Community identity

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    establish a multi-functional Community Center to serve the rural area I reside in. This Community Center would house a couple basketball/volleyball courts, a technology room, tutoring center, fitness area, snack bar, and a meeting venue. All activities would be free of charge to all community members except for the snack bar and renting of the meeting venue in which all profits collected would be used for equipment for all areas. I would use the money in the will for this Community Center because as a sophomore

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    paper will define what a community is and discuss some of the strengths and the differences between Australian Aboriginal Communities and Australian Non-Aboriginal Communities. What is Community? A community is described by many as a group of people who have the same ideologies on their cohabitation. They share the same interests and more often know how to work together. The first meaning of community as a locality refers to the territorial or geographic notion of community – the neighbourhood,

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    concepts to explain human interaction in metropolitan areas and to explain how modernity and urbanity have changed dramatically the nature of human interactions. In Community and Society, Tönnies (1887) discusses the concepts of Gemeinschaft (community) and Gesellschaft (society). According to these concepts, people living in community and people living in a society will develop a different type of will; these are essential will and arbitrary will. Tönnies explains that individuals who form part of

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    Discourse Community Study

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    1. What is the discourse community you are studying? The discourse community that I chose was bearded dragons and other animals of similar characteristics. a. What academic majors, departments, and disciplines is it related to? This discourse community relates to the major of animals sciences and/or the study of life, Biology. b. What jobs do its members usually hold? The members usually hold jobs like veterinarian, veterinary technician, animal care specialist, or general biologist. c. What defines

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    There are many different speech communities that are formed out of social locations. “A speech community exists when people share norms about how to use talk and what purposes it serves.” (Wood, 2014). This is why speech communities are formed from social locations; people who socialize in the same places often develop the same understandings of communication. One type of speech community is a gender speech community. Each gender has their own speech community, which is one reason why people of opposite

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    LEAD Scholarship Essay

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    When I was twelve years old, I desperately wanted to volunteer with the City of Calgary in their summer day camps. I had been a camper my whole life, and I wanted to be able to give others the same experience that I had at their age. In fact, I wanted to volunteer with them so badly that I registered in a camp called LEAD, which was originally only open to thirteen year olds. At the time, my understanding was that, in order to become a volunteer with the City of Calgary, you were required to complete

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    Community at heart is a group of people united under a set of values. As long as they stay secure under protection that the community conveys then they will be safe. Some individuals will often take advantage of the structure within a community, either using it to enrich themselves or gain power and position. When a community no longer holds the same protection for the citizens they may become frantic and search for reform. The Crucible by Arthur Miller highlights the disposition of individuals to

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    better understand how it affects their identity and perceptions. In order to understand one’s cultural identity, he or she needs to understand what the term means. According to one source, cultural identity can be defined as “We all have unique identities that we develop within our cultures, but these identities are not fixed or static” (Trumbull and Pacheco 10). Various aspects of a person’s life that may determine his or her cultural identity music, community, family, ethnicity, relationships, religion

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    or heritage, they forge their own sense of self-identity by overcoming the barriers in place. In Peter Skrzynecki’s poetry, particularly “Migrant Hostel” and “10 Mary Street” we witness an individual’s experience of segregation to eventual connection in the world they live. Skrzynecki’s insightful poem “Migrant Hostel” explores the notion of impermanence and uncertainty in an individual’s experience where stability is essential to develop an identity and sense of belonging. The poem illustrates the

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    to explore the aspects that create identity and how different aspects exclude people compared to the similarities which build groups and societies. People’s multiple identities are given by their similarities and differences, and their connections with others.’ [1] When considering identity it is import to look at the elements that contribute to the idea of identity. Identity elements range from situational reasons, which can just be temporary to identities based on personal characteristics such

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