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  • Childhood Research Report on Type 1 Diabetes A. Name of Disease/Illness/Disorder/Health Condition: Type 1 Diabetes (also known as Juvenile Diabetes or Insulin-Dependent Diabetes) B. Description: 1. Type

    Childhood Research Report Requirements:
    A. Name of Disease/Illness/Disorder/Health Condition: Identify name, common and medical terms used.
    B. Description:
    1. State a description of the Disease/Illness/Disorder/Health Condition.
    2. What is the causative agent? (name of pathogen, risk factors, behaviors)
    3. What is/are the mode(s) of transmission? How does the disease/Illness/Condition develop?
    4. What are the signs? (objective indicator(s), measurable, visible signs of illness such as rash, fever,
    bleeding, and/or the behavior)
    5. What are the symptoms? (subjective indicators of illness usually difficult to measure such as pain,
    fatigue, weakness, restlessness)
    If applicable:
    Links to an external site.
    9
    1. Incubation period of disease? (time between pathogen entering system/body and the appearance
    of signs/symptoms).
    2. Communicable/Contagious period? (time period in which the disease can be spread from one
    person to another)
    C. Incidence and Prevalence:
    1. Provide the incidence and prevalence of the Disease/Illness/Disorder/Health Condition.
    2. Are the numbers increasing or decreasing?
    3. Are there any trends?
    D. Treatment:
    1. Are there treatments available?
    2. What is the treatment? Be specific
    3. Where and how is the Disease/Illness/Disorder/Health Condition treated?
    E. Prevention:
    1. Discuss preventative measures that can be taken.
    F. Community Impact:
    1. What is being done at the federal, state, and community level to prevent and treat this disease.
    (state program names or bills)
    2. Are there any community, school, research programs in place? (Include program names for each)
    G. Implications for the Educator/Teacher:
    1. What types of actions/adjustments will a teacher in the school setting need to make for a child
    with the Disease/Illness/Disorder/Health Condition?
    2. Prevention: How could the school or classroom teacher prevent transmission?
    3. Classroom Environment: What modifications might be required?
    4. Adaptations of the curriculum: What types of curriculum changes will the teacher make for a
    student(s) with this disease/health condition? Be specific
    H. References:
     APA format
     Minimum 5 different sources – You may not use the class text as a source
     In text required (5)
     Complete reference page

  • Title: “The Importance of Qualifiers and Counter-Arguments in Crafting a Strong Thesis Statement”

    This assignment will be graded more rigorously than some of the other small assignments.
    Submit the following three things. The total response should be at least 200 words.
    1) Your thesis statement (one or two sentences expressing the main point you want to make in the paper). See Purdue OWL for more on thesis statementsLinks to an external site.. 
    2) One qualifier for your argument. A qualifier is a limitation that you place on the scope of your own argument. (More on this below.)
    3) One counter-argument that you will respond to in your argument, meaning a point that someone might raise against your argument. 
    4) Your response to the counter-argument. 
    If you feel good about these elements of argumentation, then you can enter them and move on with your day. If you’re struggling with these concepts, read the text immediately below. 
    What’s the difference between a qualifier and counter-argument? 
    Short answer: A qualifier is a point you need to concede (give up) in order to keep yourself honest. A counter-argument is a point you’re willing to fight for. 
    Long answer: Qualifiers are limitations that you place on the scope of your own argument. For instance, someone arguing for stricter gun laws in the US would qualify his or her argument by acknowledging that most gun owners are law-abiding citizens who own their guns for perfectly legitimate recreational or self-dense purposes. This qualifier might be followed by various arguments about how even if a gun is owned by a law-abiding citizen, gun ownership still makes tragedies more likely, but the key point here is that by stating the qualifier (most gun owners are safe and law-abiding), the person making the argument has avoided stereotyping gun owners and unhinged maniacs on the verge of a rampage. To spin it the other way, a person arguing for protections on gun ownership rights ought to include a qualifier that in the wrong hands or circumstances, guns can generate horrific tragedies. That person could then go on to argue about the importance of self-defense and the rights of individuals, but the point here is that the qualifier helps keep the argument both reasonable and civil.
    But there is a more important reason to include qualifiers: they allow you to set the boundaries of your own argument so others don’t misrepresent your argument as being more extreme than it is. Another example of a qualifier comes from Elizabeth Carll; while she is arguing that sometimes, violent video games can lead to violence, she is also quick to point out that “not all people who play video games will commit violent crimes.” By doing this, she is keeping herself honest. But perhaps more importantly, she is preventing others from misrepresenting her argument. That’s one of the benefits of a good qualifier: it keeps others from misrepresenting your argument as being more extreme than it actually is. 
    In contrast, a counter-argument is an objection to your argument that you are not willing to agree with or concede. It’s something you’re willing to fight against. It involves stating directly a point that someone has made or could make against you, and then showing why that point is either wrong or misguided. To be clear, a counter-argument is not simply “the opposite” of whatever you’re saying. Instead, it’s a targetted objection, which you then proceed to either refute (discredit/show that it’s wrong or that it doesn’t apply) or appropriate (say that it’s partly right but that it misses the bigger picture). For more on this, read the primer on rhetoric.
    https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/general_writing/the_writing_process/thesis_statement_tips.html

  • “Organic Chemistry Exam Assistance and Long-Term Assignment Help”

    I have a CHEM 2423 (Organic Chemistry) exam that is due today and I need someone who can do it for me through RemotePC (I will share my screen and you will do the exam)
    This will be a long-term commtment as I need someone to do other assignments for me as well.

