Wednesday, July 31, 2019
Myth on Change Management
Bill, lost his job recently. It seems his company was downsized, his well developed skills were no longer required. It's tempting to claim his company was at fault. But the fault was his and his alone. Let me explain why. Things are changing incredibly fast. Yesterday's idea, is an emerging technology today, mainstream news tomorrow and history by next week. Andâ⬠¦ everyone contributes to the speed of change. There's a myth about management, since we're responsible for so much change, we must be good at coping with it. I've observed the exact opposite. Managers have great difficulty accepting change. They tend to get complacent in their ââ¬Ësecure' status quo. They believe the skills they've acquired, will serve them well into the future, in spite of all Take a close look at business magazines. Each issue offers something new, something different. Each advertisement promises to increase productivity, to increase efficiency, to inflict change upon our unsuspecting organization. Used properly, magazines are a guidepost to the future. Ignore them and they'll get you downsized. Bill acquired his management skills in the trenches. He worked his way up through the ranks. He acquired a set of skills, and over the years, deepened them. He began to believe his tool kit of management techniques was complete. They'd served him well in the past, and would suffice in the future. Bill's error was not in his judgment of whether or not a particular skill was long lasting. Bill's error had little if anything to do with ââ¬Ëmanagement skills.' His error lay in his world view. He believed his world would stay the same. Somehow he's protected from change. Somehow he alone is immune. Shielded in immunity, he gives no thought to a ââ¬Ëdifferent' tomorrow. He leans on his illusion of status quo, even while destroying the status quo of others. He's not alone in this. He's joined by politicians, unions, successful companies, staff, by anyone and everyone who's comfortable with past achievements. How do you prepare for the future? Step one is trivialâ⬠¦ Acknowledge uncertainty. That alone, will keep you from being complacent. That alone, will have you thinking about alternatives. That alone, will remind you that you're not alone. Everybody is faced with the same uncertainty. Welcome to the future! Next ââ¬â you're not your business card. No matter what your title, no matter what your function, you're more than a ââ¬Ëbox' on an org chart. You're a collection of skills with the ability to learn new ones. These steps do little to change the future. Accepting uncertainty and solid self assessment is a good strategy, but without a plan of action, they'll add up to nothing. Assume you're fired tomorrow, what would you do? Sounds drastic, but it happens every day to thousands of people from ââ¬Ëevery walk of life.' So why not to you? What better time to contemplate it, than today, when you still have a job, and time to plan? Bill lost his job because he couldn't see beyond his status quo. Don't make that same mistake, contemplate this issue of Words of Mouth devoted to Change. Ask the questionâ⬠¦ ââ¬Å"What's my place in the uncertainty I'm helping create?â⬠Then leap into your future. What is the only thing constant in our lives? CHANGE impacts everything we do and is never-ending. Whether technological, psychological, physical or emotional in nature, we must learn how to deal with change effectively if In programs I have conducted for clients, their most frequent requests are in two areas: 1.What do I do with negative people? 2.How can I get people motivated? It could be argued these two areas have always been important. I have noticed the need for assistance with these areas is in direct proportion to the changes the organization is experiencing. We all go along our ââ¬Å"merry-little-wayâ⬠until one day and â⬠¦ boom â⬠¦ change appears. The change is sometimes our own doing but more often beyond our immediate control. When this occurs, the response is sometimes demonstrated in negativity or in an unwillingness to move. This constant newness is outside many people's comfort zones and they are confused as to how they should respond. My clients know change is inevitable and yet have staff who are reluctant to embrace the constantly changing environment. It may be management themselves who are reluctant to adopt the changes necessary for organizational success. Management and staff must deal with technological, psychological and personal changes, all of which impact on performance. People handle change in different ways. It is estimated as high as 78% of people are followers â⬠¦ they do not want to be first at anything. They would rather wait until something happens and then copy what they see. Approximately 5% are leaders. The remaining 17% have no idea where everybody else went! I work with the 5 percenters who want to learn approaches which will produce the best results through encouraging the 78% to follow and drag along the 17% who aren't quite sure what is happening. I will never suggest all change will be enjoyable. I believe we have to learn to adapt to it. The good news about change is it happens so quickly that if you don't like the change, just wait and it will change again soon. The bad news is if you do like the change you had better enjoy it now because it will not be here very long. What can we do? I have found one of the biggest roadblocks to personal adaptation to change is the belief we can just relax in what I call the coast mode. Do you know anyone in the coast modeÃâ°just coasting, coasting? The problem is there is only one way you can coast and that is downhill. The last person to realize you are coasting is usually yourself. Each of us knows at least one person in our personal lives who is going downhill and has not realized it yet. Your staff sees you every day and will very quickly recognize which way you are going. In a terrific book I recently read entitled Flight Of The Buffalo by James A. Belasco and Ralph C. Stayer, the realization of managers that ââ¬Å"I Am The Problemâ⬠is the first step in overcoming the ââ¬Å"What do I do with negative people or How do I motivate people?â⬠problems. Demonstrating calculated risk-taking and encouraging staff to do likewise creates a different mind-set towards change. People who are not encouraged to take risks will not. All of us have failed at least once in our lives. What do we remember longestâ⬠¦good experiences or bad? The bad ones discourage us about additional attempts. Overcoming our negative programming about failure is a key step towards meeting the challenge of change. Working with, or worse still, living with someone who does not want to change can be a very frustrating experience.
Tuesday, July 30, 2019
Female Foeticide: Death Before Birth Essay
It has been six long decades since India gained independence but many Indians are still trapped in age-old traditional beliefs. Here, ââ¬Ëold beliefsââ¬â¢ imply the mindset of people who still find themselves in the trap of girl-boy inequality. The ââ¬Ëliberalââ¬â¢ Indian society has failed to transform the other orthodox India. No doubt India is advancing at a fast pace in the field of science and technology, and also in aping of the western culture, but if we look at the grass root level, the picture is not so rosy; it is rather a dark, especially when it comes to how we treat the fairer sex. The status of females in India aptly symbolizes Indiaââ¬â¢s status of being a developing nation ââ¬â miles away from becoming a developed state. Of course, India deserves to be in this list because here, in this 21st century, the girl child continues to be murdered before she is born. Female foeticide is still prevalent in the Indian society, in fact, it has been a practice for hundreds of years. Narrow-minded people do not mind murdering their unborn daughters for the fear of giving huge amounts of dowry at the time of her marriage. Such people, whenever they discover they are going to have a girl child (through illegal sex selection tests), get the foetus aborted. Else they would continue to reproduce till they get a male heir. When price rise is already taking a toll on the standard of living, is it necessary to go in for more than two children irrespective of their gender? Many families put pressure on women to give birth to boy so that he can take familyââ¬â¢s name forward, light the funeral pyre and be the bread earner of the family. But these days, are girls less competent than boys? Just look at the results of Board exams or any other competitive exams, girls mostly outshine boys. Women empowerment has led to inundation of females excelling in the corporate world, engineering and medical professions. Sadly, there have been numerous incidents of the foetus being found lying in farms, floating in rivers, wrapped up in jute bags etc. Indiaââ¬â¢s major social problem is the intentional killing of the girl child. The struggle for a girl child starts the day her existence is known in her motherââ¬â¢s womb. The fear and struggle to survive swallow most of the girlââ¬â¢s life even if she is ââ¬Ëallowedââ¬â¢ to live in this cruel world. In India, the girl child is considered a burden as huge amounts of money, gold and other items need to be given in the form of dowry when she gets married. Dowry is not the only reason for poor couple to abort their girl child. The ages old traditions, customs and beliefs of the Indian society are largely responsible for creating a negative mindset among the couples. More shocking is the fact that the sinful crime of female foeticide is not only common in rural areas where social discrimination against women, lack of proper education etc. ca n be considered as reasons behind carrying out such acts, but also the ultra modern, so-called ââ¬Ëeducatedââ¬â¢ people living in urban areas and metropolitan cities who are a step ahead in killing the girl child in the womb. The truth behind this crime has been brought into light several times by the print and electronic media. But, it has failed to melt the hearts and minds of those who remain unaffected by the consequences of the grave sin they are committing. The matter was discussed in length and breadth in the inaugural episode of the show ââ¬ËSatyamave Jayateââ¬â¢ anchored by Bollywood actor Aamir Khan. The show has once again ignited the spirited discussion on the female foeticide in the country. That episode had mothers from different parts of rural and urban India talking about the pressure and the problems they faced for delivering a girl child. Although the show is doing really well and has already garnered positive reviews from the audiences, we will have to wait and see whether the impact will remain even after the programme stops beaming into our drawing rooms every Sunday. The emotional connect which the show has successfully created should be strong enough to stop the killing of the girl child before being born. If we look at the figures of sex ratio in India, according to the 2011 Census, the number of girls stands at 940 which is a marginal increase from 933 in 2001. Not surprisingly, Haryana has the lowest sex ratio among the states while Kerala remains at the top with the highest sex ratio. In the national capital Delhi, the statistics stand at 821 girls against 1000 boys in 2001 compared to 866 in 2011. According to the statistics, nearly 10 million female foetuses have been aborted in the country over the past two decades. Of the 12 million girls born in India, one million do not see their first birthdays. As a result, human trafficking has become common in various states of India where teenage girls are being sold for cheap money by poor families. The girls are treated as sex objects and more than half of such cases go unreported. The United Nationsââ¬â¢ World Population Fund indicated that India has one of the highest sex imbalances in the world. Not surprisingly, demographers warn that there will be a shortage of brides in the next 20 years because of the adverse juvenile sex ratio, combined with an overall decline in fertility. With the advent of technology, ultrasound techniques gained widespread use in India during the 1990s. It resulted in the foetal sex determination and sex selective abortion by medical professionals. Recently, incidences of female foeticide were reported from Beed district in Maharashtra where women used to come to a doctorââ¬â¢s clinic to get their female child aborted for Rs 2000. Just think for a moment about the doctorââ¬â¢s connivance in this illegal act. Doctors, whose aim is to save the lives of people, happily kill the foetus for a meagre two thousand bucks! And more heart wrenching is the fact that the aborted foetuses were very often fed to dogs. The above mentioned case is not the only one of such heart wrenching heinous crimes. There are thousands of such clinics where illegal activities are carried out on a daily basis and in some cases, in connivance with politicians and police men. The life transition from a female foetus to a school going girl to a caring woman is never an easy task for the fairer sex. She has to face challenges at every step of her life. Daily, there is news related to rape, sexual harassment, molestation, verbal abuse, torture, exploitation. She has to fight against gender indiscrimination, inequality, and hundreds of social norms are tagged with her the day she puts her steps outside her home. In most of the cases, women abort their female child involuntarily when they succumb to family pressures. The in-lawsââ¬â¢ illogical demand/ desire for a boy preference makes the life of women hell. Sometimes, she is left by her husband if she is unable to give birth to a child and worse happens when she conceives a girl child. Ironically, it all happens in a country where the girl is seen as an incarnation of Goddess ââ¬ËLaxmiââ¬â¢. True, many families are out of bounds in joy when a girl child is born in their family. They think she will bring luck, harmony, happiness and peace in their family. They even touch her feet to seek her blessings. Many childless couples even adopt a girl child irrespective of the worries of her future (mainly marriage). In such a grim scenario, itââ¬â¢s really difficult to digest the harsh reality of the differences between a boy and a girl. India has a deeply rooted patriarchal attitude to which even the doctors and the women, who in spite of being the victims, unthinkingly subscribe. There is an urgent need of undoing the historical and traditional wrongs of a gendered society; only then the hope of abolition of female infanticide and boy preference can positively adjust the figures in favour of the girl child in future. The skewed sex ratio has to find a balance in order to maintain the progress of the country.
