story of a Vermont boy
who dies from a bizarre accident. While complet-
ing this difficult task, Frost also explores the way
in which an innocent boy steps into the world of
experience and adulthood, only to find that this
world is a cruel and unjust place.
O u t , O u t —
V o l u m e 1 0 2 1 9
The poem begins with the saw having, liter-
ally, the first word—as it will figuratively have the
last:
The buzz saw snarled and rattled in the yard
And made dust and dropped stove-length sticks of
wood,
Sweet-scented stuff when the breeze drew across it.
25. This saw is no mindless tool; instead, it attacks
the wood like a pit bull, snarling and rattling as the
boy feeds it. This hint of malice, however, is down-
played in these lines, since the saw is in the ser-
vice of the family (making wood for their stove)
and the sticks it creates are “sweet-scented stuff ”;
the alliteration adds to the “sweetness” of the wood
(for the repeated s is sweet-sounding) and a word
like “stuff” belongs in the mouth of a rustic ob-
server, rather than a Shakespearean king.
The poem’s setting also serves to downplay the
initial ferocious sounds of the saw: “Five mountain
ranges, one behind the other / Under the sunset far
into Vermont” are not a besieged Scottish castle,
but generic elements of an American pastoral. Still,
the saw continues its steady barking:
And the saw snarled and rattled, snarled and
rattled,
As it ran light, or had to bear a load.
The boy—the saw’s master, in a sense—de-
cides how hard the saw will work, and the saw
keeps at its work. The repetition of “snarled and
rattled, snarled and rattled,” however, hints to the
reader that everything can change—like Macbeth’s
marriage—in an instant. The mountain ranges are
a beautiful sight, but the snarling of the saw adds
a touch of menace.
The speaker’s regret about the events he is
about to describe colors his descriptions of what he
wishes had happened moments before the accident:
26. Call it a day, I wish they might have said
To please the boy by giving him the half hour
That a boy counts so much when saved from work.
These lines emphasize the boy’s innocence: al-
though he was using a buzz saw (a dangerous piece
of “adult” machinery), he was, the speaker stresses,
still a boy. “Call it a day” is a phrase used by adults
to tell other adults to stop working; all the boy (any
boy) really wants is another half hour in which to
play. Later, the boy is described as a “big boy / Do-
ing a man’s work, though a child at heart,” and the
above passage underscores the boy’s youth to make
his eventual death more shocking and inexplicable.
(Note that the boy’s sister is also a child playfully
pretending to belong to the world of adults, an-
nouncing “Supper” in her apron). While kids pre-
tending to be adults (by doing adult chores or wear-
ing adult clothes, for example) are often viewed as
cute, this boy’s dabbling with adulthood proves
deadly because adults die more often than children
as part of the natural order of things.
When the accident occurs, the speaker cannot
rationalize or even describe it in definitive terms.
Frost replicates this observer’s struggle to put the
accident in a logical sequence of cause-and-effect:
At the word, the saw,
As if to prove it knew what supper meant,
Leaped out at the boy’s hand, or seemed to leap—
He must have given the hand. However it was,
Neither refused the meeting. But the hand!
27. The speaker can only offer an explanation of
the accident based on the premise that the saw
gained a moment of sentience and attacked the
boy—but the speaker also knows that this is im-
possible, so he qualifies his explanation with “or
seemed to leap” before admitting, “He must have
given the hand” and that “Neither refused the meet-
ing.” The speaker is, in effect, doing with his de-
scription of the accident what humans often do
when faced with an inexplicable event or an unex-
pected death: trying to find a reason, a cause, for
what has occurred. The poem as a whole, however,
suggests that for something like this accident there
is no reason. All a person can say is, “But the
hand!”—all an observer can do is proclaim his own
shock. Thus, the initial personification of the saw
O u t , O u t —
Using his trademark
locale (rural New England),
Frost dramatizes
Macbeth’s manifesto of
hopelessness in a distinctly
American setting to explore
the ways in which the
thoughts of a defeated and
solitary Scottish king are
equally at home in a story
of a Vermont boy who dies
from a bizarre accident.”
