development select one of the following six cases located in files this little piggy went to med school national 2020 catch or release national 2019 euthanasia for alcoholism regional 2017 grab that mic national 2018 rivers are people too

This will be an exercise in pioneering a solution to an ethical and social issue. In addition to detailing your response to the issue, you will need to rationally defend your position.

Development

Select one of the following six cases (located in Files):

  1. This Little Piggy Went to Med School (National 2020)
  2. Catch or Release? (National 2019)
  3. Euthanasia for Alcoholism (Regional 2017)
  4. Grab That Mic! (National 2018)
  5. Rivers Are People Too (Regional 2017)
  6. Quarantines (Regional 2017)

First, identify one of the central and unique ethical conflicts or “issues” at stake in the case. This will ensure that you develop a solution to the case that is relevant to the case; it will also help you focus your argument. Second, develop (a) a proposed solution, (b) at least three reasons supporting this solution (this is where additional research starts to become crucial), (c) at least one reasonable and strong objection to your position, and (d) a response to that objection (you might respond by giving reasons against the objection, or by modifying your proposal to minimize the significance of the objection). Be mindful of perspectives and values you may be denying, ignoring, and demoting. Avoid doing this as much as possible. But when you find that it is unavoidable, think of your reasons for doing so.

Format

  1. Introduction
    1. A recap of the case (for someone who has not read it)—keep this as brief as possible
    2. Mention of the key issue (conflicting values) of the case you are focusing on.
    3. Provide your proposed solution; include essential and relevant definitions of terms, caveats, limitations of principles you might be using, etc.
  2. Argument
    1. At least three reasons to support your proposal. Each of these three should probably be discussed within its own paragraph.
  3. Objection and Response
    1. A strong objection to your proposal
    2. A response

There is no need for a concluding paragraph.

Your work should be around 3 to 4 pages in length (double-spaced). Include a works cited for any additional research you do.

writing essay discussion

Directions:

Book Review Essay: The Unequal City

The book review essay is on Capital City: Gentrification and the Real Estate State. The essay asks you to evaluate the book while drawing on readings and lectures from weeks 4 through 6.

Students are required to answer the four prompts below. Answers should be two pages long (double space, 12-point font, 1-inch margins). We are assessing your knowledge of course materials (lectures and readings). MLA or APA formats are acceptable. Submit in Word or PDF format only. Do not submit in Pages format.

Your answers must be written in a standard essay format consisting of a short introduction (with a thesis statement), supporting paragraphs that respond to each of the prompts, and a short conclusion. There should be no more than two direct quotations.

Capital City

  1. What does Stein mean by the real estate state? Is the real estate state neoliberal? Support your answer.
  2. What are the principal causes of gentrification?
  3. According to Stein, what are the specific things that planners do to support gentrification?
  4. What are important consequences from gentrification?

writing a response paper 4

Writing a response paper for Documentary Reader selections from The French Revolution. The paper should be think pieces and one and a half to two pages long. All the requirments will be provided when accepting the question; the Documentary Reader included.

how were iranians marginalized after coming to american during the revolution

– 5-7 pages

– 5 sources (quotes from trustworthy websites)

– Works cited page

– 1 book reference (The book persepolis can be an option)

– 12 point Times New Roman Font

– Double Spaced

– I have an outline with sources that is attached if needed for references

describe adolescent social and moral development according to erikson and later researchers be sure to include examples in your post of a crisis one would need to overcome in order to move along successfully to the next stage of psychosocial development

must be 300 words and must not be plagiarized. clear details and correct grammer.

phil 20b hist west phil 1400 1800

Write an essay of 5-7 pages, double-spaced, in a 12-point font, in response to the prompt below.

Prompt:

What are the central problems with modern culture, according to Rousseau? What are his solutions to these problems? Are you persuaded by his account of the problems or the solutions?

various budgets

Please write 2 pages with 3 sources on the following:

Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of creating various budgets. Do you see any ethical issues that may arise in the preparation of the budgets we discussed this week?

from the professor:

This week is all about budgets. Capital budgeting decisions involve purchasing or upgrading fixed assets. The master budget is made up of a number of budgets depending upon the type of business you have. Flexible budgets are used instead of static budgets when there may be various levels of activities, revenues and expenses.

management information system i attached the file 1

Part 1: Goal Seek

The purpose of this project is to practice and apply what you have learned about using the Goal Seek tool in Excel. In this project, you will create a spreadsheet to help determine what score you need to earn on a final exam or project to get the desired letter grade in one of your classes. Please read the instructions carefully because you will have to customize your worksheet to fit your own needs and the class you choose.