Monday, July 29, 2019
(Pe) Physical Education (Essay, Sac) Training Diary
I designed a training program that i carried out over a 6 week period which aimed at strengthening my upper body and core. I exercised for 60 minutes each day and after ever workout i collected the data and recorded it in a diary which described the exact exercise, number of sets, reps and duration. Before the training program i did a series of post tests which involved a 7 stage ab tests, 1RM bench press and a 1 minute push up test. For the ab test i got to stage 5 which meant i could do 1 sit up and touch my elbows to my knees, with the bench press i could lift a max of 92. kg and with push ups i could do 40 in a minute. After i had finished my program i once again conducted a series of post tests to see how much i had improved. With my ab test i got to stage 6 which meant I could do the same but with a 2. 5kg weight held behind my head, with the bench press i got to 100kgs which is an increase of 7. 5kg and my push up test i got to 47 in a minute. I found that my greatest weekness came from my natural weight tests, with my push ups and sit ups. I belive these were more difficult due to my large weight as i weighted in at 105kg. But after i had finished my program i had put on 3kg due to an increase of muscle mass and a loss of fat. The reason i choose these tests was because they were specific to the exercises i was about to undertake for example with a push up it focuses on the core and all upper body muscles. Before each work out i did a series of proprioceptive neuromuscular facioitation stretches which i held for 6 seconds each stretch and after each workout i did a series of static stretches to help prevent the risk of injury. When i started doing my exercises the energy systems that i used changed between the anaerobic and aerobic energy systems. As i did exercises that invloved 10 reps, fast twitch fibres and a duration of less than 15 seconds i worked anaerobically but when i did my core intival training my body used interplay. As i started out my body was working anaerobically but as my heart rate rose to over 80% max heart rate and the workout went for longer than 2 minutes my body started working aerobically and used slow twitch fibre as well as when my exercise intensified to around 85% max HR the onset of hydrogen ions accumalated in certain muscles due to the inabillity to continue my workout and muscle pump in the active areas. After a couple of weeks of training aerobicaly my muscles got trained to be able to pospone the high accumalation of h+. The reason i choose the exercises i did was because each demonstrated a differnt muscular contraction or a mixture of each. flys, planks, sit-ups and push ups used isometric contractions, biceap curls, bench/chest and shoulder presses used concentric contractions and with pull downs and shoulder pull ups used eccentric contractions. All exercises were specific to the muscular area i was trying to improve, each day i worked on one part of the body for example on a Monday i would focus just on my chest and on a wendsday i would work on my biceps. The reason i choose to do my program like that was because it was easier to remember what area to work on and gave each muscle grouple a huge workout instead of doing 5 different areas each day. With reference to my diary each workout showed progresive overload either with an increase in weigth or frequency and after a day or two i explained how my body showed the signs of delayed onset muscular soreness due to the overload. The only issue i ran into with my workout was that some days i wouldnt have a spotter which made my workouts quiet difficult. After i had finished my six week trainig program my muscular strength had increased dramatically with my biceap strength increased 7. 5kg, chest strength increased 7. kg, core strenght increased 2. 5kg and i was able to dely the onset of hydrogen ions from 25 reps to 35+ reps, etc. The whole process was more than enjoyable. I learnt many different exercises from other experience weight lifters and many pointers to help improve my skills. The program has helped me outside of weight lifting, such as being able to pass and throw further while playing basketball. I might of improved my program by working with a friend to make the work out more enjoyable and to help assist me in lifting.
Sunday, July 28, 2019
Observation #6 Essay Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 250 words
Observation #6 - Essay Example I get the idea that women can only excel in the field of fashion and beauty; while, accomplishments and rewards are only for men, which should not be the case in real. This is gender biasing, which the media is portraying very beautifully. The Financial Times is a business magazine, and has some very current and hot news related to the business market. Women are considered as equally proficient gender as men, since the magazine highlights news regarding both men and women equally. April 5, 2013 publication talks about a female consultant chemist, Rachel Edwards-Stuart, and highlights her accomplishment in the lab. Both men and women are shown to be having the same level of intellect, engaging in professional meetings and conferences. The magazine does not portray gender biasing, and I get the idea that both the genders are equally professional in their fields; otherwise, there are many other magazines that emphasize the intellect and wits of men
Critique of a research article Essay Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 4000 words
Critique of a research article - Essay Example It also examines and explores the aspect of the type of criminal activities, and its impact on their employment possibilities by investigating the topic from the employerââ¬â¢s perspective. They have also successfully provided all the supportive evidences in the form of statistical records, based on the behavior of a given set of employers in relation to recruitment of ex-convicts on the basis of the nature and type of the crimes for which they were convicted. However, the article also mentions the lack of awareness on the part of the employers, about the existence of the ââ¬Å"ROA, 1974â⬠, and its significance, along with the remedies available to them to eliminate such ignorance on the part of the employers. The Act, seeks to rehabilitate ex-offenders by providing them with better employment opportunities. It is an initiative on the part of the government to help the offenders and ex-convicts resettle in the society by enabling them to ââ¬Å"wipe the slate cleanâ⬠of their criminal record. This is true in case of those convicts who have already served their sentence and have not been reconvicted for any other offence subsequent to their acquittal, thus treating their conviction as ââ¬Å"spentâ⬠for the purpose of employment. (ROA, 1974). Thus they have pointed out the cause and effect of the topic under consideration and also provided a host of solutions available at their disposal, ensuring the completeness of the research article. The authors have also thoroughly examined the fact that, a majority of the employers displayed increased resistance while recruiting people with a criminal record, with a significant part of them, showing keen interest in researching the backgrounds of their prospective employees. All in all, the article is a well-researched and well-supported with relevant evidences and the inclusion of statistical data for supporting the arguments put
Saturday, July 27, 2019
What will be the impact on business of the abandonment of th e penny Essay
What will be the impact on business of the abandonment of th e penny (Canadian one - cent piece) - Essay Example This will result to a low circulation of money and businesses all over the country will be affected, for the loss of value. This will go on for a while the business and the economy continues to deteriorate in value due to the reduced cash flow. The government will also have a lot of work and spend equally when it will be collecting the pennies for reuse in its financial institutions. The countryââ¬â¢s federal budget will also change its states that will affect the governmentââ¬â¢s expectation to apply a new way of getting equivalent currency for cash transaction in a fair and a transparent manner. The mathematical rounding off of figures will be done in several items and hence transactions involving low value items will be complicated to perform. The penny has been found to be of great help and use in the business world which is changing rampantly as new methods crops out day by day. AUSTEN, I. (n.d.). In Canada, the Pennyà ¢Ã¢â ¬Ã¢â ¢s Time to Shine Is Over - NYTimes.com. The New York Times - Breaking News, World News & Multimedia. Retrieved March 11, 2013, from http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/30/business/global/in-canada-the-pennys-time-to-shine-is-over.html?_r=0 Canadas penny withdrawal: All you need to know - Business - CBC News. (n.d.). CBC.ca - Canadian News Sports Entertainment Kids Docs Radio TV. Retrieved March 11, 2013, from http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/story/2012/03/30/f-penny-faq.html Penny C. Sansevieri: What the Plus! Whats Up With Google+? An Interview With Guy Kawasaki. (n.d.). Breaking News and Opinion on The Huffington Post. Retrieved March 11, 2013, from
Friday, July 26, 2019
Research paper final Essay Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 2000 words
Research paper final - Essay Example This should change because maintaining vibrant Internet demands that the government respects privacy of the information people share online. This research paper argues that illegal data mining is a threat to the Internet and American technology companies. According to data from American data companies, National Security Agencyââ¬â¢s Internet surveillance, and illegal data mining is hurting international sales of American Internet companies and hurting online freedom. Estimates by a policy research group called Information Technology & Innovation Foundation says by 2016 US companies will lose an estimated $35 billion in lost revenues (Herman 15). Some of the companies likely to lose out most are Apple and Google that benefit most from an open Internet without national boundaries. Data mining is become an important way of getting personal information because so many people rely on the Internet to communicate and get all types of information. According to Carr (2008), he does not all his research as a writer online. Previously, he had to get magazines, books, and other written materials to research and this used a lot of time and slowed down his productivity. Internet research on the other hand is easy. He says that he starts his research by selecting a few articles, which guides him onto resources that are more similar by clinking on links. Within a short time, he is able to get quality resources that he can use for his writings. The downside of this convenience is his activities can easily be tracked. Search engines and other websites track their visitors using cookies. Tracking is done for purposes of advertising. The other groups of people interested in online activities of people are hackers and the NSA. Hackers are interested in stealing personal informa tion for personal gain. NSA on the hand track online users in order to detect illegal online activities and communications between
Thursday, July 25, 2019
The Different Models of Disability Essay Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 2000 words
The Different Models of Disability - Essay Example According to the research findings, it can, therefore, be said that two of the most prominent models of disability are the medical and social models. These models have been greeted with great skepticism in that they are thought of as being less reflective of the dynamics of disability in the real world. Additionally, they are thought of as being restrictive in nature in that they force individuals to perceive disability in a predefined and very rigid manner. These models, however, to prove to be helpful in that they establish a framework which can be utilized as a means of enabling individuals to gain an intimate understanding of the issues related to disability and the perspective of those who conceive the models as well as the institutions which utilize these models in policy setting initiatives. This report focuses on the obtaining an understanding of the different models of disability and its implications and ramifications. First and foremost, the Medical Model maintains that dis ability is the resultant of an underlying physical or mental limitation and is largely independent of social or geographical context. It is sometimes referred to as the Biological-Inferiority or Functional-Limitation Model. The most poignant conceptualization of this model can be seen in the definition as set forth by the World Health Organization (WHO) and devised through the contribution of several medical doctors. Under this conceptualization, a disability is defined as any restriction or lack of ability to perform an activity in the manner or within the range that is considered normal for humans while impairment is defined as any or abnormality of psychological or anatomical structure or function. Additionally, a handicap is defined as any disadvantage experienced by an individual which results from an impairment or disability which limits or prevents the fulfillment of a role that has become customary for that individual.