2 2 0 P o e t r y f o r S t u d e n t s
28. is, in a sense, a lie—an attempt (as above) to offer
some rationale for the boy’s death.
Unlike the speaker, momentarily entangled in
explanations, the boy reacts in a childlike and fran-
tic manner that reflects his youth and inexperience
in a world where things happen for no reason at all:
The boy’s first outcry was a rueful laugh,
As he swung toward them holding up the hand
Half in appeal, but half as if to keep
The life from spilling. Then the boy saw all—
Since he was old enough to know …
In this one instant, the boy crosses into the
realm of adulthood, where he is no longer innocent
of the world’s random cruelty. His “rueful laugh”
is a fleeting attempt at self pity, his balancing of
his hand on his arm is a fleeting attempt at self-
preservation, but still the boy “saw all.” He knows
what is to come, but retreats back into childhood
for a final plea:
“Don’t let him cut my hand off—
The doctor, when he comes. Don’t let him, sister!”
The boy’s biggest problem here is not saving
his hand but saving his life; symbolically, he is also
begging his sister to let him stay in the realm of
childhood.
By this point, the tone of the speaker has
changed from one of outrage to one of seemingly
cold objectivity:
So. But the hand was gone already.
29. The doctor put him in the dark of ether.
He lay and puffed his lips out with his breath.
The “So” signals a change in the speaker’s at-
titude toward his subject—for what can an observer
say about the boy’s pleadings? “He pleaded well?”
“His cries made me feel sorry for him?” Perhaps—
but ultimately, all that one can say is “So,” just as
all Macbeth can say is, “Out, out, brief candle!”
“The hand was gone already” reflects the speaker’s
succumbing to the reality of what is happening, as
the boy is about to succumb to the effects of his
“life … spilling.” Entering “the dark of ether” is
like a journey to the underworld, and the boy’s ear-
O u t , O u t —
What
Do I Read
Next?
• Like “Out, Out—,” Frost’s poem “Birches”
(1915) also explores the tension between the
worlds of childhood and adulthood.
• Frost’s poem “Nothing Gold Can Stay” (1923)
explores the issue of transient beauty and (like
“Out, Out—”) the fleeting nature of all earthly
things.
• “Home Burial” (1923), one of Frost’s dramatic
poems, depicts an argument between a husband
and wife about the appropriate response to the
death of their son.
30. • William Wordsworth’s poem “A Slumber Did
My Spirit Seal” (1800) depicts a man who once
thought his lost love beyond “the touch of
earthly years” and who attempts to grapple with
her mortality.
• Dylan Thomas’s poem “A Refusal to Mourn the
Death, by Fire, of a Child in London” (1945)
toys with the issues raised in “Out, Out—”; in
it, Thomas explains the reasons for his not of-
fering (what he calls) an “Elegy of innocence
and youth.”
• “Infant Innocence,” a short poem by the late
Victorian English poet A. E. Housman, treats
the theme of an innocent youth figuratively de-
voured by the adult world.
• Naturally, a reader of “Out, Out—” will find a
reading of Shakespeare’s Macbeth (c. 1606) use-
ful in understanding the forces that prompt Mac-
beth to make the statement Frost uses as the ti-
tle for his poem.
• J. D. Salinger’s novel The Catcher in the Rye
(1951) has as its protagonist a teenager unable
to cope with the death of his younger brother
and, in a larger sense, with the encroachment of
adulthood upon his innocent self.
V o l u m e 1 0 2 2 1
lier frantic cries are contrasted by his inability to
31. speak: all he can do is puff “his lips out with his
breath.” Once “full of sound and fury,” the boy’s
voice is now “signifying nothing.”
The poem ends with the speaker growing more
indifferent, although this indifference is more
philosophical than literal:
And then—the watcher at his pulse took fright.
No one believed. They listened at his heart.
Little-less-nothing!—and that ended it.