Requirements:

Open a new Excel workbook. Use “GoalSeek” for the name of the spreadsheet—you will add additional spreadsheets to this workbook in parts 2 and 3.

Choose any one of your current classes and create a spreadsheet that includes at least the following headings: Category, Points Possible, Estimated Percentage, Estimated Points. You are free to include any additional headings that are useful to you.

Under Category, list the categories of the major components (assignments, quizzes, projects, exams, etc.) that make up your grade for that class. You don’t need to list the individual items in that category, just list the category (i.e., use “Quizzes” instead of “Quiz 1”, “Quiz 2”, etc.). However, list the final exam or final project separately from your other exams, as shown in the example screenshot. (If you don’t have any exams in the class, use the final project or whatever major graded activity that falls near the end of the semester.)

Under Points Possible, enter the total number of possible points for each category. (If you have ten quizzes in the class and each quiz is worth 10 points, the points possible for quizzes is 100.) When you get to the final exam or project, list the possible points for that one exam or that one project and be sure to exclude those points from the general exams category.

Under Estimated Percentage, enter your best guess for the percentage of points you think you will earn for each category. If you think you will average 80% on the quizzes or the other exams, enter in 80% for that category.Do this for all the categories in your spreadsheet.

Use a formula to calculate the estimated points using the points possible and the estimated percentage. Do this for all the categories in your spreadsheet.

In the three rows immediately below the last grade category in your spreadsheet, enter three labels: Total Points, Points Possible, and Percent Score. In the column directly to the right of those labels, use formulas or enter the total estimated points, the actual points possible for the class, and the percentage score (Total Points/Points Possible) based on your estimated points for the categories. The screenshot below shows a partial version of the table you are creating. Yours should not be exactly like this, but it should have at least the headings and labels as shown.

Use the Goal Seek tool to determine the percent score that you need to get on the final exam or project to get an A (90%) in the class. In a cell beneath the table you just created, record what score you need to get on the final exam to earn an A in the class and also comment on whether you think it is likely you will achieve that.

Use the Goal Seek tool again to determine the percent score that you need to get on the final exam or project to get a B (80%) in the class. In a cell beneath your first comment, record what score you need to get on the final exam to earn an B in the class and also comment on whether you think it is likely you will achieve that.

Save your progress and proceed to Part 2.

Part 2: Solver

The purpose of this part of the project is to practice and apply what you have learned about the Solver tool. You will use Solver to determine an optimal combination and number of products to produce to maximize profit.

Requirements:

Add a new spreadsheet into your project 4 workbook and name it “Solver”.

Enter in the labels and numbers as shown in the following screenshot. This table shows the profit and requirements for three different products. Each product requires a certain number of hours and materials. The company only has so many resources available, so the solution has to fit within what is available.

Cells F5, F6, and G8 use functions or formulas. All other numbers should be entered in exactly as shown in the screenshot.

Cell F5 holds the calculation for the total number of hours used, based on the production size for each product. This is calculated by taking the hours required multiplied by the production size for Product 1, added to the hours required multiplied by the production size for Product 2, added to the hours required multiplied by the production size for Product 3. The easiest way to calculate this is to use the SUMPRODUCT function for the hours cells and the production size cells. (Look up the SUMPRODUCT function on Google if you need help figuring out how to use it.)

Cell F6 holds the calculation for the total number of materials used, based on the production size for each product. Use the SUMPRODUCT function to calculate this value similar to what you did with hours.

Cell G8 is the total profit. It is calculated using a formula that takes the sum of the product profits multiplied by the production sizes. Use SUMPRODUCT for this cell as well.

Use the Solver tool to determine the optimal mix and number of products to produce.

Your goal is to maximize total profit.

You achieve this by allowing Solver to change to production sizes for all the products.

You must implement the following bounds and constraints:

You cannot use more resources than you have available.

The minimum production size for each product is 5.

The production size must be in whole numbers or integers—no partially products produced.

After you have successfully used Solver to maximize total profit, save your spreadsheet in that state without changing the numbers or your Solver settings. The optimal total profit should be around $6,700.

Save your progress and proceed to Part 3.

Part 3: Data Tables

The purpose of this part of the project is for you to practice and apply what you have learned about data tables. You will create two different data tables that show how loan interest rates and terms affect your total and monthly payments.

