“There is no single combination of methods

 

The International Reading Association’s 1999 position statement states, “There is no single combination of methods that can successfully teach all children to read. Therefore teachers must have a strong knowledge of multiple methods for teaching reading and a strong knowledge of the children in their care so they can create the appropriate balance of methods needed for the children they teach.” https://www.literacyworldwide.org/docs/default-source/where-we-stand/multiple-methods-position-statement.pdf?sfvrsn=d04ea18e_6Links to an external site.
In one or two paragraphs, state whether you agree or disagree with this statement and explain why. References are not required in this discussion posting. Later in the week, return to this discussion, read your classmates’ postings, and reflect on the comments in at least two of the postings.

Application of artificial intelligence in digital art

 

The theme is the application and thinking of artificial intelligence in digital art, please do not deviate from the theme;
It can involve the history of digital art, the future of digital art, it can involve creativity-related content, or the impact of artificial intelligence on them, etc.;
Use examples to demonstrate, at least 6 different examples;
Use data to demonstrate reliability.

Decisions based on awareness of legal and organizational parameters

 

Scenario
In Project Two: Assessing Financial Performance, your loyalty rewards program product line proposed a marketing and sales campaign targeting low-income neighborhoods. While you were doing your KPI analysis, the company’s legal team reviewed the same document to address any legal or ethical concerns.
The company CEO has forwarded you a memo from the legal team that discusses legal and ethical issues. Changes in the plan must be made to address these issues. Without these changes, the legal team will not approve the marketing and sales proposal.
For each issue, the CEO wants you to recommend changes to the proposal that satisfy the requirements the legal team has described. For the legal issues, the company lawyers describe how the company needs to interpret and apply existing laws.
Directions
Your task is to evaluate the memo from the legal department for legal and ethical concerns and recommend ways to address those concerns in alignment with organizational parameters.
1. Review the memo received from the legal department, available in the Supporting Materials section.
2. For each legal issue, include the requirements outlined below:
a. Evaluate the plan for legal issues.
i. Where in the proposal do the issues occur?
b. Recommend changes to address the legal concerns.
i. Cite or quote their language to show what you are addressing.
ii. State what aspects of the plan need to change in some way to address the concern.
iii. Recommend one or more possible changes.
iv. Explain how your recommendations meet the legal requirements.
3. For each ethical issue, include the requirements outlined below:
a. Evaluate the plan for ethical issues.
i. Where in the proposal do the issues occur?
ii. Consider which ethical frameworks apply.
b. Recommend changes to address the ethical concerns.
i. Cite or quote their language to show what you are addressing.
ii. State what aspects of the plan need to change in some way to address the concern.
iii. Recommend one or more possible changes.
iv. Explain how your recommendations meet the ethical concerns.
4. Assess your recommendations for alignment to organizational parameters.
a. Refer to the mission and vision statement from Project One (linked in the Supporting Materials).

“CSI effect,” and how it does and does not affect court operations and court actors.

 

 

 

1. Explain the “CSI effect,” and how it does and does not affect court operations and court actors.
2. What are the characteristics of courthouse shootings, and what are the differences between courthouse violence that is targeted and nontargeted?
3. What are the possible consequences of delay in the courts, and what are some possible solutions to this problem?
4. Should plea bargaining and courtroom cameras be kept or barred from our legal system? Why or why not?
5. In what ways does Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) hold promise for reducing the current avalanche of lawsuits?

 

The recently announced acquisition of Coyote Logistics

 