No more to build on there. And they, since they
Were not the one dead, turned to their affairs.
The boy’s death is described in the most
generic and unadorned language: his pulse slows,
“and that ended it. / No more to build on there.”
One might expect the speaker to evoke the passion
of Dylan Thomas’s “Do Not Go Gentle Into That
Good Night,” in which he commands his dying fa-
ther to
Rage, rage, against the dying of the light!
—but Frost’s mission here is to replicate the
lack of passion felt by Macbeth upon learning of
his wife’s death. “That ended it” and “No more to
build on there” are phrases in which the speaker
stands slowly shaking his head with his palms up-
turned and his eyebrows raised. The speaker, an
adult, has already learned about the inability of any
words to explain why this boy had to die. As with,
“However it was, / Neither refused the meeting,”
the speaker can only fall back on indifference—but
this indifference is more of a philosophical stance
than a literal lack of concern: the doctor and the
32. boy’s family (collected under “they” in the last sen-
tence) return to their lives, “since they / Were not
the one dead.” This may strike readers as uncaring
and cold, but only if these same readers do not re-
alize that Frost is describing an eventual “turning”
to their affairs. Over time, “they” return to their
own lives, since there is nothing they can say or do
to bring the boy back or even explain why he had
to be snatched from them in the first place. The en-
dorsement of this attitude—that the world is a place
where random events sometimes destroy the inno-
cent for no good reason—is a part of growing up,
which is why, after finishing the poem (and even
dwelling on it for a long, long time), the adult
reader himself will, eventually, turn to his affairs
as well.
Frost’s achievement, therefore, is manifold: he
applies the philosophy of a fictional Scottish king
to a fictional Vermont boy, suggests that the ac-
ceptance of such a philosophy is part of growing
up, and finally illustrates the philosophy’s truth
through the reaction of the very reader to whom he
is presenting these ideas. “You are shocked, I
know,” thinks Frost. “But eventually, your shock
will subside, you’ll stop trying to rationalize the
event, and see that, in a very real way, Macbeth
was right.” “Out, Out—,” both the phrase and the
poem, are about all there is to say about a death for
which there is no explanation.
Source: Daniel Moran, in an essay for Poetry for Students,
Gale, 2001.
Bill Wiles
33. Bill Wiles teaches and writes in the shadow of
Vermont’s Green Mountains. He has sat in the very
chair from which Robert Frost taught scores of stu-
dents at the Bread Loaf School of English. In this
essay, Wiles explores the tension between the pas-
toral landscape and the realities of rural life.
The state of Vermont publishes a quarterly
magazine known as Vermont Life. On either its
front or back cover, readers will invariably find a
photograph of a farm scene. The house is almost
always white, the barn almost always red. If the
season is winter, readers see a field of untrammeled
snow. If the scene is autumn, the path filled with
fallen leaves appears untrodden. Spring or summer
photos usually portray immaculate fields or breath-
taking sunsets. Rarely will the reader be treated to
depictions of rutted roads, rusted pickup trucks, or
manure piles. The reality is that visitors to Vermont
farms are more likely to see those scenes that do
not make the cover of Vermont Life. In many of his
poems, Robert Frost tackles this tension between
the perfect world of the magazine photographer and
the hard-bitten reality of life on a rural New Eng-
land farm.
In “Out, Out—,” Frost places the action in
what might be termed a picture postcard setting
worthy of Vermont Life, but suggests that the peo-
ple who live on this farm may be just too busy with
the day-to-day business of survival to admire the
view. The visual brilliance of the sunset and the
five mountain ranges contrasts with the drab, com-
mon dust and sticks of the boy’s chore of cutting
wood for the stove. The pleasing odor of the newly
34. sawn wood as it is borne by the breeze clashes with
the onomatopoetic snarling and rattling, snarling
and rattling, snarling and rattling of the buzz saw.