Wednesday, July 24, 2019
Definitions Essay Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 750 words
Definitions - Essay Example While the generally accepted symptoms of autism are observable by 18 months of age characterized by inattention and undeveloped speech, the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development added more behavioral symptoms that includes problems with eye contact, not responding to oneââ¬â¢s name, joint attention problems, underdeveloped skills in pretend play and imitation, and problems with nonverbal communication and language. They also added that there are more subtle signs of autism that would begin at eight months of age. In the investigation of O'Hearn et al, it reported that autistic people process their world slower and with fewer elements. The study reported that autistic people have ââ¬Å"slightly fewer elements, slower serial processes, and less sensitivity to parallel/holistic processes that mature into adulthoodâ⬠and this ââ¬Å"could undermine the representation of multiple elements in several waysâ⬠(14). Early intervention is crucial for the effect ive handling of autism. The earlier the detection and intervention, the more effective it will be. It has to be clarified however that there is still no known treatment for autism disorder. Intervention for autism includes ââ¬Å"behavioral, social, and skill-building trainingâ⬠(Kuangparichat 81). There are also alternative schools that address autism such as charter or magnet schools, private academies to home schooling. In the research of Kuangparichat, it was also stressed the importance of this intervention particularly the Individualized Education Plan (IEP) among public schools as an important intervention tool for those who have autism. He stress that it is in fact a right of an autistic person to have an Individual Education Program because it is mandated by law where schools must have these kind of program for students who have autism to live a normal life (82). Autism is often misunderstood by society and people who have it are readily judged to be academically and s ocially inadequate. At the onset, this may appear to be true because autistic people have relatively slower cognitive skills and awkward social skills compared to a mainstream individual (Durand and Barlow 23). This assessment however is also inadequate because it failed to recognize that contribution to the general good of society is not only limited to the ability of being in a regular class or having the regular cognitive and motor skill but rather is measured on the final output of an individual less the liability that he or she may pose. Works Cited David H. Barlow,V. Mark Durand. ââ¬Å"Abnormal Psychology: An Integrative Approach 6th ed.â⬠Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, 2012. Kuangparichat, Malynn. ââ¬Å"LEGAL RIGHTS OF YOUNG ADULTS WITHà AUTISM: TRANSITIONING INTO MAINSTREAM ADULTHOODâ⬠..à Widener Law Review.à 2010, Vol. 16 Issue 1, p175-196. O'Hearn, Kirsten Franconeri, Steven Wright, Catherine Minshew, Nancy Luna, Beatriz.; ââ¬Å"The Development of Individu ation inà Autismâ⬠.à Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance. (November 12,
Tuesday, July 23, 2019
Compare three companies Essay Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 1000 words
Compare three companies - Essay Example 1 in the overall mobile phone market; with its revenues skyrocketing and sales to end users growing 19 percent in the second quarter of 2013 .This paper is an attempt to identify the key tactics and measures adopted by Samsung to reach the top slot of consumer market all over the world. Apple and Samsung have been rivals of each other over a number of years for acquiring the entitlement for the best Smartphone manufacturer. In the recent past, Apple has convincingly won the best Smartphone provider in the past years. After the loss of its iconic mastermind Steve Job, Apple has lost its hold on the market and is receiving tough competition from Samsung. Samsung, on the other hand, has shot to fame by breaking his own previous sales records by consistently improving the quality of its smartphones, giving high-quality products like the Samsung Galaxy and giving lots of new features with every version of its smart phone range. Although Sony is not far behind but it will take time to comp ete on an equal scale with Samsung. Sony had established its name quite firmly in the television, LCD, LED, gadgets, and cellphone manufacturing industry but Samsung has now taken the lead in this context and is capturing the TV market by developing LED, LCD with more advanced technology and more user friendly features under reasonable rates. After the not so successful launch of iPhone5, Apple has quietly predicted that the new iPhone 5S will be the first ever Apple phone that has been created primarily to compete with Samsung and will give a tough competition in head to head sales. If both companyââ¬â¢s latest smartphones are analyzed, then it becomes clear that the image of Samsung is in every way a step ahead from Apple because of its unique production techniques. It is important to have a comparison of iPhone5S and Samsung Galaxy S4 specs to understand the difference between the latest offerings from each vendor. Both these sets were introduced in 2013. DISPLAY Samsung Apple Physical size 5.0 inches 4.0 inches à Resolution 1080 x 1920 pixels 640 x 1136 pixels à Pixel density 441 ppi 326 ppi à Technology Super AMOLED IPS LCD à Colors 16 777 216 16 777 216 à Touchscreen Capacitive, Multi-touch Capacitive, Multi-touch à Features Light sensor, Proximity sensor, Scratch-resistant glass (Corning Gorilla Glass) Light sensor, Proximity sensor à HARDWARE System chip Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 APQ8064T Apple A6 à Processor Quad core, 1900 MHz, Krait 300 Dual core, 1300 MHz, Apple Swift à Graphics processor Adreno 320 PowerVR SGX543MP3 à System memory 2048 MB RAM (Dual-channel) / LPDDR3 1016 MB RAM (Dual-channel, 1066 MHz) / LPDDR2 à Built-in storage 16 GB 16 GB à Storage expansion microSD, microSDHC, microSDXC up to 64 GB à à (Han) From the above comparison, it becomes clear that Samsung is taking the lead in almost every aspect related to producing a great and fully loaded smart phone. The only edge that iPhone 5s seem to have over Samsungââ¬â¢s Galaxy S4 is that iPhone tends to be much lighter but still Samsungââ¬â¢s S4 offers so much more and is also having a handy look to suit all sorts of customers. The strange thing which is noticed by the users of android is that the new version of Apple ios7 is almost a replica to the android users, which is a controversial topic. It is crystal clear that the iPhone is actually adopting android interface software to give their iPhone a different look. The new version of
Open and Closed Source and What It Means Essay Example for Free
Open and Closed Source and What It Means Essay Open-Source means it is free. No one owns it, so there is no source code, no key code, and no licensing to purchase. When Linus Torvalds created Linux, he determined that the more people or, the more minds delving into the software can make the system more creative, more improved, and the possibilities are endless. Thus, he gave Linux to the world as a free open-source operating system (Damicon; Linking The Left Brain And The Right Brain: Open Vs. Closed Source, 2003-2009). Open-Source is defined by the code or source code is accessible to person or persons who essentially use it or in IT definition: end-user. The user can revise and refashion or change it, as long as he or she adhere to the standards in the associated license (Damicon; Linking The Left Brain And The Right Brain: Open Vs. Closed Source, 2003-2009). How Open Source is different from Closed Source Closed-Source is owned by someone, or some company, and cost money. The buyer has to pay for the right to use the program, but the buyer does not own it. In the case of Microsoft Windows companies have to purchase licensing rights can purchase keys codes in volume, and individuals pay for their key codes, or rights to use the software or program (Damicon; Linking The Left Brain And The Right Brain: Open Vs. Closed Source, 2003-2009). Closed Source is also defined in that the code or source code is retained and maintained by the designer or developer, and they are the only ones that can make changes to it, analyze it, or scrutinize it (Damicon; Linking The Left Brain And The Right Brain: Open Vs. Closed Source, 2003-2009). Linux Linux is an open-source version of the UNIX operating system. It has been said According to What Is Linux And Why Is It So Popular? (1998-2013), it is as ââ¬Å"much a phenomenon as it is an operating systemâ⬠(para. 4). The original version or first version of UNIX was created some decades ago and was used mostly as a research operating system in universities. Dynamic desktop workstations from other companies flourished in the 1980s, and were all created from UNIX. Because many companies were trying to compete with each other each of them had, their own version of UNIX and software sales was very problematic. The Linux kernel created by Linus Torvalds, invited help or innovation ideas from others, but the prerequisite was that they had to contribute free. Windows Windows is a computer operating system with a GUI or graphical user interface. It is a personal computer operating system, or PC OS created by Microsoft. The first version in 1985 was presented to residential and commercial PC users the GUI that was created at an experimental lab at Xerox, as well as Appleââ¬â¢s Lisa and Macintosh (Mac) computers. Microsoftââ¬â¢s Word and excel became the customary for users throughout the world in homes and businesses. OS X OS X is also known as Mac OS X, or Mac OS 10 is the present version of the operating system used on Apple Macintosh computers. It is a user-friendly OS. Previous versions based on the original Mac OS were released in 1984. In the late 1990ââ¬â¢s Windowââ¬â¢s started to make Mac OS and Appleââ¬â¢s OS appear to be outdated, and so Apple overhauled Mac OS and generated a new OS from the ground up. Since a lot of the code was composed from scratch, a great deal of it was taken from NEXTSTEP OS. NEXTSTEP was a Unix-based system running on NeXT computers, which are no longer manufactured. Apple purchased NeXT in 1997 and Steve Jobs was hired as interim CEO. Apple then took the Unix-based code from NEXTSTEP and combined it with the GUI of Mac OS 9. It became an unwavering, high-performance OS that was as stable as UNIX and the intuitive interface of the Mac. Mac OS X 10. 0 was released in 2001. General Licensing Models (GPL) Gnu Public License, Microsoft Licensing Most software licenses are intended to not allow the user to share and change it. However, the GNU or General Public License is designed to allow users to share, copy, and change free software, or to confirm the software is free to all users. Software that safeguards these privileges are kept is called free software. The license was originally written by Richard Stallman of the Free Software Foundation or (FSF) for the GNU project. According to Gnu General Public License, Version 3 29 June 2007 (2007), ââ¬Å"The GNU General Public license is a free, copyleft license for software and other kinds of worksâ⬠(para. 1). Copyleft means a technique for creating a program whereby it is free; forcing any altered and expanded versions of said program to be free also. A software company provides a software license to a consumer who then provides their permission for the consumer to use their software packet or package. Typically, it comes with many restrictions, and only allows the user one copy per license. It cannot be copied or distributed in anyway. Such is the case for Microsoft. Microsoft also has volume licensing in that a corporation can purchase as many licenses, or also referred to as key codes, as they might need depending on the size of the business. When Microsoft came up with volume licensing it allowed businesses to save costs by not having to purchase the boxed software. The cost is only for the license number or key code. It can also give tailored buying choices and better software administration.