The recently announced acquisition of Coyote Logistics by UPS conjures up memories of the origins of UPS and the strategic journey to their present position in the logistics and supply chain world. Some logistics and supply chain professionals may not be aware of the relatively humble begin-nings of United Parcel as a small package delivery service for major retailers in East Coast cities like NYC, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. Many urban families lived in very modest homes and did not own automobiles. They would use public transportation (bus and trolley cars) to get to the central districts in the city where the large multiple-story department stores were located to shop for non-food items, normally not available in the smaller neighborhood retail stores and/or to see more variety. If they had too many packages or the items were too large for the transit carriers, the items could be delivered by United Parcel. It was an invaluable service “for the times,” but “times change.”With the end of World War II, there was pent up demand and increased household savings from the War years. Families started to move from small, urban homes to larger suburban residencies with individual lots and most families acquired an automobile for convenience and shopping. This Post-War phenomenon had serious implications for United Parcel as retail stores started locating in shopping malls with free parking for shoppers which lessened the demand for parcel delivery. United Parcel had to do an evaluation of their business model and strategy, and ask the classic question, viz., “What Business Are We In.”United Parcel essentially answered the question by stating that they were a transportation company that specialized in moving small packages between and among businesses as well as residencies, that is, business-to-business, business-to-residences, and residences-to-residences. This restate-ment of their mission opened up many new opportunities but presented some major challenges going forward. Intrastate and interstate transportation carriers were highly regulated by the federal government and state agencies where operating authorities had to be approved. It was especially challenging for approval of interstate service. Also, it put them in direct competition with the U.S. Post Office which offered similar service but not direct pick-up at businesses and homes. Over time they mitigated these “roadblocks” and with the elimination of federal regulation of motor carrier transportation at the federal level, they could move ahead more aggressively. However, deregulation of transportation also provided an opportunity for another potential competitor, viz., Federal Express. Initially one could say that UPS provided surface transportation service and FEDEX provided air service. However, that distinction has become blurred over time as both companies moved aggres-sively to grow and expand.Both UPS and FedEx have used acquisition of established companies to expand the scope of their services and global geographic reach. The end result has been the development of two successful organizations who started as delivery companies and have become much more comprehensive logis-tics service companies who offer a variety of services for businesses and individuals. UPS is currently ranked fourth as a 3PL with almost $6 billion in revenue. Both companies have become household names as they have rode the wave of interest and expansion of logistics and supply chain manage-ment into the twenty-first century by providing service on a global basis.Their ability to identify and meet the needs of global organizations has accounted for their growth and expansion, but competition and the need to be more efficient and effective has necessitated a continual effort to improve and stay ahead of their rivals. Coyote Logistics appears to be a “gem” in terms of a “fit” for UPS just as GENCO Distribution was for FEDEX. The latter provided entry into the ever growing product returns or reverse logistics business for FEDEX. UPS is looking to expand aggressively into the freight brokerage which is an important part of Coyote’s success and profitabil-ity because of their development of a proprietary scheduling technology for managing that service. This same technology should be a major benefit to UPS to handle their fleet of trucks especially during the peak holiday season which has been a serious challenge for UPS during the last several seasons. The key takeaway here is that UPS has been able to change their internal operations and business model to meet the challenges and changes occurring in the external environment and to recognize the criticality of the “final mile” of the supply chain which is essentially a logistics function. Maybe the title of this piece should be “Coyote Logistics and Wiley UPS”?

 

 

STUDY QUESTIONS
1. Provide a definition of logistics and a rationale for why is it important in private companies and public organizations?
2. Explain the importance of logistics important on a macro level and the contributions of logistics to the economy?
3. How does logistics add value in the economy? How does logistics add value for firms? What, if any are the differences?
4. Explain the relationship between logistics and supply chain management?
5. Compare and contrast the four major subdivisions of logistics discussed in this chapter.
6. Discuss the relationship between manufacturing and logistics. What are the tradeoffs between the two areas?
7. Physical distribution has a special relationship to marketing. What is the nature of the relationship between logistics and marketing? Is the relationship becoming more or less important? Why?
8. Logistics encompasses a relatively large number of managerial activities. Discuss five of these activities and why they are important to logistics systems.
9. Why do companies analyze their logistics systems from perspective of nodes and links?
10. What product characteristics affect logistics costs? Discuss the effects of these charac-teristics on logistics costs.

 

“SAP Found in Violation of FCPA” case study

 

 

Your individual project in this Unit is based on the “SAP Found in Violation of FCPA” case study located at the end of Chapter 2 in your textbook. In order to complete this assignment, read that case study and respond to the questions below,

Do you think that the penalty for violation of the internal control provision and the books and records provision of the FCPA is stiff enough to motivate companies to implement systems capable of detecting bribes? What changes, if any, would you suggest to the FCPA?
When an organization implements a major accounting software package, it also inherits the system of internal control that is built into the software—good, bad, or indifferent. What can be done if it is discovered, months after the software has been purchased and installed, that the software is lacking in good internal control?
IT workers have a key role in designing and implementing the internal controls associated with systems that automate the processing of business transactions, such as the payment of suppliers, employees, and business partners and the receipt of payments from customers. What can IT workers do to prepare themselves for this responsibility? Who should the IT workers collaborate with when evaluating or designing the automated internal controls of a computer-based information systems?