  • Summary of “Mock Systems Meeting” Video: Strategies and Impact 1. Active Listening and Reframing: The coordinator in the video demonstrates the importance of active listening and reframing in a systems meeting. She listens attentively to each member’s

    Watch the  Mock Systems Meeting.mp4 video and summarize 5 major takeaways from the video and why. Ex. What strategies did you notice the coordinator do? What was their impact? Did you notice reframing, active listening, or strength spotting? What did she do to engage system members? Did she provide education? How? Etc.
    Video Link 
    https://universitysystemnh-my.sharepoint.com/personal/flb1012_usnh_edu/_layouts/15/stream.aspx?id=%2Fpersonal%2Fflb1012%5Fusnh%5Fedu%2FDocuments%2FResources%20and%20Training%2FCTG%2F10%2E%20Week%2010%20%2D%20Systemic%20Consultation%20%2B%20Outreach%2FMock%20Systems%20Meeting%2Emp4&nav=eyJyZWZlcnJhbEluZm8iOnsicmVmZXJyYWxBcHAiOiJPbmVEcml2ZUZvckJ1c2luZXNzIiwicmVmZXJyYWxBcHBQbGF0Zm9ybSI6IldlYiIsInJlZmVycmFsTW9kZSI6InZpZXciLCJyZWZlcnJhbFZpZXciOiJNeUZpbGVzTGlua0NvcHkifX0&ga=1&LOF=1&referrer=StreamWebApp%2EWeb&referrerScenario=AddressBarCopied%2Eview%2E117ece0d%2Df0c1%2D4de4%2D8669%2D3a8f8d7e3114

  • Title: Contrasting Theories on Criminal Behavior: A Case Study of Two Brothers

    This writing will serve to contrast different ideas. You are allowed to take any two theories   learned up to this point and contrast the ideas and show/or refute your selection. In short, discuss your prompt, your chosen theories, answer the question associated with the prompt, ensure APA compliance, include at least four references (and citations) with two being peer-reviewed, and have fun.
    Select one (or two) of the bullet points.
    What if an offender commits a highly irrational crime, such as physically assaulting a person in front of a police officer?  Would you argue that that person made a rational choice to commit that crime? 
    What if biological profiles were created to identify individuals who were most likely to engage in criminal behavior?  What would be the possible consequences of identifying believed criminals before they were actually criminal?  
    What if two boys grow up in the same family.  They attend the same school and have the same friends.  One becomes a criminal and the other a police officer.  Explain.
    Let me know which of the bullet points you choose.
    Make sure the 2 peer reviewed soources are construsted the right way.
    The paper must be four full pages of information. That means four full pages of text/information, and not to include references, title, etc. I would suggest that you go over by a few sentences to a paragraph onto the fifth page. You must follow APA formatting.

  • “Enhancing Innovation at University of Miami Health System: Recommendations Based on Key Models” Enhancing Innovation at University of Miami Health System: Recommendations Based on Key Models Introduction: Innovation is crucial for the success and growth of any organization, especially in

    Key Models document attached.Please
    Provide brief information and three (3) new relevant recommendations that can be offered to University of Miami Health System to enhance its innovation, based on the work you submitted in Week 6 attached
    Please submit a minimum of two recommendations supported by your prior research and sources from your analysis used for Week 6. Include the rationale for each recommendation, flowing from your detailed analysis in Week 6.
    2-3 academic journal sources

  • Title: Comparing Chemical and Behavioral Addictions

     In conjunction with the course readings, review the differences and similarities between addiction to chemical substances and behavioral addictions (See chapter 14 of textbook) and youtube video at 

  • “The Infinitely Small: Exploring the Role of Microorganisms in Health, Industry, and the Environment”

    Louis Pasteur said, “The role of the infinitely small in nature is infinitely large.” Explain what he meant, using examples of the roles of microorganisms in health, industry, and the environment.

  • Title: Analysis of Business Environment and Identification of Opportunities and Threats for [Organization Name] in the Next Three Years

    Note: See the Tutorial in week 7 to distinguish recommendations from opportunities and threats.
    structure
    Use a Professional Report structure. In general, your project report must include the following sections:
    1. Executive Summary
    A summary of the entire report in a single page. This should be written after the rest of the report has been completed. The aim of this section is to allow a busy manager to get an overview of the entire   report without needing to read the full document.
    2. Introduction:
    What is the purpose of this document? For which organisation is it developed? What will be covered?
    3. Body: Analysis of the Business Environment
    You may have a different emphasis on different lenses, but each of the two lenses will be relevant.
    •    Which course concepts will you use for each lens? Identification of Opportunities and Threats:
    •    What are the opportunities and threats from the external business environment for the organisation in the next three years?
    The analysis supports your identification of relevant opportunities and threats. Therefore, it is vital that the analysis section is more extensive and detailed than the subsequent discussions on opportunities  and threats.
    Note: You can organise this section based on your way of storytelling, which is not necessarily organised by the lenses.
    4. Conclusion
    Briefly summarise your report. Highlight how you have addressed the complexity of the business environment.
    5. Reference list
    Include a reference list following theHarvard Referencing format.
    6. Appendices
    If you have additional information that is important and relevant but cannot fit within the body of your    report, you may include this in an appendix. Anything included in an appendix must be referred to in the body of the report. However, the story of the report must make sense without having to refer to an
    appendix. This should not be a data dump. If you can provide a reliable link or a summary, this will add more value.

  • “Unlocking the Success of TripAdvisor: A Case Study in the Travel Industry”

    please see brief and guide for full details. Minimum of 15 essential/ mandatory resources ( fine to have more than 15). The case study is TripAdvisor in the travel industry. statistics, graphs, pictures are to be on the slides. interactive slides.