In health care, the nurse holds many responsibilities. The nurse must care for a patient by following the physician’s orders, assessing labs and objective data, in addition to discerning needs for the patient discharge plan. The discharge plan should be initiated soon after the patient is admitted to the hospital. The nurse, along with the interdisciplinary team, will assess the patient needs for returning home, with the nurse providing much of the discharge education. The purpose of this discussion is to choose two learning objectives for the Shadow Health patient Tina Jones. I will describe the teaching methods I would use, discuss how I would evaluate Tina’s learning, and list any possible barriers to learning. I will also relate this to
What I took away from interviewing her is that there is no “right” way to raise a child and you cannot force them to behave any specific way. She believes as a mother it is her job to show us what is right and wrong and the power of decision making. She said she decided that religious beliefs and values would not be a core pat of her parenting style. I love my mom and greatly value her opinion and knowledge. She is an amazing mom but it is my belief that faith is an important foundation in a persons life. I plan to utilize my conviction and Christian Spirituality when I guide and raise children as to give them a foundation of faith. Not everyone believes in this method of parenting, in fact some people very strongly disagree with this. In studying the subject I came across a very opinionated article published by Rob Cooper in The Daily Mail. This article titled: "Forcing a Religion on Your Children Is as Bad as Child Abuse” cited the opinions of atheist Professor Richard Dawkins. Dawkins takes the stance that “forcing a religion on children without questioning its merits is as bad as ‘child abuse.’” While I find this a very extreme position to take, in society today raising children in religious ways is increasingly more frowned upon. Society today, like Dawkins, often takes the stance that since religion is not scientific it is not accurate and
I used to have a friend lets call her Laura. Laura’s mom was a Jehovah Witness and her dad was non practicing, but her mother was devout to the point that she would let her child die before she would accept a blood transfusion. As you can tell I have biases when it comes to religious beliefs. Well Laura got accepted to a university about 5hour away the same school I was, and she really wanted to go, but her dad being a Mexican a machismo Mexican (there is a difference) threatened to disown her. She was all distraught, and me being me told her to tell them to go to hell and walk out the door and go to college. I spent weeks convincing her or trying to, and for a while I had her set to go she had everything done she even had a dorm room, and then her mother got pregnant and told her she had to raise the child like the oldest daughter should. I again told her to tell her mom to go to hell, but I am sad to say Laura stayed home raised her sister and went to the local community college. Knowing what I know now I should have kept silent about my beliefs and supported her right to choose what she wanted to do maybe she would have chosen school if I had not pushed my values on her so hard. To this day I recognize what I did wrong, but I still feel she wasted her life by rising someone else’s child, and becoming another statistic. I do however, see that maybe she did make the choice that was best for her, and though I do not agree with her the choice was never mine to make, and
Desegregation:Susan Clark Case of 1868 Thesis Susan Clark faced conflict in 1868 when she was refused admission to Washington School, an all white school in Muscatine, Iowa. Victory was achieved when the case was appealed to the Iowa Supreme Court who decided school segregation was unconstitutional. This
A music prodigy, former model, Assistant Principal, and the mother of two children; one boy and one girl. Standing at about five foot three, her curly blonde hair flutters down to the middle of her back. She wears glasses to help her experience all of life's greatest experiences. Always dressing in the fanciest clothes, she shows off her taste of fashion. As kind as a butterfly, she never fails to brighten up a stranger’s day. I have had the honor of getting to know her personally through my girlfriend and for the short time I have, she has treated me like a member of her own family. Her name is Julie Schrot, but do not pronounce her name wrong or you could lose an eye. No joke. She tells me, “The key to pronouncing it correctly is to just
