article summary

 
Select an article from a magazine or newspaper that has something in it that pertains to biology. This will serve as the “target article” for this assignment. For instance, you can select an article about medicine, invasive species, nature, conservation, genetic technology, ecology, or any other topic that is related to biology. One purpose of this assignment is to help you become aware of how biology is related to your everyday life.
Write a one to three (1-3) page paper in which you:

  1. Summarize the article in one (1) or more paragraphs, using your own words. Be sure to identify the article using an in-text citation in the body of the paper, as well as a reference in the reference section. 
  2. Explain how the article relates to this course. Identify which biological concepts from the course and / or text are relevant to the topic covered in the article. Citing the course text, discuss the ways in which this course does (or doesn’t) provide background information to help you understand the article and the larger issues surrounding it.
  3. Explain why the article caught your attention. Relate the article to your life and to issues that are important to you. Discuss how or if the scientific knowledge about the topic covered in the article affects you directly or indirectly.
  4. Discuss your opinion on how research on this topic should be funded. State whether you think taxpayer monies should support research on this topic or whether such research in this area should be funded by the private sector. Rate the importance of research on this topic, relative to other areas of research.

In addition to the target article, you should use at least one additional resource, such as your textbook or another article. You must have a reference section which contains an APA reference to your chosen article and all other sources. Additionally, you must provide in-text citations (in APA format) to your references in the body of the text. Integrate all sources into your paper using proper techniques of quoting, paraphrasing and summarizing, along with your in-text citations.

Ethnography-Formulating Outcome-Based Evaluation of Needs Assessment Report for Stakeholders

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Top of Form

· Unit 9

· Formulating Outcome-Based Evaluation of Needs Assessment Report for Stakeholders