Monday, July 22, 2019
The US Correctional System Essay Example for Free
The US Correctional System Essay When it comes to the phrase ââ¬Å"being behind bars,â⬠most people get the visualization and thought of prison, our correctional facilities. When thinking of these prisons there is one big thought about it and that is time. Offenders that get sentenced to prison usually have a very long sentence over there head. The real questions for these correctional systems is how are offenders punished as well as how are they rehabilitated? People may never understand the main role of prisons, but it wonââ¬â¢t hurt to find out. When thinking of punishment when it comes to offenders what does it really mean? Punishment is a penalty dispensed on an offender with legal system. Correctional officials and parole board members determine the context of punishment and, occasionally, its length (Stanko, Gillespie CREWS, 2004). Soon after the advancement of penitentiaries, early disciplines were frequently brutal and torturous. These punishments were flogging, mutilation, branding, public humiliation, workhouses, and exile. Flogging is being beaten with a rod or a whip. The last flogging of an offender was in Delaware, June 16, 1952. Mutilation is basically a system of particular prevention that makes it challenging or unrealistic for people to carry out fate wrongdoings. All through history, diverse public orders have cut away the hands of hoodlums and burglars, blinded spies, and maimed attackers. Blasphemers had their tongues torn out, and pickpockets endured broken fingers. Noteworthy mutilation, which incorporated cutting off the ears and splitting out the tongue, was initiated in eleventh-century Britain and encroached on pursuers who poached on regal terrains. Branding was utilized to promptly distinguish declared guilty offenders and to caution alternates with whom they may go in contact of their perilous potential. Various early disciplines were composed to mortify offenders in accessible and to permit parts of the group a chance for vengeance. The stocks and pillory were two such disciplines. In the belief that neediness was created by slowness, administrations were snappy to make workhouses outlined to inject ââ¬Å"inclinations of industryâ⬠in the unemployed. Lastly, many criminals were banished in many societies. The French sent criminal offenders to Devils Island, and the Russians utilized Siberia for quite some time for the same reason (Schmalleger, 2008). Now days Imprisonment is the most regular illustration of discipline in the correctional framework, however the demise punishment and lesser punishments for example probation are likewise outlined to be corrective (eHow Contributor , 2013). In the philosophical level headed discussion about punishment, two fundamental sorts of speculations of discipline command: utilitarian speculation and retributive speculation. Speculations that set the objective of discipline as the anticipation of destiny wrongdoing (prevention) are for the most part pointed to as utilitarian being as how they are inferred from utilitarian theory. Past oriented speculations (hypotheses that center on the past activities of the offender) are pointed to as retributivist for the reason that they look for requital from offenders for their criminal acts (Banks , 2013). After punishment comes rehabilitation. When it comes to prisons today, does rehabilitate really mean anything and if so what takes place with rehabilitation? Rehabilitate means to restore to a former capacity (Rehabilitate, 2013) as well as intimates interior change, importance a perpetual change in qualities, demeanor, ethics, or ways of getting a load of the planet (Stanko, Gillespie CREWS, 2004). The prison framework offers a mixture of courses to accommodate restore offenders: existence aptitudes classes, drug medicine arrangements, school, work developing, and an assortment of different projects (Hillman , 2009). Rehabilitation is the essential re-socialization strategy connected with the criminal equity framework. Throughout recovery, offenders study that faithful, adjusting conduct gives more gushing and material compensates than resistant, oppositional conduct. Correctional rehabilitation improved in tandem with the ascent of the social sciences in the early twentieth century. Scholastics started going to penitentiaries with the end goal of deductive exploration. It was noted that recovery regularly had a medicinal introduction. Clinicians and psychiatrics started overseeing emotional disposition tests to convicts throughout gathering and appraisal in the early twentieth century. Jail sociologists were likewise procured to group convicts as per their behavior and needs. A mixture of directing projects was launched, incorporating gathering treatment, conduct change, and contemplation. Rehabilitation was the overwhelming correctional theory for a large portion of the twentieth century. Nonetheless, the New York State Department of Corrections led an assessment investigation of rehabilitative projects in the mid1970s. Martinson was one of the scientists who presumed that recovery did not diminish recidivism. That is, medication and help customizes outlined to re-socialized convicts were not working. Martinsons exploration started a level headed discussion that kept up into the 1980s and 1990s. Lawmakers and social traditionalists utilized his summations to development the corrective part of adjustments, while analysts and liberals debated his findings. In late years, nonetheless, the open deliberation over restoration has disappeared in light of additionally pressing correctional issues, for example climbing jail inhabitant totals, packing, and budgetary lessening (Stanko, Gillespie CREWS, 2004). Determining whether punishment or rehabilitation is more effective in reducing crime, well it can be difficult to determine. In my opinion punishment would be the most effective. For example, if a 9 year old got in trouble by getting mad and going to his room after fighting with his parents and then slams the bedroom door. Talking with the child and pretty much telling them what they did was wrong is going to help them not do it again. If the child is punished by his parents and has to open and close the door softly 100 times nonstop in a row, it would teach the child that since he did something wrong he has to pay the price of it. I know that from experience. I used to slam the door and after opening and closing it over and over countless times, I learned my lesson and never slammed a door. Here is a quoted dialogue from the movie ââ¬Å"Shawshank Redemptionâ⬠that explains why I think rehabilitation isnââ¬â¢t very effective. Redding: ââ¬Å"Rehabilitated? Well, now, let me see. You know, I dont have any idea what that means.â⬠Parole Board Interviewer: ââ¬Å"Uh, well, it means youre ready to rejoin societyâ⬠ââ¬â Redding: ââ¬Å"I know what you think it means, sonny. To me, its just a made up word, a politicians word, so that young fellas like yourself can wear a suit and a tie and have a job. What do you really wanna know? Am I sorry for what I did?â⬠Parole Board Interviewer: ââ¬Å"Well, are you?â⬠Redding: ââ¬Å"Theres not a day goes by I dont feel regret. Not because Im in here, or because you think I should. I look back on the way I was then, a young, stupid kid who committed that terrible crime. I wanna talk to him. I wanna try to talk some sense to him tell him the way things are. But I cant. That kids long gone and this old man is all thats left. I gotta live with that. Rehabilitated? Its just a bull**** word. So you go on and stamp your form, sonny, and stop wasting my time. Because to tell you the truth, I dont give a s**t (American Rhetoric: Movie Speech , 1994).â⬠After this dialogue took place in the movie Reddingââ¬â¢s parole decision to be released was approved. So honestly I really donââ¬â¢t think that rehabilitation does any good in trying to change offendersââ¬â¢ personal behavior so that they will not commit any future crimes. Like Redding said, itââ¬â¢s just a made up word. Our US Correctional system can be very complex when it comes to punishment and rehabilitation. Flogging, mutilation, branding, public humiliation, workhouses, and exile were early punishments that took place soon after penitentiaries were created. Now dayââ¬â¢s imprisonment is the main role for punishment. Existence aptitudes classes, drug medicine arrangements, school, work developing, and an assortment of different projects are all associated with rehabilitation now days. Rehabilitation is the essential re-socialization strategy connected with the criminal equity framework. When it comes to reducing crime some people think that punishment is more effective than rehabilitation and others think that rehabilitation is more effective. We may never know exactly which one is more effective to help reduce crime but in my opinion punishment would me the most effective. It teaches the offender a lesson. Donââ¬â¢t get me wrong, rehabilitation can and does help for certain offenders, but for most offenders now days, sometimes it just takes some discipline to help turn them back around. References American Rhetoric: Movie Speech (1994). The shawshank redemption [Web]. Retrieved from http://www.americanrhetoric.com/MovieSpeeches/moviespeechtheshawshankredemptionparoleboard.html Banks , C. (2013). Criminal justice ethics. (3rd ed., p. 105). Tousand Oaks, California: Sage. Retrieved from http://www.sagepub.com/upm- data/5144_Banks_II_Proof_Chapter_5.pdf eHow Contributor (2013). Role of the correctional system. Retrieved from http://www.ehow.com/about_5087269_role-correctional-system.html Hillman , S. (2009, April 17). Do us prisons really rehabilitate criminals?. Retrieved from http://www.helium.com/items/1418951-prison- systems-rehabilitation Rehabilitate. In (2013). Merriam-Webster. Retrieved from http://www.merriam- webster.com/dictionary/rehabilitate Schmalleger, F. (2008). Criminal justice today: An introductory text for the 21st century . (11th ed., pp. 451-453). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall. Retrieved from http://content-crj.kaplan.edu/CJ101_1201B/images/product/M13_SCHM4091_11_SE_CH13.pdf Stanko, S., Gillespie, W., CREWS, G. A. (2004). Living in prison : A history of the correctional system with an insiders view. (pp. 10, 54-55). Westport, Connecticut: GREENWOOD PRESS. Retrieved from http://ehis.ebscohost.com.lib.kaplan.edu/eds/ebookviewer/ebook/nlebk_125608_AN? sid=a8ee54a8-197e-4b9a-8e17- [emailprotected]vid=2
Sunday, July 21, 2019
Learning Disability: Barriers to Effective Communication
Learning Disability: Barriers to Effective Communication Communication is the act or process of using words, sounds, or behaviours to express ideas, thoughts feelings, or exchange information (Merriam ââ¬â Webster, 2014). People with learning disabilities die younger than other people (Heslop et al, 2013). The Independent Inquiry into Access to Healthcare for People with Learning Disabilities (Michael, 2008) followed the Mencap report Death by Indifference (2007). The report concluded that there are inherent risks in the care system that result in high levels of health needs not being met. The inquiry found that people with learning disabilities appear to receive less effective care and that there are many shortcomings in the way treatment is delivered, with avoidable suffering caused by untreated ill health. Effective communication is essential in ensuring high quality health care (Balandin Hemsley, 2008) and is an essential skill for nurses (Nursing Midwifery Council (NMC), 2007). Because communication difficulties are characteristic of people with learning disabilities, the nurse needs strategies that can be used to promote communication and understanding by removing barriers, and developing their skills and knowledge. Why ? Effective communication is a recurring and pervasive theme in government policies, reports and best practice guidelines (Turner, 2014). Good practice guidance on working with parents with a Learning Disability (Department of Health, 2007), the survey of the human rights of adults with learning disabilities, A life like any other? (Joint Committee on Human Rights, 2008) and valuing people now (Department of Health, 2009). In particular, A Life Any Other? highlights the ways in which barriers to communication can all too easily result in the human rights of people with learning disabilities being breached, unmet communication needs can restrict access to public services. For example, research commissioned by Mencap showed that, of 215 GPs interviewed, 75% had received no training to help them treat people with a learning disability (Taylor Nelson Sofres, 2004, cited in Mencap, 2004). Children with LD Regnard et al. (2007) found more than twenty changes in behaviour in children with learning disability when they encountered distress, and it is likely those who have no verbal language are likely to be more receptive to non-verbal communication (Tuffrey ââ¬âWijne McEnhill, 2008). It is therefore vitally important for professionals working directly with children to engage with them however possible. Adults with LD Difficulties with communication have been consistently reported as a barrier in supporting adults with learning disabilities at the end of life . HEALTH NEEDS A high People with learning disabilities are likely to need assistance in communication. It has estimated that there are 1.5 million people in the United Kingdom (UK) with learning disabilities and between 50% and 90% suffer from sensory loss (Eric et al, 