Good Evening, I am registered in your English 2960-902 online course. I recently received an C in the discussion board assignment. I responded to two other students and also posted my own message. I would like to get a better understanding of what I did wrong, so this could be prevented next time. Thanks, Paige Jones
As my senior year here at Jersey College of Nursing moves quickly to its end, I reflect on how far I have come and what exactly my experience here at Jersey College of Nursing has meant to me.
Reflecting on this course over this semester, there have been many lessons learned that will be valuable, as we enter the business world. Our first lesson was to learn to work together, as a team, to prepare a short memo, long memo, letter, and email for use in the business world. This is a lesson that will experience many times as we do our daily work. Punctuation and grammar are so important to present to the client and other organizations that we are professionals. It could mean the loss of a sale or acquiring new business. It’s like dressing for work; looking professional or unprofessional.
This subject of my essay is Lucinda Davis, a former slave owned by a Creek Indian family in what was then the former Indian Territory. She was approximately 89 years old when she was interviewed during the summer of 1937. Her story was quite an interesting one, as she was a witness to the Battle of Honey Springs during the civil war, an era that I am very interested in, which is the main reason why I chose to write about her. Another reason I chose her, is that she lived in Tulsa Oklahoma, and to me that brought the issue of slavery closer to home. I have always associated slavery with the southern states, not Oklahoma.
This is a reflective essay based on a event which took place in a hospital setting. The aim of this essay is to explore how members of the Multidisciplinary Team (MDT) worked together and communicate with each other to achieve the best patients outcome.
My interviewee's name is Paula Anderson-Worts. She was born in Jamaica back in the 1960’s. However, Paula along with her parents relocated to Florida when she was two years old for an improved life, and in search of the American dream. When Paula started school, she was inspired to become a teacher, doctor, and a fashion designer. Although, all throughout her life people told her she can’t become all those things, she has to select one. Even though this may be true, she still insisted on her dreams. In addition, “she thought it would be unique to follow in her mother’s footsteps”.
I interviewed my Aunt Ailine Elizabeth Harris Watterson. She is a forty-five-year-old homemaker born April 16, 1954 and raised here in Johnson City, Tennessee. I chose to interview her on the Civil Rights Movement because she had to face a lot of obstacles her late childhood and young adulthood years. Here is a series of questions on the Civil Rights Movement that I asked her and the answers that she gave me.
Once released from custody, Cassidy returned to the UK where she shared her experiences to raise awareness for violation of human rights in Chile, as she was one of 30,000 tortured. She continues to give back to the community with her want to improve people’s lives.
Sarah Boseley explains how white women have a higher greater chance getting breast cancer than those blacks and South Asian women. According to Boseley, she mentions how women from ethnic groups such as blacks, whites and south Asian being recruited from since 1996 to 2001. A recent study shows found in British journal of cancer eighteen percent of Asian women have less worried getting breast cancer. Furthermore, statistics show white women have more chance to have this disease and indeed, they show suddenly increased higher rate in the UK. Similarly, from Asian women, black women have a fifteen percent lesser than them. Boseley also notes the relationship among ethnic groups, these individual women's lifestyles such as drinking alcohol, breastfeeding, and having a lot of children are some number of risk factors. This source analyzes how these women need to make changes, as a result, they should reduce risk habits.
It has come to my attention that a few fillings done by you had to be re-done by another provider. For instance, on your first day working at DAMC you did a filling on a patient in Jimmy Carter. However, the patient came back very upset because his filling came off and we lost him as a patient. Subsequently, a patient in Tara Blvd complained that a filling came off and it had to be re-done again. We understand that this happens from time to time, but being that it has happened in patient’s that you have seen. I am asking you to please make an effort and to take appropiate measures, so this issues won’t be repeted
This book was probably the most brutal reading I’ve ever read. However, I found it incredibly eye-opening and excruciatingly honest about what life can be like for girls in impoverished and uneducated situations. Sapphire’s writing makes her character, Precious, seem real by incorporating her feelings, questions, and by writing in altered English grammar to make it seem as if her feelings are being spoken. I really enjoyed reading this book as it brought life and sensitivity to the statistics I’ve been reading about in my nursing clinicals and classes this semester.
Gwen Harwood’s poetry is very powerful for its ability to question the social conventions of its time, positioning the reader to see things in new ways. During the 1960’s, a wave of feminism swept across Australian society, challenging the dominant patriarchal ideologies of the time. Gwen Harwood’s poems ‘Burning Sappho’ and ‘Suburban Sonnet’ are two texts that challenge the dominant image of the happy, gentle, but ultimately subservient housewife. Instead, ‘Burning Sappho’ is powerful in constructing the mother as violent to reject the restraints placed on her by society, whilst Suburban Sonnet addresses the mental impact of the female gender’s confinement to the maternal and domestic sphere. Harwood employs a range of language and
When first brainstorming what topic I was going to pick for each annotated bibliography, it took me a while before I settled on a topic for each essay. While reflecting on my writing process, I came to the conclusion that more time would have definitely benefited my argument for each of these annotated bibliographies.
Pamela Jones enjoyed banking. She had taken a battery of personal aptitude and interest tests that suggested that she might like and do well in either banking or librarianship. Since the job market for librarians was poor, she applied for employment with a large chartered bank, the Bank of Winnipeg, and was quickly accepted.
Opportunities for an individual to develop understanding of themselves stem from the experiences attained on their journey through life. The elements which contribute to life are explored throughout Gwen Harwood’s poems, At Mornington and Mother Who Gave Me Life, where the recollection of various events are presented as influences on the individual’s perception of the continuity of life. Both poems examine the connections between people and death in relation to personal connections with the persona’s father or mother. By encompassing aspects of human nature and life’s journey, Harwood addresses memories and relationships which contribute to one’s awareness of life.
| |the intellectual conversation of topics that were discussed. I also enjoyed the learning |