Introduction
At the outset of this course, you were introduced to the action learning knowledge base on the public needs assessment and planning processes representing the contextual gap between the present conditions or situation occurring within the community of interest and what ought to have been occurring to ensure the best possible services, programs, or projects for those whose needs-based issues are at stake. Also, you learned that the needs assessment planning process is that measurable instrument used in determining the measurable action that can foster desirable systems changes to bridge or fill that gap. However, without a results-based accountability instrument and performance reporting framework, there can be no way of determining whether that contextual gap has been bridged and its measurable outcomes been attained.
Moreover, as an undergirding centerpiece, you have also learned that in conceptualizing the measurable action, the needs assessment and planning processes provide a comprehensive framework for determining action intervention and service or program use patterns in facilitation of an action-oriented research project. However, crucial to the facilitation of the public needs assessment and planning process that can impact the action-oriented research project is the delineation of the positionality of research facilitator. Also, because the central focus of this course is on the public aspect of needs assessment planning projects, it is important to understand its ethnographic implications.
Moreover, your future participatory action research dissertation study includes you as a member of a team that works to find a solution to a public problem or gaps in service, program, or project use patterns within the public domain. Participatory action research builds on ethnography as one component of the research model. And that is another reason to understand ethnography as a qualitative research methodology. Ethnography has its roots in a number of disciplines, and each adds depth and richness to the research design.
Thus, throughout this course, you have been exploring the various components of public needs assessment and planning processes and have learned a great deal about how gaps in service, program, or project use patterns can be bridged to effect positive systems changes. In bridging those gaps, the components of public needs assessment and planning processes may require any of the following plans: proximate or short-term, ultimate or long-term, and proximate-ultimate or multileveled strategic planning. The outcome-based evaluation (OBE) is the accountability instrument that can provide the framework for determining the impacts of such plans on program or project use patterns.
Even in the previous unit, you also explored how KTA intervention framework or other suitable frameworks can be used in facilitation of your needs-based action learning of program or project planning, implementation, monitoring, and performance evaluation processes. The OBE serves as the program or project inquiry blueprint in ascertaining to what extent the program’s implementation has facilitated a successful outcome. In other words, without the OBE, how do you really know the extent to which the public needs assessment and planning processes or perhaps the KTA interventions have been effective or efficient in bridging the gaps in service, program, or project use patterns for the positive systems changes? And without the OBE, how sure are you that all of the relevant needs-based data have even been well collected to give accurate data representation of the SAF?
Also, to what degree of certainty have you really determined this SAF as constituting the needs-based issues? How valid and reliable have the various analytic tools been efficient and effective in helping gather the relevant data in delineating the SAF? Under which condition of certainty is the etiological analysis of the needs assessment planning processes conducted presents a clear delineation of the assumptions that undergird the needs-based SAF? And, how certain is such etiological analysis of the needs assessment planning processes embedded in theory-driven outcomes or theoretical foundations of program use patterns? How have such theory-driven outcomes informed the conceptualization of measurable action plan in shaping the overall goal, outcome objectives, process objectives, program or project hypotheses, and activities? All of the above action learning questions thus echo the uncertainty that may surround the public needs assessment and planning processes. That is to say that, no public needs assessment and planning processes may run a completely smooth course. In fact, there may be ups and downs, uncertainties, challenges, efficiency or effectiveness issues with service, program or project use patterns, and perhaps successes, or it could be that things just did not go as well planned. The important points are that progress, results-based accountability, and performance reporting, however slow, should continue to be made as the undergirding principles. Sometimes, the progress, results-based accountability, and performance reporting are just not as obvious, which is why methods of evaluating different stages and activities in ways pertinent to the service, program or project use patterns are important. For example, in some situations, it is subjective and not so much measured as could have been observed.
In other cases, we can quantify our planned action goals or create milestones to measure progress. For example, if our planned action goal is to introduce fresh healthy foods to all 78 markets in an area of a city, an interim or short-term goal might be 25 stores in the first year. We can measure our progress against that. An action plan might lay out steps to reduce community crime through better public awareness. A survey taken at certain points in the project timeline could tell us how well our awareness program is being understood by the public. Again, we can take a snapshot in time of our progress. In this unit, we will consider some of the ups and downs, uncertainties, challenges, efficiency or effectiveness issues with service, program or project use patterns, and the ethnographic implications, as well as the OBE methods we can use to assess our public needs assessment and planning project’s progress.
Finally, remember that all of the action learning issues covered in this course are intended to introduce you to the process of exploring the needs-based patterns of service, program, or project use gap that may serve as the backbone for your future action research dissertation project in the DPA program. For this, the public needs assessment and planning course is a starting point of exploring possible needs-based patterns of service, program, or project use gap in preparation for your ultimate action research dissertation project.
Currently, because the scientific merit action research template (SMART) form is the research plan that serves as the skeleton for your dissertation proposal in the DPA program, it may be good to get introduced to it. Being introduced early to the SMART form will not only help you better acclimate yourself on what will be expected of you at the dissertation phase, but also you could perhaps start reflecting on the relevant questions noted on some of the sections as lenses to help shape your public needs assessment and planning project.
Objectives
To successfully complete this learning unit, you will be expected to:
1. Explore results-based accountability instrument and performance reporting framework used in determining the measurable outcome of systems changes.
2. Assess methods of performance evaluation and outcomes measurement for public needs assessments.
3. Compare methods used to evaluate uncertainties, challenges, and efficiency or effectiveness issues with service, program, or project use patterns, success, and progress in a public needs assessment project.
4. Explore outcome-based evaluation applications and implications on public needs assessment and planning processes, theory-driven outcomes, and action-oriented research projects.
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What Is Ethnography?
Readings
Note: Be certain to read the unit introduction, as it may contain important information and references pertaining to this unit’s content and activities.
Use your Designing and Managing Programs text to complete the following:
. Read Chapter 9, “Designing Effectiveness-Based Information Systems,” pages 161–188.
. Read Chapter 11, “Impact Program Evaluation and Hypothesis Testing,” pages 203–212.
Use your Conducting Needs Assessments text to read Chapter 10, “Reporting the Findings,” pages 171–179.
Use the Capella library to read Coryn, Noakes, Westine, and Schröter’s 2011 article, “A Systematic Review of Theory-Driven Evaluation Practice From 1990 to 2009,” from American Journal of Evaluation, volume 32, issue 2, pages 199–226.

Plants In The Modern World

I need this paper to be on two part
Plants In The Modern World
 
1- Draft one : (February 5th,2018 )
This draft needs to be more than an outline but does not need to be a complete paper.  Please submit the best draft that you can.  Points will be awarded based on completion towards a final draft, incorporation of comments made on your outline, and on timeliness of your submission.   You don’t have to adhere to the rubric included for this draft but it is the rubric that will be used for the final draft so I’m including it for your information.
Final paper (February 18th,2018)
+
PowerPoint to present the paper for the presentation .

Choose one of the sectors we discussed in class (i.e., Destinations, Accommodations, F&B, Attractions, Meetings & Events, Transportation, or Travel trade). Now choose one of the 5 external issues (i.e., Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Environmental, or Legal) and discuss how that current issue affects the industry sector you selected.