Requirements:

Add a new spreadsheet to your existing project 4 workbook and name it “DataTables”.

Copy a mortgage table from a previous example or project or create a new one. Your table should be similar to the one in the screenshot below. Be sure to use $300,000 for the home price, a 20% down payment amount, a 3.5% interest rate, and a 30 year loan.

To the right of the mortgage table, create a one-variable data table using the Data Table tool that shows the monthly payments and total amounts paid for the range of interest rates between 3.250% and 4.000%. Your completed data table should match the one below. You must use the Data Table tool; do not simply manually enter the numbers into the table.

Below your first data table, create a second data table. This should be a two-variable data table that shows how the number of years determines the total amounts paid for the loan for the interest rates between 3.250% and 4.000%. You must use the Data Table tool, and your completed table should match the one below.

Save your progress and workbook.Part 1: Goal Seek

The purpose of this project is to practice and apply what you have learned about using the Goal Seek tool in Excel. In this project, you will create a spreadsheet to help determine what score you need to earn on a final exam or project to get the desired letter grade in one of your classes. Please read the instructions carefully because you will have to customize your worksheet to fit your own needs and the class you choose.

Requirements:

1. Open a new Excel workbook. Use “GoalSeek” for the name of the spreadsheet—you will add additional spreadsheets to this workbook in parts 2 and 3.

2. Choose any one of your current classes and create a spreadsheet that includes at least the following headings: Category, Points Possible, Estimated Percentage, Estimated Points. You are free to include any additional headings that are useful to you.

3. Under Category, list the categories of the major components (assignments, quizzes, projects, exams, etc.) that make up your grade for that class. You don’t need to list the individual items in that category, just list the category (i.e., use “Quizzes” instead of “Quiz 1”, “Quiz 2”, etc.). However, list the final exam or final project separately from your other exams, as shown in the example screenshot. (If you don’t have any exams in the class, use the final project or whatever major graded activity that falls near the end of the semester.)

4. Under Points Possible, enter the total number of possible points for each category. (If you have ten quizzes in the class and each quiz is worth 10 points, the points possible for quizzes is 100.) When you get to the final exam or project, list the possible points for that one exam or that one project and be sure to exclude those points from the general exams category.

5. Under Estimated Percentage, enter your best guess for the percentage of points you think you will earn for each category. If you think you will average 80% on the quizzes or the other exams, enter in 80% for that category. Do this for all the categories in your spreadsheet.

6. Use a formula to calculate the estimated points using the points possible and the estimated percentage. Do this for all the categories in your spreadsheet.

7. In the three rows immediately below the last grade category in your spreadsheet, enter three labels: Total Points, Points Possible, and Percent Score. In the column directly to the right of those labels, use formulas or enter the total estimated points, the actual points possible for the class, and the percentage score (Total Points/Points Possible) based on your estimated points for the categories. The screenshot below shows a partial version of the table you are creating. Yours should not be exactly like this, but it should have at least the headings and labels as shown.

8. Use the Goal Seek tool to determine the percent score that you need to get on the final exam or project to get an A (90%) in the class. In a cell beneath the table you just created, record what score you need to get on the final exam to earn an A in the class and also comment on whether you think it is likely you will achieve that.

9. Use the Goal Seek tool again to determine the percent score that you need to get on the final exam or project to get a B (80%) in the class. In a cell beneath your first comment, record what score you need to get on the final exam to earn an B in the class and also comment on whether you think it is likely you will achieve that.

Save your progress and proceed to Part 2.

Part 2: Solver

The purpose of this part of the project is to practice and apply what you have learned about the Solver tool. You will use Solver to determine an optimal combination and number of products to produce to maximize profit.

Requirements:

1. Add a new spreadsheet into your project 4 workbook and name it “Solver”.

2. Enter in the labels and numbers as shown in the following screenshot. This table shows the profit and requirements for three different products. Each product requires a certain number of hours and materials. The company only has so many resources available, so the solution has to fit within what is available.

3. Cells F5, F6, and G8 use functions or formulas. All other numbers should be entered in exactly as shown in the screenshot.

A. Cell F5 holds the calculation for the total number of hours used, based on the production size for each product. This is calculated by taking the hours required multiplied by the production size for Product 1, added to the hours required multiplied by the production size for Product 2, added to the hours required multiplied by the production size for Product 3. The easiest way to calculate this is to use the SUMPRODUCT function for the hours cells and the production size cells. (Look up the SUMPRODUCT function on Google if you need help figuring out how to use it.)