Influencer marketing, more than advertisement?

This book chapter should discuss the role on influencer marketing nowadays. Based on the attached researches normal “influencers” actually became
nothing more than advertising platforms as the “influence” disappeared. Mainly nano- and micro-influencers who know their follwers personally have a real
influence on the purchase decision of their followers. Therefore, the search of these real influencers (with the help of big data analytics and AI) is the current
challenge for social media marketing.
Additionally, in social media marketing, companies should not try to get customers engae on their social media sites (mainly lovers and haters engage on
company’s social media accounts) but should rather go where their (potential) customers engage (crowd culture). Red Bull is an excellent example as they
identified the gamer community as potential customers and engaged with them on gaming forms by identifying on the gaming forums influencers.
This book chapter should cover these two topics, should not follow the typical academic essay format but rather jump directly into discussion and then
conclusion.
The attached article with the research must be cited and an additional approx 15 citations should be added.

Assessing the Relative Effectiveness of Combining Self-Care with Practitioner-Delivered Complementary

 

 

 

Scenario:
To read the scenario, navigate to the end of Chapter 13, “Global Use of Complementary and Integrative Health Approaches” in your textbook (Global Health Care: Issues and Policies). Then, review Case Study #4: Qi Therapy Used to Relieve Symptoms of Cancer in a Terminally Ill Cancer Patient. You do not need to answer the questions listed in the textbook but instead should proceed to the following prompt.
Additionally, read the following article: Assessing the Relative Effectiveness of Combining Self-Care with Practitioner-Delivered Complementary and Integrative Health Therapies to Improve Pain in a Pragmatic Trial. This article explores real-world evidence about the value of combining self-care and practitioner-delivered CIH therapies.
Prompt
Apply your disciplinary perspective to evaluate the intervention strategies implied by the case. In other words, your task is to defend your professional viewpoint regarding the most effective interventions. Then, in your responses, you will work as a group to refine those initial assessments.
• Illustrate the use of complementary and integrative health (CIH) approaches to address the health challenges in the case. To what extent is qi therapy effective in curing cancer? Be sure to substantiate your claims with evidence.
• Describe the influence of politics, economics, culture, and religion on the use of the CIH approach described in the case. To what extent does the political, economic, or cultural context impact the effectiveness of CIH approaches like qi therapy? In other words, when, why, and how would you recommend using CIH approaches? Be sure to substantiate your claims with evidence

Assessing the Relative Effectiveness of Combining Self-Care with Practitioner-Delivered Complementary

 

 

 

Scenario:
To read the scenario, navigate to the end of Chapter 13, “Global Use of Complementary and Integrative Health Approaches” in your textbook (Global Health Care: Issues and Policies). Then, review Case Study #4: Qi Therapy Used to Relieve Symptoms of Cancer in a Terminally Ill Cancer Patient. You do not need to answer the questions listed in the textbook but instead should proceed to the following prompt.
Additionally, read the following article: Assessing the Relative Effectiveness of Combining Self-Care with Practitioner-Delivered Complementary and Integrative Health Therapies to Improve Pain in a Pragmatic Trial. This article explores real-world evidence about the value of combining self-care and practitioner-delivered CIH therapies.
Prompt
Apply your disciplinary perspective to evaluate the intervention strategies implied by the case. In other words, your task is to defend your professional viewpoint regarding the most effective interventions. Then, in your responses, you will work as a group to refine those initial assessments.
• Illustrate the use of complementary and integrative health (CIH) approaches to address the health challenges in the case. To what extent is qi therapy effective in curing cancer? Be sure to substantiate your claims with evidence.
• Describe the influence of politics, economics, culture, and religion on the use of the CIH approach described in the case. To what extent does the political, economic, or cultural context impact the effectiveness of CIH approaches like qi therapy? In other words, when, why, and how would you recommend using CIH approaches? Be sure to substantiate your claims with evidence

How socio-demographic characteristics impact the experience of space and place

  1. Situate the topic and research question
  2. Describe the methods used and why they are appropriate to answer the research question (explicitly drawing on the methods literature);
  3. Present an analysis of the data produced; and
  4. Provide a reflection on the student’s positionality in the research process. Analysis will include reflections on the things that were difficult for you as a proto-researcher and what you wish you understood better.