The work of the day, uneventful as it is, has in-
truded on the idyllic rural scene. But, even here,
the day’s labor is coming to an end; the boy’s sis-
ter calls “them” (suggesting others besides the boy
are doing necessary chores) to the evening meal. It
O u t , O u t —
2 2 2 P o e t r y f o r S t u d e n t s
looks as though the next scene will be the large
family gathered around the sturdy table sharing a
meal of simple yet hearty fare.
Frost is unwilling to continue this pastoral
scene, and uses one of his more confusing transi-
tional lines: “ … the saw / … / Leaped out at the
boy’s hand, or seemed to leap—” Jay Parini in
Robert Frost: A Life states that “perhaps the saw
was animate and malicious.” Also, Parini suggests
that Frost has made the world of technology “omi-
nous, even rapacious,” a reaction against the in-
dustrialization of farming.
This contrast between the postcard view of the
opening six lines outlines the tension the romantic
notion of living in the country at the beginning of
the twentieth century and the harsh realities of farm
life before rural electrification, radio, paved roads,
telephone, and other modern conveniences. Live-
stock died from a variety of ailments and problems.
35. So too did many of the human inhabitants as well,
young and old. Disease, sickness, and accidents
took their toll. Communicable diseases, such as in-
fluenza, hit rural pockets of New England very
hard. Children were especially vulnerable. Entire
families perished. It would be easy for a lesser poet
to surrender to despair.
Frost, however, turns his attention to those who
remain, even as the boy’s blood spills onto the
rocky New England soil. Frost notes the sister, the
doctor, the “watcher at [the boy’s] pulse,” and they
who “were not the one dead.” Frost is sometimes
taken to task for this seeming indifference on the
part of the survivors, but the idea fits squarely with
the way of life on the farm. Cows have to be
milked; animals have to be fed and watered; wood
still has to be cut for the stove. Donald Grenier in
Robert Frost: The Poet and His Critics mentions
the observations of Radcliffe Squires from The Ma-
jor Themes of Robert Frost: “‘Out, Out—’ show[s]
the human watchers experiencing normal griefs and
yet convinced that life’s more important task is to
keep living …”
It is the boy’s immediate reaction to the acci-
dent that piques the reader’s interest. Parini de-
scribes the “rueful laugh” as a “familiar Frostian
note” where both the reader and the boy see the
irony of the boy’s fate. Everything—the boy’s life,
the family unit, as well as the boy’s hand—is ru-
ined (“spoiled”). There is little room for a boy who
cannot “pull his weight” in the subsistence econ-
omy of a rural farming, “circumstances are such,”
Parini states, “that an extra ‘hand’ is essential for
36. survival.”
Another personage haunts the entire poem—
the speaker of the title words, Macbeth. Frost ap-
pears to compare Macbeth’s expression of futility
to the boy’s rueful laugh. There are, however,
marked differences in the two views of existence.
Macbeth sees only the “sound and the fury” of life.
His own “vaunting ambition” clouds his ability to
accept responsibility for the present death of Lady
Macbeth, the deaths of Duncan, Banquo, and the
family of Macduff, and his own impending death.
The boy, on the other hand, sees his own value to
the family and community plummet to nothing
when he loses his hand. He can no longer con-
tribute; his role shifts in an instant from worker to
liability. His death, in a practical way, saved the
family and small community from carrying a non-
productive member. “No more to build on there …”
Macbeth lives in a universe where nothing is what
it seems. (“Fair is foul; foul is fair / Hover through
the fog and filthy air.”) What appears beautiful on
the surface has a center filled with ugliness. The
boy inhabits a world where the natural beauty of
the New England mountains and the hazards of
farm work exist side by side. One has a reality that
is carefully hidden and concealed; the other ex-
hibits a painful reality cheek by jowl with sweet-
scented breezes and a mountain sunset.
Source: Bill Wiles, in an essay for Poetry for Students, Gale,
2001.
Aviya Kushner
Aviya Kushner discusses Robert Frost’s poem
37. “Out, Out—”and how its often subtle references to
the Bible and Shakespeare’s Macbeth inform the
reading of this poem, emphasizing its more serious
and darker tones.
