The purpose of the developmental observation assignment is to synthesize and apply the theoretical concepts of child development to acquire an understanding of the developmental characteristics of a child or an adolescent in the biological, cognitive, and psychosocial domains of development.

Students will put together a report after completing an observation. The purpose of the developmental observation assignment is to synthesize and apply the theoretical concepts of child development to acquire an understanding of the developmental characteristics of a child or an adolescent in the biological, cognitive, and psychosocial domains of development.

There are two components to this assignment:

Observation:

Observe and/or interview a child or an adolescent (newborn – 18 years) for four weeks in a home, school or any other community organization serving children and adolescents. Record your observations based on the guidelines provided. If the child can talk, interview the child/adolescent asking age appropriate questions. In your interview, as appropriate,you may ask the child/adolescent about his or her likes, dislikes, interests or hobbies, role models, hopes and fears, attitude towards parents, teachers, school, friends, society, influence of the media, internet and the social media, and culture. Recognize atypical developmental characteristics, if any.

Written Report:

Write a written report following the guidelines provided. You will gather all of this information, synthesize it and then submit a final report in essay format and not just in question and answer format. This project will be completed as a 3page paper (not including cover and references), double-spaced, 1’ margins, 10-12 point Times New Roman or Helvetica font.

Reflective Journaling

Reflective Journaling:Part III: Leaders are Not Born, They are Trained (chapters 1-4)in the Havard text.

Chapter 1: Aretology The Science of Virtue
Chapter 2: We are What We Habitually Do
Chapter 3: The Unity of All the Virtues
Chapter 4: Leaders of Mind, Will, and Heart
Remember you will add to your journal from week 02. Make sure to include the date to keep your entries organized and identifiable. This week there are four chapters, however, you only are only required to journal three pages due to the length of the chapters. If you need a review of how to complete the assignment, review the directions in module 01. Also, keep in mind the objectives of the module 05 Virtuous Leadership Practical Application Paper.

Description To complete this assignment, you will choose one person to interview who was raised in a culture different from your own.

Description To complete this assignment, you will choose one person to interview who was raised in a culture different from your own.You will conduct the interview by asking questions that help you to learn about the interviewee’s culture. You can create some of the interview questions on your own, but you will want to cover enough information to complete the Interview Analysis Assignment that follows the interview. Below you will see sample questions you can use or edit to fit your interaction.Note: Although the information you will learn may be more dynamic and eye-opening if you interview someone from a different country, remember, culture is defined by more than just geographical continents. Sample Interview QuestionsHere are examples of questions you can use to get the interview started or to learn details about the interviewee’s background and culture.You do not have to use any or all of these questions,but make sure your questions are diverse and detailed enough to address the requirements in the Analysis Assignment. Where did you grow up?What was it like to grow up there? Did you live in a house, apartment, etc?Who lived with you? Did you grow up in an urban or rural setting? Who raised you?What were their roles in your family? Did your family and upbringing reflect the typical family in your culture? What holidays, traditions, and foods symbolize your culture? What were common industries or professions in your hometown or culture? Was there a major industry that employed most workers, or was it a diverse working community? How does your culture view conflict? Do people openly engage in conflict? Is it viewed in a positive or negative way? How does your culture feel about authority? Are elders respected unconditionally? Do people challenge authority? Are people in your culture blunt or reserved with communication? Do people openly express ideas and feelings? Do people avoid direct expressions of verbal messages? Is your culture community oriented or was your culture more focused on individuals or family groups? Did it feel like you were living inside a “big family” in your town or community? Did it feel like each family was separate and independent from others? Interview AssignmentFollowing the interview, you will create an essay that highlights areas of your interviewee’s culture. The essay should be two pages, double-spaced, Times New Roman 12-point font, and 1 inch margin all around. Include the interviewee’s name and phone number at the top of the essay.Here are the questions to consider in your essay. Answer four of the six questions about your interviewee’s culture. Was your interviewee from an individualistic or collectivisticculture? What information helped you to determine your answer? Was your interviewee’s from a more masculine or feminine oriented culture? Why? Was your interviewee from a high-context or low-context culture? Use examples to support your answer. Did your interviewee come from a culture with a low-power or high-power distance? What information helped to you determine your answer? Was your interviewee from a monochromatic or polychromatic culture? Use examples to support your answer. Did your interviewee come from an explicit-rule culture or an implicit-rule culture? What information helped you determine your answer? After choosing and answering four questions above, close out the body of your essay by answering this question.How does knowing this information impact the way you would work with someone from this cultural background? Use an example to illustrate two specific tips/ideas that you’ve learned and could pass on to others who may work with someone from this culture.

Understanding Free Will vs Determinism 

Understanding Free Will vs Determinism – How can we know we have free will? Gaining an understanding of this timeless philosophical problem is our main objective.

Introduction:

George Saunders’ “Escape from Spiderhead” is a dystopian short story that portrays a controlled pharmacological environment in which scientists experimentally manipulate the desires and emotions of human subjects. We are confronted with the question whether the chemical cocktails produced by our brains grant greater freedom than Spiderhead. Sanders’ riveting story is thought-provoking and challenges us to probe the topic of free will and determinism.

Overarching Question:

  • How does the story reinforce your preferred position on free will? How can the story challenge your preferred position on free will? Explain.

Brief Definition of Positions on Free Will:

  • Hard Determinism – People’s actions are causally necessitated and their actions are therefore unfree.
  • Compatiblism – Although all actions are caused, people act with free will and are morally responsible whenever they are not constrained or forced to perform the action.
  • Deep Compatiblism – People are free only if only if they act on desires they truly want to act on (i.e., desires that move people are genuinely “their own”).
  • Libertarianism – People’s actions are not causally necessitated. People have special powers to cause their actions and are morally responsible for their choices.

Essay Questions:

  1. Why does Jeff participate in Abnesti’s project at Spiderhead? Has he chosen to participate?
  2. Thanks to Verbaluce, Jeff is able to wax poetic about loving Heather. He refers to his deepest longing fulfilled (50-51)? Does Jeff love Heather? If not, how is genuine love different from what Jeff experiences? Abnesti says, “Say someone can’t love? Now he or she can” (57). Does the project at Spiderhead support Abnesti’s claim?
  3. Why does Abnesti tell Jeff to make a decision whether Rachel or Heather should get Darkenfloxx? What is Jeff’s decision? Does he make it freely? Explain. (pgs 56,62-63, 65)
  4. What was Jeff’s fateful night? In what sense was it “fateful”? (76-77)
  5. How does Jeff “doink with [Abnesti’s] experimental design integrity”? (63)
  6. Why does Jeff feel “a little jerked around”? (64)
  7. Does Jeff freely participate in the Confirmation Trial? The test reveals that he no longer feels any romantic love toward Heather. Verlaine says that he’s showing “just pretty much basic human feeling.” What is the difference between feelings that belong to Jeff and those s(t)simulated by the study? (67-68, 70)
  8. Saying “acknowledge” implies permission, but why would it be misleading to call this consent? (75-76)
  9. Does Jeff choose his fate at the end of the story? Is it completely up to him? (78-81)

Please choose one or more of these questions to formulate an essay formatted response to the broader theme of free will and determinism.