2012). Most people with learning disabilities have greater health needs than those with no disabilities. They are also likely to die at a younger age (Mencap, 2007). A number of reports in recent years have shown that there are failings in accessing services and in providing appropriate treatment for people with learning disabilities( Equal Treatment: Closing the Gap(2006); Death by Indifference (2007)). A life like no other (2007), a report into services for people with a learning disability in England, found that adults with a learning disability are particularly vulnerable to breaches of their human rights in healthcare services. There is considerable evidence that people with learning disabilities are not receiving the same level of health care as other people. In the UK, there have been many documented examples of secondary health services causing te preventable death of people with learning disabilities, with contributory factors reported to include poor communication, a failure of heath service staff to recognise pain, delays in diagnosis and treatment, a lack of basic care, and the use of Do Not Resuscitate orders (Heslop et al., 2013; Mencap, 2012a). A UK based Confidential Inquiry into premature deaths of people with learning disabilities (Heslop et al., 2013) estimated that 37% of deaths were potentially avoidable. When people with learning disabilities use health services, staff may have difficulty in meeting their needs because they are unable to communicate effectively with them. A number of reports (Department of Health, 2008; Mencap, 2012; Royal College of Nursing, 2010) highlighted the communication complexity between patient and the staff which have resulted in some cases of deaths and poor quality hospital care. HISTORY A report from Mencap (2007), entitles Death by Indifference, highlights the poor treatment received by six people with learning disabilities admitted to acute adult and mental health service. This poor treatment ultimately led to these peoplesââ¬â¢ deaths. The report goes as far to say that institutional discrimination exists within the National Health Service (NHS) towards people who have a learning disability with them getting worse health care than non-disables people. One of the major concerns raised by Mencap was the notion of diagnostic overshadowing. This is neglecting to recognise signs and symptoms of ill health assuming them to be characteristic of a personââ¬â¢s learning disability. Death by indifference In 2004, Mencap published Treat me Right, a report which highlighted the inequities of NHS healthcare provision to people with learning disabilities. This also highlighted that that healthcare professional should not depend on carers or family to communicate with service users with learning disabilities and hospitals must perform their legal duty of care. Healthcare providers are accountable to make sure that these service users have their needs met and this include an easy-read information in place. In 2006, the Disability Right Commission further emphasised concerns that people with learning disabilities were not afforded equitable access to healthcare services and treatment and as a consequence suffered more ill health and were more likely to die. In 2007, Mencap published Death by Indifference, a report which told the shocking stories of six people with learning disabilities who suffered potentially avoidable deaths while in various NHS healthcare service by improving communicati on. A subsequent independent inquiry (Micheal, 2008) and port by the Local Government Ombudsmen and Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsmen (2009) both confirmed that people with learning disabilities were consistently being placed at risk within primary and secondary healthcare services due to lack of and staff ââ¬âpatient communication http://www.ombudsman.org.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0013/1408/six-lives-part1-overview.pdf Death by Indifference (Mencap, 2007) attributed the unacceptable standards if care largely to an ignorance or apathy by nurses and other health professionals to understand and listen to their clients with learning disabilities. It is important that the individual is continually consulted about their care regardless of the extent of their learning disability. 74 deaths and counting (2012) The report by Mencap, 2012 relayed details of more potentially avoidable deaths of people with learning disabilities within NHS services. Reasonable adjustments The failure of public services to make reasonable adjustments regarding communication not only makes it extremely difficult for people with learning disabilities to access services, but it may also breach the Equality Act (2010) and Article 8 pf the European Convention on Human Rights (Micheal, 2008, p24). Poor communication with people who have learning disabilities has consequences that range from the relatively insignificant. For example a service user is given coffee when they would prefer tea. NON VERBAL COMMUNICATION Non-verbal communication is as important as verbal in interactions that influence dignity. For example, in a study of older peopleââ¬â¢s transitions (include older people with learning disabilities) between care service, Ellins et al. (2012) noted the following: ââ¬Ëone of the most striking findings was that even the smallest gestures by providers to connect with somebody as a human being, such as a smile or a hug could make MAKATON The Makaton language programme is commonly used by people with learning disabilities. Many people with learning disabilities use speech, there are also a range of altranative methods of communication which can be used in conjunction with speech. Sign systems are used widely among people with learning disabilities, either alone or in conjunction with speech. One of the common systems is Makaton(Williams, 2009). However, Hannon (2003) found that no one at the hospital had heard of it. One of the people with a learning disability involved in the study said any of the health care professionals did not understand him. EASY READ Some people can benefit from written information being into an easy-read format. This involves the use of simple sentences and language and the use of photos or pictures to support the meaning of the written words. When producing written information for patients, it may be worth considering accessibility for patients who may be non-verbal or have a learning disability. An easy ââ¬âto ââ¬âread, information resource with picture and images and dew words can support people with learning disabilities to have a greater understanding of information and support their decision making. Talking Mats is ââ¬Ëa visual framework that uses picture symbols to help people with a communication difficulty communicate more effectivelyââ¬â¢ (Murphy and Cameron 2005, p.3). Using pictures to represent topics and options and a visual scale with people with little or no speech and people who have difficulty in understanding speech can assist them to express their wishes about what will occur in their own life. Service providers, including case managers, can use this tool to help the person with disability consider and discuss a variety of options. The pictures are placed on a mat so that the person with disability can look at the options and choices available and then move them using the visual scale to indicate how they feel about each option. The visual scale might include symbols for liking something, for being unsure and for definitely not liking or wanting something. More complex visual scales can be created, depending on the personââ¬â¢s needs and abilities. Many people with a variety of disabilities use Talking Mats successfully. Nevertheless, there are some people for whom this system is not suitable. Murphy and Cameron (2005) suggested that to use Talking Mats successfully, the person using the mat must be able to recognise picture symbols and must be able to understand at least two keywords at a time. The person must also have a reliable way of confirming his or her views so that the case manager or service provider can be sure that the placement of pictures on the mat does in fact reflect the personââ¬â¢s views PERSON-CENTRED APPROCH Patient- or person- centred approaches to health are increasingly seen as more effi cient as they promote good communication between the clinician and patient but research to support this is lacking (Lewin et al., 2009). The Mental Capacity Act (2005) is based on person- centred principles and gives legal backing to previous guidelines for good practice (Mencap, 2010). It gives responsibility to all healthcare professionals to follow person- centred guidance in addressing issues of choice and consent in healthcare with the learning disabled. The key principles of this include the person being at the centre of any planning and discussion. This does not mean decisions are simply taken in their best interests but ways are sought to actively involve them in decision- making using accessible communication systems when necessary. McCaffery et al. (2010) argues that although there have been major advances in way to increase patient involvement in health decisions, with the benefits of greater involvement and shared decision-making now widely accepted, there has been little attention given to the development of tools and strategies to support participation of adults with lower literacy, who are members of a group with poor health knowledge, limited involvement in health decisions and poor health outcomes. McCaffery et al. (2010) proposed a framework to consider the different stages of shred health decision making and the tasks and skills required to achieve each stage. The 6cs In 2012, the Department of Health carried out a widespread consultation exercise on values for nurses, which were published in ââ¬ËCompassion in Practice: Nursing, Midwifery and Care staff: Our Vision and Strategyââ¬â¢. The vision is based around six values: care, compassion, competence, communication, courage and commitment. The vision aims to embed these values (the 6Cs) in all nursing, midwifery and caregiving settings throughout the NHS and social care to improve care for patients. Conclusion In conclusion, the author highlighted the importance and the barriers of communication when working with people with a learning disability, and the some communication methods that a learning disability nurses can use to work effectively with this client group. Good communication is the basis of effective care provision, and the value of developing a relationship and getting to know the individual demonstrates how this enables effective communication to take place. Health care professionals need to develop competencies in identifying individual communication needs, and developing creative ideas for how to overcome these, using a range of tools to aid communication. Person-centred approaches provide a framework to do this on an individual basis, enable and support people to make choices.
Saturday, July 20, 2019
Saratoga Race Course :: essays research papers fc
Saratoga Race course On July 27, 1783, George Washington and his men stood over a bubbling hole, that hole was releasing water that to them was salty and smelled as if it had a high sulfur content. This water would be known as Saratoga mineral water. Saratoga residents baked spring water bread for Washington and his men, with out adding any salt or yeast and yet within a matter of minutes the bread rose. George Washington was considered to be Saratogaââ¬â¢s first visitor or tourist on that day. Almost fifty years before Washington came to this watering hole the Mohawk Indians used the local waters as a cleanser, for medicinal purposes and for drinking (Hotaling 1). George never did buy the land of Saratoga Springs that he had wanted so bad. George was having trouble with real estate deals; he was actually going to buy Saratoga Springs. George had said that Saratoga was the turning point of the revolution. George also new that Saratoga had great mineral water that could lead to industry. George en joyed Saratogaââ¬â¢s environment, people gambling and playing billiard, while women road through on horses (Hotaling, 2-3). Almost one hundred years later the birth of Saratoga racing had begun. In 1863, during the middle of the civil war, the Saratoga association was formed. The Saratoga association was a continuation of Saratoga attractions such as boxing, gambling, and what brought people to famous Saratoga in the first place, its water. In 1863, a racing meet for thoroughbreds marked the beginning of "the oldest race track in America."(Longrigg, 222-223) The race course bears the additional distinction of being the oldest sports facility in the country. With the exception of 1911 and 1912, when the track closed in response to gambling reforms, and 1943-45, when meets were cancelled due to World War II, the track has continued to operate and grow in popularity. Attendance at the famous Travers Day race has been known to double the city's population. Health and Horses are the foundation of Saratoga's History. Without the springs, settlers might easily have passed the region. Mineral water, for drinking and bathing, a European tradition for the health conscious, was the force for the development of the city. The arrival of the railroad in 1831 was a huge boost in tourism. The summer season at Saratoga offered diversions as well: hot air balloon ascensions, hops, balls, Indian encampments, and afternoon carriage rides down Broadway where people and horses were decorated in the latest finery.