O u t , O u t —
The pleasing odor of
the newly sawn wood as it
is borne by the breeze
clashes with the
onomatopoetic snarling and
rattling, snarling and
rattling, snarling and
rattling of the buzz saw.”
V o l u m e 1 0 2 2 3
Although Robert Frost would later in his life
become a farm owner, a husband and father, and a
four-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize in poetry, his
life was often marked by struggle, beginning with
the early death of his father and the untimely deaths
of his own children. Frost achieved wide acclaim
and popularity not only with academic critics, but
with the American public. Frost was even honored
as the nation’s Poet Laureate, reading at the inau-
guration of John F. Kennedy. When Frost died,
Kennedy said: “His death impoverishes us all; but
he has bequeathed his nation a body of imperish-
able verse from which Americans will forever gain
38. joy and understanding.”
Several decades after Frost’s death, one notes
in his work the dueling influences of success and
hardship. On the surface, Frost’s poems are about
apple-picking, birches, and putting up fences—the
daily activities of a peaceful country existence. But
there is a darkness rumbling beneath the lines, and
the ugly side of the human heart is well-chronicled
in Frost’s seemingly bucolic, quintessentially
American poems.
“Out, Out—” is one of Frost’s most chilling
poems. The title is a quotation from the last act of
Shakespeare’s Macbeth, when Macbeth says:
To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow
Creeps in this petty pave from day to day
To the last syllable of recorded time,
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!
Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And is then heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.
Readers familiar with Macbeth can immedi-
ately catch Frost’s hint at inevitable death and the
swiftness of human life.
Frost’s poem begins ominously. They saw
“snarls and rattles, snarls and rattles,” alluding to
both the sounds of anger and the sounds of a snake.
“Rattle” may recall the snake in the Garden of
Eden, who was a main cause for the ejection from
39. Paradise and the loss of initial innocence. What’s
more, the snake in the Biblical story is the instru-
ment of betrayal, and thus the poem’s first line sub-
tly introduces the idea of callousness toward hu-
mans’ fates.
The second line’s mention of “dust” again
brings up the Biblical idea of originating from dust
and returning to dust. The opening three lines are
memorable also thanks to Frost’s mastery of the
music of English. These lines have a distinctive
sound that mimics the objects they describe.
“The buzz saw snarled and rattled” uses the
“s” and “r” sounds of a saw cutting wood, and shav-
ing the strips to dust. The alliteration continues with
“dust” and “dropped,” followed by “stove-length
sticks” and “sweet-scented stuff.”
While the opening three lines focus on sound
and smell, the fourth line finally addresses sight.
The “and from there” emphasizes that the visual
description is coming last:
And from there those that lifted eyes could count
Five mountain ranges one behind the other
Under the sunset far into Vermont.
This juxtaposition of “lifted eyes” and “moun-
tain” recalls the Psalms:
I lift mine eyes unto the mountain
From whence will come my help?
After the depiction of the mountain ranges and
the sunset, the original sawing sound returns. “And
40. the saw snarled and rattled, snarled and rattled.”
The ominous tone of the poem returns too, tem-
pered by: “Nothing happened.” The speaker then
interjects:
Call it a day, I wish they might have said
To please the boy by giving him the half-hour
That a boy counts so much when saved from work.
This line hints that disaster is on its way in-
stead of the respite for which the boy might so ap-
preciate. Here is where the speaker shows an un-
derstanding of the ways of the country—a half-hour
means so much to a child.
The sister—a new character—comes out in an
apron and announces that supper is ready, as she
might have done countless times before. But on this
O u t , O u t —
The word “So,” all
alone in a sentence captures
the hopelessness of the
situation. The doctor merely
walks in and numbs the
boy. But suddenly—and
this is a poem about sudden
twists of fate—something
changes …”
2 2 4 P o e t r y f o r S t u d e n t s
day everything changes. Instead of the boy and the
41. other men coming home to a nice meal, the day
quickly changes because “the saw leaps out.” Here
again the Bible peeks through, as the sudden leap
of a sharp object recalls Abraham’s attempted sac-
rifice of his own son, or in the prophetic writings,
Yiftach’s actual sacrifice of his own daughter.