Active Learning Sheet Assignments
HTM402 Winter 2018
 
ALS2 Due Date February 16 2018
The assignment sheet should have a cover page with your name and topic, two single-spaced pages to answer the questions (one page per question), and one additional page, as needed, for references (APA style). This ALS follows the class exercise and discussion we had on PESTEL analysis.
 

  1. Question 1. Choose one of the sectors we discussed in class (i.e., Destinations, Accommodations, F&B, Attractions, Meetings & Events, Transportation, or Travel trade). Now choose one of the 5 external issues (i.e., Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Environmental, or Legal) and discuss how that current issue affects the industry sector you selected.
  2. Question 2. Same as question 1, but with a different sector and a different issue.

 
You need to have at least 5 references per question (total of 10 references should be listed, APA style)
 

Correlate cardio-respiratory fitness

MP

EF205-4: Correlate cardio-respiratory fitness guidelines with exercise and fitness requirements.
Instructions
Complete labs 5.1 and 5.2 (including all activities).
Submit your lab write up to the dropbox and be sure to answer these questions. You do not need to submit the labs, only the write up.
Your write up should include a summary of your findings and interpretation of your score. You should make recommendations based on the information obtained being sure to answer these questions: list and discuss your current stage of change are you in regarding CV endurance. Does your current CV activity level meet exercise and fitness guidelines? Why or why not? What would an appropriate target HR zone be for you to begin a new routine?
Requirements
· This paper should be 2-3 pages in length, written in APA format and utilize references.
Book
https://kaplan.vitalsource.com/#/books/9781284036831/cfi/6/28!/4/26/40/8/12/8/6/6/22/2/2@0:100

Digital radiography

paraphrising

Introduction.
Digital radiography now able to use the electronic collimation on images after acquisition. This may seem convenient in paediatric imaging, but we have to be aware that electronic collimation has two major downsides. Electronic collimation implicates that the original field size should have been smaller and the patient has been exposed to unnecessary radiation. Also, by use of electronic collimation, potentially important information may be lost. (Bomer, Wiersma-Deijl and Holscher, 2013)
levels of radiation exposure depend on the use of collimation(Ghobadifar and Zarei, 2013)
Collimation decreased radiation exposure and maintained the quality of image. Hereby, the proper use of collimation will be useful to both patients and operators.
This clinical audit poster shows data for using electronic collimation after x ray done and how that can affect the image appearance.
Aim.
To evaluate the quality of image delivered also to reducing x ray dose.
Objectives.
To determine how many radiographers using the collimation after the x ray done.
To see which examination the radiographer using the collimation more.
Methodology
Data collection method.
Data were collected randomly from General x-ray department by seeing the images on PACS* system (A picture archiving and communication system). (PACS) is a medical imaging technology which provides economical storage and convenient access to images from multiple modalities.
Results.
From 30 images ,19 out of 30 the radiographers not using the collimation on the computer but 11 images the collimation was used.
Conclusion.
This poster discusses the use of electronic collimation in digital imaging. The ability to electronically collimate an image after acquisition carries the risk of overexposure., we can use electronic collimation to optimise image quality. However, the original images should always be sent to the PACS as they may contain critically important information and the patient has the right to all information at all times (Bomer, Wiersma-Deijl and Holscher, 2013)
Recommendations for practice:
A more descript vie assessment of using a collimator on the computer after the x-ray done
May be useful to improve the radiographer skill and also to reduce the x ray dose

Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)

Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has become a big concern in hospitals throughout the country and the world, as have other antibiotic resistant bacterial strains.
Part 1

Part 2

  • How can you prevent or slow down the spread and further      the selection of new antibiotic resistant strains of bacteria?
  • Are there things that you can personally do to reduce      your risk or even to reduce the spread of these dangerous microbes?
  • What is your reaction to the following sign that is      commonly found in restrooms? Is it significant to the discussion of      antibiotic resistance?

Saccharomyces cerevisiae 

Topic:  Saccharomyces cerevisiae 
 You must discuss the above organism to tell what type of microbe it is, what helpful beneficial actions it performs and which subfield of microbiology it is involved in. The discussion should be well-written, in your own words, paraphrasing from only credible academic sources. You may not directly quote from your sources.  You must also cite your credible academic reference sources in text and provide full end ref information in APA format. The post must be at least 300-400 words
Please do not use Wikipedia or any other Open Source to support this college level work!
paraphrase from all sources as direct quotation is not acceptable in science writing.
Due date:2/7/15 at 6pm