Technology The End Of Mankind :: essays research papers
Technology: The End of Mankind TECHNOLOGY The human race is slowly, but surely, contributing to its own demise. This sub-conscious suicide is being carried out in more than one way, but the most apparent one is technology. Technology is advancing at a pace so rapid that it will eventually lead to the self-extinction of the human race. à à à à à The most current and pressing issue that falls into this category is the infamous Y2K bug. This is the virus that is going to cause every computer in operation to go haywire when the year 2000 comes around. Some of the things will be effected by this are personal computers, ATMââ¬â¢s, air traffic control and street and traffic lights. Even if none of these theories pan out, the hype alone that is being created by the media is predicted to cause enough chaos and pandemonium by itself. In a recent survey, it was proven that over 50% of the American people are afraid of the bug and what it will do. If this matter is not addressed soon it will be responsible for many casualties. à à à à à Another branch of technology that has caused casualties in the past and is bound to cause many more in the future is weapons. The weapon that has had the most impact is the gun. It has killed millions, not only in wars, but in everyday life as well. In addition, there is the atomic bomb that killed thousands at Hiroshima. More recently there is the nuclear missile that is capable of wiping out an entire major city. Moreover, there are many inventions that have been built with the intent to improve life only to repeatedly take it away from people. Some such inventions are cars, planes and nuclear power plants. Something must be done to hinder the advancement of technology in these areas before we are all dead. à à à à à Lastly, technology is the biggest source of pollution. This pollution poses the largest threat of all to the world. Not only will it eventually lead to a genocide of the entire human race, but it is destroying everything else on the planet. The increase in the population has compounded this effect leading to more cars on the road and more waste, hence, more pollution. If pollution keeps up at this rate something bad is going to happen. Everyone will die of either cancer, due to holes in the ozone, starvation, because all of the animals were wiped out by pollution, or some other illness obtained from contaminated food and water. Technology The End Of Mankind :: essays research papers Technology: The End of Mankind TECHNOLOGY The human race is slowly, but surely, contributing to its own demise. This sub-conscious suicide is being carried out in more than one way, but the most apparent one is technology. Technology is advancing at a pace so rapid that it will eventually lead to the self-extinction of the human race. à à à à à The most current and pressing issue that falls into this category is the infamous Y2K bug. This is the virus that is going to cause every computer in operation to go haywire when the year 2000 comes around. Some of the things will be effected by this are personal computers, ATMââ¬â¢s, air traffic control and street and traffic lights. Even if none of these theories pan out, the hype alone that is being created by the media is predicted to cause enough chaos and pandemonium by itself. In a recent survey, it was proven that over 50% of the American people are afraid of the bug and what it will do. If this matter is not addressed soon it will be responsible for many casualties. à à à à à Another branch of technology that has caused casualties in the past and is bound to cause many more in the future is weapons. The weapon that has had the most impact is the gun. It has killed millions, not only in wars, but in everyday life as well. In addition, there is the atomic bomb that killed thousands at Hiroshima. More recently there is the nuclear missile that is capable of wiping out an entire major city. Moreover, there are many inventions that have been built with the intent to improve life only to repeatedly take it away from people. Some such inventions are cars, planes and nuclear power plants. Something must be done to hinder the advancement of technology in these areas before we are all dead. à à à à à Lastly, technology is the biggest source of pollution. This pollution poses the largest threat of all to the world. Not only will it eventually lead to a genocide of the entire human race, but it is destroying everything else on the planet. The increase in the population has compounded this effect leading to more cars on the road and more waste, hence, more pollution. If pollution keeps up at this rate something bad is going to happen. Everyone will die of either cancer, due to holes in the ozone, starvation, because all of the animals were wiped out by pollution, or some other illness obtained from contaminated food and water.
Friday, July 19, 2019
Sports and the Business World Essay -- essays research papers
Sports and the Business World à à à à à In the wide world of sports, teams will try and find a way to better market themselves in the nation to make more revenue. There are many ways to market your team but in the newer generation teams have been taking a different approach. Most teams will advertise there big sports star in trying to have people buy there gear, buy tickets, or simply support their team. But the most effective way to market your team is getting to the kids first. In advertising for a younger generation, you will tie the kids in more at an earlier age and hopefully will stay with the team throughout the years. à à à à à Reaching tomorrowââ¬â¢s fans, teams seek long-term benefits from marketing to kids and teens. Youth Marketing is one of the most popular ways that sports are using to market their teams. Television has become the main source of marketing pro teams, as some teams have their own T.V show. The New York Jets launched ââ¬Å"Generation Jets,â⬠a weekly half-hour show for children that uses animated characters, Jets players and New York landmarks to teach life lessons. A few of the lessons featured in season one-preparation, patience, and faith- might also be the keys to success for pro teams that are marketing to kids and teenagers. In airing this show the Jets targeted kids six to eleven years old, in hoping that the kids would watch it before they realize whatââ¬â¢s cool. ââ¬Å"Generation Jetsâ⬠is more than a TV show, it became the opening for a comprehensive kids marketing effort that has seen the team launch a dedicated Web site, create themed mer chandise, and re-brand its community relations activities and kids club. Case in point: Like many teams, the Arizona Cardinals have a kids club through which members receive specially created newsletters and team merchandise. Many marketers figure that kids clubs are a sort of necessary evil, a way to create some connection with children and teenagers who probably arenââ¬â¢t going to buy full-price tickets for years to come. à à à à à For pro teams, getting fans while theyââ¬â¢re still young is probably the most important now than ever because of well-established competing forces like the Internet, video games and action sports. The way teams are going about it, varies from team to team. The range of tactics includes everything from scheduling ... ...g to attract four to five year olds. To attract those youngsters, Reebok markets kids-only for kidsââ¬â¢ only styles, creates kid targeted retail displays and steals a few tricks from kidââ¬â¢s breakfast cereal. Reeboks main focus is it tries to mirror its kid targeted advertising with retail displays to help young kids make the connection from TV spots to the product in stores. Sales at stores with those displays consistently outstrip sales at merchants without them. On the other hand Nike which is a high profile athletic apparel and footwear company was having trouble positioning themselves successfully with youths. The youths have been more attracted to newer brands such as Volcom or old school with Adidas that is making a comeback because kids watch more and more TV and extreme sports are becoming more and more popular each day. In trying to get the kids back to supporting NIKE, NIKE came out with a contest that had a youths compete in skate and bike jumping. At this event the kids were video taped and the best ones moved on. Also, NIKE was giving out their branded materials in seeking to get the consumer back. This event was highly attended and NIKE was able to increase its brand.
Thursday, July 18, 2019
The Lust Lizard of Melancholy Cove Chapter 21
Twenty-one Gabe and Theo ââ¬Å"This is where I found the aberrant rats,â⬠Gabe said as they pulled into the Fly Rod Trailer Court. ââ¬Å"That's nice,â⬠Theo said, not really paying attention. ââ¬Å"Did I tell you I got the brain chemistry back from Stanford? It's interesting, but I'm not sure that it explains the behavior.â⬠ââ¬Å"Not now, Gabe, please.â⬠Theo slammed on the brakes and the truck rocked to a stop. ââ¬Å"What the hell?â⬠There were no lights on in Molly Michon's trailer. In the empty lot next door, a dozen well-dressed adults stood in a circle, holding candles. ââ¬Å"Prayer meeting?â⬠Gabe ventured. ââ¬Å"It's Sunday night.â⬠ââ¬Å"There was a trailer there last time I was here,â⬠Theo said. ââ¬Å"Just like the one on the ranch.â⬠ââ¬Å"I know. This is the lot where I found the rats with the low serotonin levels.â⬠Theo shut off the truck, set the parking brake, and climbed out. Then he looked back at Gabe. ââ¬Å"You found your rats right here?â⬠ââ¬Å"The six that I could find. But this is where the other ones that were last tracked disappeared as well. I can show you the graphic later.â⬠ââ¬Å"That would be good.â⬠Theo pulled his flannel shirt over the guns in his waistband and approached the circle. Skinner jumped out of the truck and ran ahead. Gabe reluctantly followed. They did, indeed, seem to be praying. Their heads were bowed and a woman in a powder-blue dress and pillbox hat was leading the group. ââ¬Å"Bless us, Lord, for we have felt the stirrings of your power within us and heeded your call to come to this holy place on the eve ofâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ Skinner drove his nose into the woman's crotch, and she yipped like a bee-stung poodle. Everyone in the group looked up. ââ¬Å"Excuse me,â⬠Theo said. ââ¬Å"I don't mean to interrupt, but what are you all doing here?â⬠Several of the men looked irritated and stepped up behind the powder-blue woman to give support. The woman held Skinner's nose away from her dress while trying to keep the candle flame away from her hair spray. ââ¬Å"Constable Crowe? Is that right?â⬠ââ¬Å"Yes, ma'am,â⬠Theo said. The woman was younger than he was by at least five years and pretty in a Texas Big Hair sort of way, but her dress and manner of speaking made him feel as if he'd just been busted by his first-grade teacher for eating paste. ââ¬Å"We've been called here, Constable,â⬠the woman explained. She reached behind her, grabbed the shoulder of a woman who looked like her clone in pink, and pulled her forward. Skinner stamped the pink woman's dress with the Wet-Nose Inspection Seal. ââ¬Å"Margie and I felt it first, but when we started talking about it after services this afternoon, all these other people said that they had felt drawn to this place as well. The Holy Spirit has moved us here.â⬠ââ¬Å"Ask them if they've seen any rats.â⬠Gabe said. ââ¬Å"Call your dog,â⬠Theo tossed over his shoulder. Gabe called Skinner and the Labrador looked around. They smell fine to me, Food Guy. I say fuck 'em, Skinner thought. But he got no response except a minor scolding. ââ¬Å"The Holy Spirit called you here?â⬠Theo said. Everyone in the group nodded earnestly. ââ¬Å"Did any of you happen to see the woman who lives in that trailer next door?â⬠The pink lady chimed in, ââ¬Å"Oh yes, she was the one to call our attention to this place two nights ago. We wondered about that at first, being as how she is and all, but then Katie pointed outâ⬠ââ¬â she gestured to her friend ââ¬â ââ¬Å"that our Lord Jesus spent time with Mary Magdalene, and she, as I'm sure you know, was ââ¬â well ââ¬â she wasâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ââ¬Å"A whore,â⬠Theo offered. ââ¬Å"Well. Yes. And so we thought, who are we to judge?â⬠ââ¬Å"Very charitable of you,â⬠Theo said. ââ¬Å"But have you seen Molly Michon tonight?