Conduct a semi-structured interview (at least 30 minutes) with a friend, relative, classmate, or roommate about their residential experience and daily activities as a student in Atlanta. Using Smith and Fox’s Studentification Guide for North America as a starting point, brainstorm key themes; and design an interview script to explore consisting over 5-7 primary questions with associated secondary follow-up questions. The purpose of the interview is to explore the lived experience of students in the city, including (for example):
• • Housing histories and the (social, geographic, economic) factors shaping residential decisions;
• • Student perceptions of the neighborhoods surrounding campus (Summerhill, Downtown…);

• • How socio-demographic characteristics impact the experience of space and place…
conduct you interview online or using an online platform like WebEx, Skype, FaceTime, or Zoom. Identify themes in your participant’s responses. Transcribe and code your interview and explain how you identified key themes and narratives from your interview.
Project Option 2: Focus Group
Georgia State University is developing a student housing and spurring development in the neighborhood of Summerhill, adjacent to Center Park Stadium – see: https://georgiastatesignal.com/georgia-states- summerhill-project-is-already-an-overwhelming-success/
Using Smith and Fox’s Studentification Guide for North America as a starting point, design and conduct a focus group with 4 people, lasting at least 45 minutes. Your focus group should explore what students think about the transformation of this development, how they have experienced the neighborhood in the past (if at all), their perception of the planned development, and what they think would be important to prompt an inclusive space for students and non-students. Devise questions/prompts to canvas the focus group’s views. In the write-up, identify the key findings from the discussion, and include your reflections on the process.
You may conduct you interview online or using an online platform like WebEx, Skype, FaceTime, or Zoom. You may also reflect on the strengths and limitations of conducting focus group online.
Project Option 3: Participant Observation
Identify a key ‘student space’ in the city. Spend at least one hour as a participant observer and write up your field notes. Select a field site of your choosing in order to understand the spaces and geographies of student life in Atlanta. This can include spaces where they study, live, commute, socialize at night, shop, eat out, or communal spaces in which they spend time around campus.
Develop your observational skills by being attentive to who is there and how people are interacting. What define your site as a ‘student space’. How are social norms (re)produced? Are their tensions between student and non-students? How is social inclusion or exclusion manifested in the social and physical space? Reflect on your role as a participant observer in your chosen setting. Use this information to develop a thick description of your research site, including the social norms, behaviors, and practices necessary to become an ‘insider’. Pay attention to social distancing guidelines.

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Project Option 4: Photo Elicitation
Ask a friend to think about the places in the Atlanta area where they feel they most strongly identify as a student. Then ask them to take a series of 15-20 photos (using a camera or smartphone) over a few days that capture these spaces. Encourage them to consider capturing a variety of spaces and places that cover their range of daily activities, including where they study, live, commute, socialize at night, shop, eat out, or communal spaces in which they spend time around campus.
After collecting your photos, sit down with you research participant and interview them with the help of the photos they have taken. While discussing the images, try to grasp their experiences and perceptions of place, and how space relates to their identity and feelings of belonging. This might also include spaces and places where they feel out of place compared to hegemonic student practices or norms. Reflect on the role that the photos played in your interview and how they managed to represent the area in which they were taken; what do they tell you about your participant’s distinct view of the student life in the city?
Project Option 5: A ‘Sense of Place’ Walking Interview
Drawing from Holton and Riley’s 2014 paper on walking interviews, arrange to walk with a friend to two or three locations in the city that they regularly visit as ‘student spaces’. This can include spaces where they study, live, commute, socialize at night, shop, eat out, or communal spaces in which they spend time around campus. Encourage your interviewee to think about a route that moves between campus (classroom, the Library etc.) and non-campus spaces, but keep the routes you take open in order to replicate as much as possible their ‘natural’ everyday journeys. During your ‘walk’ keep a series of questions and theme in mind regarding the significance and perceptions of the spaces you are moving through – prompt your friend to reflect on the environment they are moving through and practice more spontaneous questioning in light on your interviewee’s responses; what influences their everyday spatial routines? How do they feel about these places at different times of the day? Have the places they frequent shifted over they time (months? years?) at the University? What alternative routes or places are rarely visited, and why?