Andrea Yates: The Hand That Rocked The Cradle Noble Woods III PSY 303 Abnormal Psychology Julie Bruno 19 September 2011 In 1964 Andrea Yates was born into a Roman Catholic family. She had had a normal upbringing. Andrea graduated valedictorian of her class in 1982. After high school Andrea continued her education and became a Registered Nurse. In 1984 Andrea met Russell “Rusty” Yates. The couple dated and eventually fell in love. They married in 1993, and started a family. Andrea Yates suffered from mental illness. In 2001, Andrea drowned her five children in a bathtub in her home. After years of court hearings, testing, and over-turned rulings, Andrea was found not guilty by reason of insanity. Yates was diagnosed
Newspaper Article Review The author’s article I have reviewed was Julia Preston. Ms. Preston is a former Mexican Correspondent who has also covered the federal courts. Ms. Preston currently works as the National Immigration Correspondent at the New York Times. In her article she goes into detail about immigrants and whether or not they are taking jobs from Americans and lowering wages by working for less. In addition, she provides a few words spoken by both the Republic nominee Donald Trump and his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton. Trump promises to cut back legal immigration with new controls by saying he would” boost wages and ensure open jobs are offered to American workers first.” Mrs. Clinton however believes that immigrants contribute
Dr. Ava Morrow Dr. Ava Morrow is a person worthy of being nominated and recognized for an HBCU Alumni Award in the category of education because her work as a microbiologist has afforded her the opportunity to train and encourage high school students and college students to be the next generation of STEM professionals. Her career as a faculty member began as a teaching assistant in the biology department at Gallaudet University and ended with the rank of Full Professor of Microbiology when she retired in 2013. She loved her work and was dedicated to students and the learning process. During her tenure at the university, she taught courses in Human Biology, General Microbiology, Pathogenic Microbiology, Physical Science, and Psychosocial and
Victoria Dickerson is a second year teacher at Carolina High School teaching in the Self-Contained special education classroom. Victoria’s expectations for her students are high and she often uses innovative techniques which include project-based learning strategies. Her students are always solving real world problems that will not only prepare them for work but provides them with the necessary life skills they need to be productive after high school. The students in the classroom range from being low-functioning intellectually disabled students to students how are on the middle school level in reading and are categorized as learning disabled. Even with the population she serves, she still challenges her students to be excellent. During
Olivia Judson, an evolutionary biologist with a doctorate in biological sciences and the author of The Definitive Guide to the Evolutionary Biology of Sex: Dr. Tatiana's Sex Advice to All Creation tells of her in-depth research on procreation to educate others on the sex life of all creation while incorporating the organismsf scientific names. Each chapter of the book begins with letters containing questions from an animal, amphibian, bug, arachnid, or other organism that, at times, must be put under a magnifying glass to see. The questions themselves are under three different categories. These categories are as follows:
What were her years in office like? She served from 2001 to 2005. As governor of Montana Ms. Martz entered politics in 1996 as Gov. Marc Racicot’s running mate and, with their victory, became the state’s first female lieutenant governor. Ms. Martz ran for governor in 2000 and won. What was her life like
Julie Johnstons childhood is by interesting. First, when Julie was younger she played soccer, but she played all positions. She was very good at defense, but she liked forward more. After, awhile she started to like defense a lot more. Julie Johnston as a child love being better than her sister. All in all, Julie's childhood is
Dear whoever finds this notebook, September ?, 2037 This is the story of me, Anna Carter, before and after it happened. “After what happened?” you might wonder. I’ll get to that if I have time. But for now, let’s talk about before.
Susan McClary’s scholarly article, A Musical Dialect from the Enlightenment: Mozart’s Piano Concerto in G Major, K. 453, Mvt. 2, starts off with her recalling a time after watching a performance of the concerto with a colleague and the two of them confessing different opinions about the soloist’s performance. McClary,
Shelly – Ann Fraser-Pryce only 5 feet has made Jamaica proud as the first track and field 100 m women sprinter athlete to win a gold medal at the Olympics game in 2008 with a time of 10.78 seconds. Fraser also went on to winning the 100 meter IAAF World