B. Cell F6 holds the calculation for the total number of materials used, based on the production size for each product. Use the SUMPRODUCT function to calculate this value similar to what you did with hours.

C. Cell G8 is the total profit. It is calculated using a formula that takes the sum of the product profits multiplied by the production sizes. Use SUMPRODUCT for this cell as well.

4. Use the Solver tool to determine the optimal mix and number of products to produce.

A. Your goal is to maximize total profit.

B. You achieve this by allowing Solver to change to production sizes for all the products.

C. You must implement the following bounds and constraints:

1. You cannot use more resources than you have available.

2. The minimum production size for each product is 5.

3. The production size must be in whole numbers or integers—no partially products produced.

5. After you have successfully used Solver to maximize total profit, save your spreadsheet in that state without changing the numbers or your Solver settings. The optimal total profit should be around $6,700.

Save your progress and proceed to Part 3.

Part 3: Data Tables (10 points)

The purpose of this part of the project is for you to practice and apply what you have learned about data tables. You will create two different data tables that show how loan interest rates and terms affect your total and monthly payments.

Requirements:

1. Add a new spreadsheet to your existing project 4 workbook and name it “DataTables”.

2. Copy a mortgage table from a previous example or project or create a new one. Your table should be similar to the one in the screenshot below. Be sure to use $300,000 for the home price, a 20% down payment amount, a 3.5% interest rate, and a 30 year loan.

3. To the right of the mortgage table, create a one-variable data table using the Data Table tool that shows the monthly payments and total amounts paid for the range of interest rates between 3.250% and 4.000%. Your completed data table should match the one below. You must use the Data Table tool; do not simply manually enter the numbers into the table.

4. Below your first data table, create a second data table. This should be a two-variable data table that shows how the number of years determines the total amounts paid for the loan for the interest rates between 3.250% and 4.000%. You must use the Data Table tool, and your completed table should match the one below.

5. Save your progress and workbook.

study guide unit 3 possible bacterial unknowns

Below is a list of all of the possible bacterial unknowns you could be given in lab. Prepare a table that lists the organism, the phylum, class, order, and family to which it belongs, and the medical significance, including the mode of transmission (air, water, food, close contact, sexual contact), and the body system affected (ie, skin, nervous system, cardiovascular/lymphatic, respiratory, digestive, urinary, reproductive). To find the phylum, class, order, and family according to the Bergey’s manual, use this link: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/pb-assets/assets/9781118960608/Taxonomic_Outline_October_2017-1507044705000.pdf (Links to an external site.)

Info regarding medical significance can be found in the Tortora text.

Citrobacter freundii

Klebsiella pneumoniae

Enterobacter aerogenes

Escherichia coli

Edwardsiella tarda

Providencia stuartii

Proteus mirabilis

Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Pseudomonas fluorescens

Serratia marcescens

Salmonella enteritidis

Shigella flexneri

Bacillus cereus

Bacillus megaterium

Bacillus subtilis

Clostridium sporogenes

Corynebacterium xerosis

Micrococcus luteus

Micrococcus roseus

Staphylococcus saprophyticus

Mycobacterium phlei

Mycobacterium smegmatis

Staphylococcus aureus

Staphylococcus epidermidis

Enterococcus faecalis

12. What are some common features of parasitic helminth worms? Describe the three stages that

are found in all parasitic helminth life cycles. Give an example of a helminth disease discussed in class.

13. List 3 mechanisms by which helminths can enter human hosts (transmission).

14. What is another name for the helminths in the phylum Platyhelminthes? What are the 2 major groups of worms in this phylum? What is another name for the helminths in the phylum Nematoda?

15. What structures form the basis for the classification of fungi? What are the four groups into which

fungi are currently classified?

16. Compare and contrast superficial, systemic and subcutaneous mycoses. Give an example of each.

17. Distinguish between a prion and a viroid.


write up a comparison paper base on two articles

Compare the article “My struggles with Anti-Intellectualism” by Paul Stoller https://www.huffpost.com/entry/anti-intellectualism_b_1498288

and article “What’s wrong with vocational school? ” by Charles Murray ( Text photo provided in files)

Around 700-800 words.

Points that could be write up about : The use of language, the development, different views, the role of pragmatism in U.S, clearly of approach etc..

(Theres no need to include every point but include three points only from above) And please use point, evidence/example, explanation to support the comparison of two articles.