â⬠ââ¬Å"No, not tonight.â⬠Theo felt his energy reserves drain even more. ââ¬Å"Look, folks, you shouldn't be here. I'm not sure it's safe. Some people have gone missingâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ââ¬Å"Oh, that poor boy,â⬠Margie said. ââ¬Å"Yes and maybe some others. I have to ask you all to take your meeting somewhere else, please.â⬠The group looked disappointed. One of the men, a portly bald fellow in his fifties, puffed himself up and stepped forward. ââ¬Å"Constable, we have the right to worship when and where we please.â⬠ââ¬Å"I'm just thinking of your safety,â⬠Theo said. ââ¬Å"This country was founded on the basis of religious freedom, andâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ Theo stepped up to the man and loomed over him with all of his six-footsix frame, ââ¬Å"Then start praying that I don't throw you in jail with the biggest, horniest sodomite the country jail has to offer, which is what I'm going to do if you all don't go home right now.â⬠ââ¬Å"Smooth,â⬠Gabe said. Make him roll over and pee on himself, Skinner thought. The bald man made a harumph sound and turned to the group. ââ¬Å"Let's meet at the church to discuss the removal of our local law enforcement official.â⬠ââ¬Å"Yeah, get in line,â⬠Theo said. He watched as the group dispersed to their cars and drove away. When the last one pulled out, Gabe said, ââ¬Å"Theories?â⬠Theo shook his head. ââ¬Å"Everyone in this town is nuts. I'm going to check Molly's trailer, but I doubt she's there. Do you want me to take you home to shower and change clothes before your date?â⬠Gabe looked down at his stained work pants and safari shirt. ââ¬Å"Do you think I should?â⬠ââ¬Å"Gabe, you're the only guy I know that makes me look suave.â⬠ââ¬Å"You're coming along, right?â⬠ââ¬Å"Casanova,â⬠Theo said. ââ¬Å"Compared to you, I feel like Casanova.â⬠ââ¬Å"What?â⬠Gabe said. ââ¬Å"It's fried chicken night at H.P.'s.â⬠Steve Steve lay under a stand of cypress trees, his new lover snuggled up to his right foreleg, snoring softly. He let his tongue slide out and the tip just brushed her bare back. She moaned and nuzzled closer to his leg. She tasted pretty good. But he had eaten all those other warmbloods and he wasn't really hungry. When he had been a female, some fifty years ago, and going back another five thousand, he had become accustomed to eating his lovers after mating. That's just how it was done. But as a male, he wasn't sure. He hadn't mated with his own species since he'd become male, and so the instinct to become passive after mating was new to him. He just didn't feel like eating the warmblood. She had made him feel better, and for some reason, he could see the pictures of her thoughts instead of just sending his own sig-nals. He sensed no fear in her, and no need to send the signal to draw her to him. Strange for a warmblood. He lay his head down on the bed of cypress needles to sleep and let his wounds heal. He could eat her later. Somewhere in the back of his brain, as he fell asleep, a fear alarm went off. In five thousand years of life, he had never conceived of the concept of later or before, only now. His DNA had rechained itself many times, adapted to changes without waiting for the life cycles of generations ââ¬â he was a unique organism in that way ââ¬â but the concept of time, of memory beyond the cellular level, was a new adapt-ation. Through his contact with Molly he was evolving consciousness, and like the pragmatic mechanism that it is, nature was trying to warn him. The nightmare was about to have a nightmare. Val Is this a date? Val sat alone at a table in the back of H.P.'s Cafe. She'd ordered a glass of a local chardonnay and was trying to form an opinion about it that would reflect the appropriate disgust, but unfortunately, it was quite good. She was wearing light evening makeup and an understated raw silk suit in indigo with a single string of pearls so as not to clash too badly with her date, who she knew would be in jeans or cotton khaki. Her date? If this is a date, how far have I sunk? she asked herself. This tacky little cafe in this tacky little town, waiting for a man who had probably never worn a tux or a Rolex, and she was looking forward to it. No, it's not a date. It's just dinner. It's sustenance. It's, for once, not eating alone. Slumming in the land of the folksy and the neighborly, that's what it is. It's a satirical performance art experience; call it The Bourgeois Fried Chicken Follies. It was one thing to read her journals over coffee in the local cafe, but dinner? Gabe Fenton came through the front door and Val felt her pulse quicken. She smiled in spite of herself as she watched the waitress point to her table. Then Theo Crowe was following Gabe across the restaurant and a bolt of anxiety shot up her spine. This definitely isn't a date. Gabe smiled and the lines around his eyes crinkled as if he were about to burst out laughing. He extended his hand to her. ââ¬Å"Hi, I hope you don't mind, I asked Theo to join us.â⬠His hair was combed, as was his beard, and he was wearing a faded but clean chambray shirt. Not exactly dashing, but a pretty good-looking guy in a lumber-jack sort of way. ââ¬Å"No, please,â⬠Val said. ââ¬Å"Sit down, Theo.â⬠Theo nodded and pulled a chair up to the table, which had been set for two. The waitress breezed in with another place setting before they were seated. ââ¬Å"I'm sorry to intrude,â⬠Theo said, ââ¬Å"but Gabe insisted.â⬠ââ¬Å"No, really, you're welcome, Constable.â⬠ââ¬Å"Theo, please.â⬠ââ¬Å"Theo then,â⬠Val said. She forced a smile. What now? The last time she had talked to this man it had thrown her life for a loop. She found herself building a resentment for Gabe that was usually reserved for relationships that were years old. Theo cleared his throat. ââ¬Å"Uh, can we go on the doctor-patient confidentiality plan again, Doctor?â⬠Val nodded to Gabe, ââ¬Å"That usually implies a session. Not dinner.â⬠ââ¬Å"Okay, then, don't say anything, but Joseph Leander killed his wife.â⬠Val didn't say, ââ¬Å"Wow.â⬠Almost, but she didn't. ââ¬Å"And you know this becauseâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ââ¬Å"Because he told me so,â⬠Theo said. ââ¬Å"He gave her tea made from foxglove. Evidently, it can cause heart failure and is almost undetectable. Then he hung her in the dining room.â⬠ââ¬Å"So you've arrested him?â⬠ââ¬Å"No, I don't know where he is.â⬠ââ¬Å"But you've put a warrant out for his arrest or whatever it is that you do? ââ¬Å"No, I'm not sure that I'm still the constable.â⬠Gabe broke in. ââ¬Å"We've been talking about it, Val. I say that Theo is an elected official, and therefore the only way he can lose his job is through impeachment, even if his immediate superior tries to kill him. What do you think?â⬠ââ¬Å"Kill him?â⬠ââ¬Å"Smooth,â⬠Theo said, grinning at Gabe. ââ¬Å"Oh, maybe you should tell her about the crank lab and stuff, Theo.â⬠And so Theo explained, telling the story of his kidnapping, the drug lab, Joseph Leander's disappearance, and Molly Michon setting him free, but leaving out any theories he had about a giant creature. During the telling, they ordered (fried chicken for Theo and Gabe, a Greek salad for Val) and were halfway through dinner before Theo stopped talking. Val stared at her salad and silence washed over the table. If there was going to be a murder investigation, she could be found out. And if they found out what she had done to her patients, her career was over. She might even go to jail. It wasn't fair, she really had tried to do the right thing for once. She resisted the urge to blurt out a confession ââ¬â to throw herself on the mercy of a court born of sheer paranoia. Instead she raised her eyes to Gabe, who took the signal to break the silence. Gabe said, ââ¬Å"And I still don't know the significance of the low serotonin levels in the rats' brains.â⬠ââ¬Å"Huh?â⬠said not only Val and Theo, but the waitress, Jenny, who had been eavesdropping from the next table and joined the confusion at Gabe's non sequitur. ââ¬Å"Sorry,â⬠Gabe said to Val. ââ¬Å"I thought you might have a take on the brain chemistry of those rats I had tested. You said you were interested.â⬠ââ¬Å"And I am,â⬠Val said, lying through her teeth, ââ¬Å"but I'm a little overwhelmed by the news about Bess Leander.â⬠ââ¬Å"Right, anyway, the group of rats that didn't take part in the mass migration all had unusually low levels of serotonin. The brain chemistry of the larger group, the group that ran, was all in normal ranges. So I'm thinking thatâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ââ¬Å"They were depressed,â⬠Val said. ââ¬Å"Pardon me?â⬠Gabe said. ââ¬Å"Of course they're depressed, they're rats,â⬠Theo said. Gabe glared at him. ââ¬Å"Well, imagine waking up to that every morning,â⬠Theo continued. ââ¬Å"ââ¬ËOh, it's a great day, crap, I'm still a rat. Never mind.'â⬠ââ¬Å"Well, I don't know about rats,â⬠Val said, ââ¬Å"but serotonin levels in humans affect a lot of different things, predominantly mood. Low levels of serotonin can indicate depression. That's how Prozac works. It basically keeps sero-tonin in the brain to keep the patient from getting depressed. So maybe Gabe's rats were too depressed to run.â⬠Gabe stroked his beard. ââ¬Å"I never thought of that. But it doesn't help that much. It doesn't tell me why the majority of the rats did run.â⬠ââ¬Å"Well, duh, Gabe,â⬠Theo said. ââ¬Å"It's the fucking monster.â⬠ââ¬Å"What?â⬠Val said. ââ¬Å"What?â⬠said Jenny, who was lingering nearby. ââ¬Å"Can we get some dessert menus?â⬠Gabe asked, sending Jenny backing across the restaurant. ââ¬Å"Monster?â⬠Val said. ââ¬Å"Maybe you'd better explain, Gabe,â⬠Theo said. ââ¬Å"I think your scientific skepticism will make it sound more credible.â⬠Val's jaw dropped visibly as she listened to Gabe talk about the tracks at the ranch, the mutilated cattle, and Theo's theory for the disappearances of Joseph Leander, Mikey Plotznik, and perhaps Les from the hardware store. When Gabe brought up Molly Michon, Val stopped him. ââ¬Å"You can't believe what she tells you. Molly is a very disturbed woman.â⬠ââ¬Å"She didn't tell me anything,â⬠Theo said. ââ¬Å"I just think she knows something about all this.â⬠Val wanted to call up Theo's drug history to sweep the story aside, then she remembered what Estelle Boyet had told her in therapy. ââ¬Å"I'm not going to say who, but one of my patients mentioned a sea monster in session.â⬠Gabe asked. ââ¬Å"Who?â⬠ââ¬Å"I can't say,â⬠Val said. ââ¬Å"Estelle Boyet,â⬠Jenny said as she came up to get the dessert order. ââ¬Å"Damn,â⬠Val said. ââ¬Å"I wasn't the one who told you,â⬠she said to Theo. ââ¬Å"Well, she was talking about it over breakfast with that Catfish guy,â⬠Jenny added. ââ¬Å"No dessert,â⬠Val snapped at Jenny. ââ¬Å"I'll bring the check.â⬠ââ¬Å"So Estelle has seen it?â⬠Theo asked. ââ¬Å"No, she says she's heard it. She's not the type to propagate a hoax, but I wouldn't put it past Molly Michon. Perhaps that's where the rumor started. I can ask Estelle.â⬠ââ¬Å"Do that,â⬠Theo said. ââ¬Å"But it's not a hoax. My car is smashed. That's evidence. I'm going to Molly's tonight and wait for her. The door was unlocked when I checked earlier and I can't go home.â⬠ââ¬Å"You think it's that dangerous?â⬠Val asked. ââ¬Å"I know it is.â⬠Theo stood and started to pull some bills from his pocket. Gabe waved him off. Theo said, ââ¬Å"Doctor, can you give Gabe a ride?â⬠ââ¬Å"Sure, butâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ââ¬Å"Thanks,â⬠Theo said. ââ¬Å"I'll call you, Gabe. Thanks for letting me join you, Doctor. I thought you'd want to know about Bess. I'm afraid I've ruined your date.â⬠I'll say, Val thought as she watched Theo leave the restaurant. A sense of alert exhaustion washed over her like an espresso fog bank. ââ¬Å"He just quit smoking pot,â⬠Gabe said. ââ¬Å"He's feeling the stress.â⬠ââ¬Å"He has a right to. You don't believe any of that stuff about a monster, do you?â⬠ââ¬Å"I have some theories.â⬠ââ¬Å"Would you like to come up to the house and explain them over a bottle of wine?â⬠ââ¬Å"Really? I mean, sure, that would be nice.â⬠ââ¬Å"Good,â⬠Val said. ââ¬Å"I think I need to get hammered and I'd like your company.â⬠Had she used the term ââ¬Å"hammeredâ⬠since college? She didn't think so. ââ¬Å"I'll get the check,â⬠Gabe said. ââ¬Å"Of course you will.â⬠ââ¬Å"I hope you don't mind having a dog in your car,â⬠Gabe said. I'm not slumming, she thought. I've moved to the slums.