The saw jumps. There is some confusion, and
the speaker admits it with “however it was.” It is
unclear to the reader what is happening, which par-
allels the confusion of the characters in the poem.
The jagged grammar mimics that confusion, par-
ticularly with:
“But the hand!”
The boy’s first response is a “rueful laugh,”
but then the boy holds up the injured hand, both
for help, and to prevent the massive loss of blood.
The boy suddenly realizes what has happened, and
what will happen:
Then the boy saw all—
Since he was old enough to know, big boy
Doing a man’s work, though a child at heart—
He saw all spoiled.
With “all spoiled,” it may appear that the boy
is about to live life as a cripple. He then speaks for
the first and only time in the poem:
Don’t let him cut my hand off—
The doctor, when he comes. Don’t let him, sister!”
This disjunction in language—first “him,” then
the explanation of doctor, mirrors the confusion of
42. the actual accident, when what exactly happened
was unclear. The sister is begged to prevent the in-
evitable. And then the speaker explains:
So. But the hand was gone already.
The word “So,” all alone in a sentence cap-
tures the hopelessness of the situation. The doctor
merely walks in and numbs the boy. But sud-
denly—and this is a poem about sudden twists of
fate—something changes:
And then—the watcher at his pulse took fright.
No one believed. They listened at his heart.
Little—less—nothing! And that ended it.
“That ended it.”—the boy’s life ends with that
phrase. The preceding description—“little, less,
nothing”—neatly and frighteningly sums up the life
lived. The boy was a child, or “little.” With his
hand gone, he was “less.” And then, with his pulse
gone, he was “nothing.”
No more to build on there. And they, since they
Were not the one dead, turned to their affairs.
The last lines return to the manual labor and
construction tone of the poem’s opening. This time,
though, there is nothing left to build in that spot.
While the final line suggests that there are other
“affairs” to turn to, it is also a condemnation, with
no separation between the behavior of relatives and
strangers. Living is what people continue to do af-
ter a death. The only ones who truly stop are the
dead themselves. Frost may have realized that de-
43. spite the ending of some lives, the survivors must
go on. The living can only “build on” from there.
Source: Aviya Kushner, in an essay for Poetry for Students,
Gale, 2001.
Sources
Frost, Robert, The Poetry of Robert Frost, Holt, Rinehart
and Winston, 1969.
———, Robert Frost’s Poems, with an Introduction and
Commentary by Louis Untermeyer, Washington Square
Press, 1971.
Grenier, Donald J., Robert Frost: The Poet and His Critics,
American Library Association, 1974.
Meyers, Jeffrey, Robert Frost: A Biography, Houghton Mif-
flin Company, 1996.
Parini, Jay, Robert Frost: A Life, Henry Holt and Company,
1999.
Pritchard, William H., Frost: A Literary Life Reconsidered,
Oxford University Press, 1984.
For Further Study
Frost, Robert, Poetry, Plays, and Prose, The Library of
America, 1995.
This is the definitive edition of Frost’s work, featur-
ing all of his individual books of poetry plus ninety-
four uncollected poems (seventeen published for the
first time). The volume also contains a generous sam-
pling of Frost’s letters and forty-five pages of notes
concerning publication dates and textual variations.
44. Parini, Jay, Robert Frost: A Life, Henry Holt and Company,
1999.
Of the many biographies of Frost, Parini’s is the most
recent and certainly one of the most accessible, hav-
ing been praised by numerous critics for its read-
ability and insight into an often misrepresented fig-
ure.
Pritchard, William, Lives of the Modern Poets, University
Press of New England, 1980.
Pritchard’s book is a collection of studies of poets
ranging from Thomas Hardy to William Carlos
Williams. The chapter on Frost, while not dealing
with “Out, Out—” specifically, is still an engaging
overview of Frost’s career and poetry.
O u t , O u t —