Wednesday, July 17, 2019
Black Leaders Essay
booker T. capital letter and William Edward Burg unexpressedt Du Bois were potent drear start up goinging. Their leadership streng henceed the straitss of the desolate incline. During the decades of Reconstruction following the cultivated War, African Americans strugglight-emitting diode to be assimilated into the new American society. To do this African Americans required kindly and stinting equality. Two cracking Negro leaders that emerged for this cause were booking agent T. endureing capital and W. E. B. Du Bois. With these 2 strong-headed hands, an early(a) problem arose.They some(prenominal) aggressively disagreed upon the strategies needed to gain these equalities. capital of the United States pet a gradual, submissive, and economically base plan. On the other hand, Du Bois relied upon a more agitative and politically aggressive plan. They hited for the onward motion of African-Americans in American society, but their methods of achieving this terminus and their leadership style differed greatly from iodin another. It is life-threatening to fathom that 2 manpower, who helped to strive for the great goal of racial fairness, could have been such opposites, but it is true. booker T. upper-case letter, a creator slave and the founder of the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, believed that African Americans needed to accept separationism and favouritism for the time being and reduce on elevating themselves through hard work and natural prosperity. The eventual acquisition of wealth and finale by African Americans would step by step win for them the repute and acceptance of the snow-covered community. This would break d have got the divisions between the two races and lead to equal citizenship for African Americans in the annihilate.Also he urged wispys to accept variation for the time being and concentrate on elevating themselves through hard work and material prosperity. He believed in fostering in the crafts, industrial and farming skills and the cultivation of the virtues of patience, endeavor and thrift. This, he said, would win the respect of discolors and lead to African Americans being fully judge as citizens and included into all strata of society. uppercase treasured mysterious-markets in the s tabuh to respect and value the need for industrial education both from a vantage of American and African experience.Booker T. uppercase was innate(p) a slave on April 5, 1856 in Franklin County, Virginia. Once the slaves were emancipated, his family moved to West Virginia. There, his family was poor, and he had to work in a brininess furnace and consequently a coal mine. In drill day he findd himself Booker working capital. completely later did he find out his name was Booker Taliaferro. So he combined both names to spurt his now famous name, Booker T. Washington. He went to school at the Hampton Institute, which was an industrial school for coloureds. Later on, he based his educatio nal theories on his time at Hampton.He founded the Tuskegee Institute, which was a Negro school, which eventually became cognize for its hardworking, reliable graduates. William Edward Burghardt Du Bois was born into an affluent family on February 23, 1868 in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. Bois took college preparatory classes darn in high school. He was likewise a column writer of a newspaper, the New York Globe. While still spring chicken he accompanied town meetings to hark to people discuss concerns of the town. He talk about Wendell Phillips at his high school graduation. Du Boiss mother unexpectedly died in 1884.After high school, he attended Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee. He was the first black person to obtain a Ph. D. from Harvard. He taught at Atlanta University. At Fisk he took part in public talk and debates. He edited the Fisk Herald, the schools paper. At Fisk he realized that his goal was not for his own happiness, but for the advancement of the bla ck race. He graduated from Fisk in 1886 with an A. B. degree. After Fisk he was accepted into Harvard. In 1895 Du Bois became the first African American to wreak a Ph. D. from Harvard. Even with a Ph.D. from Harvard he did not feel he was make up to deal with the problems that African Americans faced. He then spent two years at Berlin University. This gave him an extended outlook on the race problem. In the south, African Americans received discriminate and unequal education established by white Americans. Du Bois was confident that he could get white Americans to give up discrimination. Du Bois was cause to lead African Americans out of the disadvantage position they seemed to be in. He believed the place to their advancement was in education.Near the end of the 1800s African Americans occupied bungled jobs in southern cities. Their economic event was not good. Du Bois matt-up compelled to work to make better this situation. He initially cherished to use his life to educ ation. In 1909 he contributed to the festering of the National Association for the Advancement of grim People (NAACP). According to Gerald Hynes, Du Bois was not fortunate with the group, due in part by it being under the leadership of whites. He agreed to work with them and became the editor of The Crisis (1909-1934), a publication from the NAACP.He to a fault led the Niagara Movement. The Niagara Movement was an organization founded by black Americans to racial discrimination. The movement placed more or less of the blame for Americas racial problems on whites. It opposed the view of Booker T. Washington. He later became a redness and a Communist. Washington and Du Bois were alike in few ways. They were both black leaders. They were both teachers and authors. They were also both subject to discrimination from whites. They were both spokesmen for their separate ideologies.Du Bois and Washington were diametric opposites of each other in e really aspect except for the reasons p reviously stated. They were so much so that Du Bois published a book named The Souls of Black Folk, which contained some essays criticizing Washingtons views. Du Bois went on to write many other essays and speeches opposing the viewpoints of supposed Uncle tom turkeys. The author believes that Booker T. Washington authentic a leadership style based on the model of the old plantation house servant. He used humility, politeness, flattery, and constraint as a wedge with which he hoped to split the wall of racial discrimination.His pliable approach won the enthusiastic concord of the solid South as easily as that of influential Northern politicians and industrialists their mount gained him a national reputation and provided him with comfy access to the press. Members of his own community were fill up with pride to see one of their own treated with such respect by wealthy and influential leaders of white America. Du Bois assigned Washington of giving the black race the distinc t status of courteous inferiority. Washington was for surrendering basic human rights and lordliness for economic advancement. Du Bois conception that was detrimental to the black race.Washington thought that a vocational education was far more all strategic(predicate) to blacks than higher education. Du Bois thought that the really important things in life laid in the realm of the mind. The term The Talented 10th was the trademark of his educational philosophy. To him, this was, The Talented ten percent of the Negro race must be made leaders of thought and missionaries of culture among their people. No others can do this work and Negro colleges must train men for it. The Negro race, like all other races, is going to be saved by its exceptional men. In the authors opinion, theres any skepticism that Booker T.Washington did accept segregation. Booker T. Washington was an accommodationist. And his program was to match the social and political situation of the South. Du Bois was not in complete disagreement with Booker T. Washington. Du Bois referred to Booker T. Washington as the greatest black leader since Frederick Douglass. And also referred to Washington as the most distinguished man, black or white, to come out of the South since the Civil War. So it wasnt as though Du Bois disagreed with Washingtons program, but Du Bois snarl that there was room for more than one solution to the problem.And incisively as Washington advocated vocational education for the majority of African Americans in the South, Du Bois felt yes, there were African Americans in the South, perhaps the majority who at that point in their historical growing were better off with vocational education. moreover there were others among the race who needed to be the individuals who were at the top, the individuals who did the training, the individuals who were the intelligentsia. And that you needed this group of people. And I think that was the basis of their disagreement.Not tha t Du Bois felt that Washington was completely wrong, but that Washington needed to have more than just one way of approaching the problem. And then of course the other issue on which they disagreed was Du Bois did not feel that you could accommodate injustice. And he felt that Washington was placing upon his shoulders an extremely glum responsibility by advocating that African Americans accommodate the social and political system in the South. Washington stated that blacks should work hard and become economically prosperous beforehand they should bear for racial equality from the whites.Du Bois thought that this was absolutely preposterous. Blacks shouldnt have to ask for equality from whites, it is Gods talent to them and ein truth(prenominal) human being be it. Du Bois believed that the whites were responsible for keeping the black men down and that the black man should name out and declare his independence. Washington wanted to please the whites, because he thought that was the solely way anything good could happen. Even when he was a child, he made his name Washington, whom was a well-known white historical figure of prominence.Du Bois was more radical, whereas Washington was genuinely moderate. Washington was a realist, Du Bois was a romantic. Du Bois wanted to stir mens hearts, Washington wanted to stir mens minds. Washington was loyal to his country, Du Bois was loyal to his race. Washington was possessed humility, and could relate to the common man, Du Bois was arrogant, egotistical, and imperious. Since he could not believe that the average grey white man had any intrust to help the Negro, Du Bois could see no future in the South for the ambitious youthfulness people of his race.Directly contradicting Washingtons counsel, Du Bois urged them to go North for freedom and advancement. He encouraged urban migration at every turn, believing that the country represented subjugation and serfdom, while the city represented opportunity. It is very c lear to see that their experiences were different and this is very important in understanding how they truism the future of the race. But its also important to keep in mind that for both of them, race uplift was the underlying key. Despite all of Du Bois attacks on him, Washington still managed to be more pop at the time, and more famous today.
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