Negotiating Cultural Differences in America

Assignment 2: LASA 1: Negotiating Cultural Differences in AmericaFor this assignment, choose two of the “Historical Documents” authors we have read so far this term. Choose authors you have found interesting, engaging, or problematic in how they articulate the nature of cultural, racial, or gender differences in America.In a well-documented and well-structured essay, compare your chosen texts in terms of how they argue for or against the negotiation of difference in America—in other words, how they argue for or against accommodating, rejecting, or compromising with the wide variety of differences (cultural, racial, ethnic, class, and so on) in America. Specifically, in your essay you should respond to the following questions:How do the authors define what it means to be American?Compare between each of the authors what it means to be civilized or savage, superior or inferior?Assess how the texts argue for the inclusion or exclusion of certain groups. How do they justify inclusion?Differentiate how the authors define or create a sense of different social roles for different groups. Examine how they are defined—by race, by ethnicity, by nation of origin, by gender, or something different. Why do the authors insist on maintaining these differences? How do the authors suggest these differences should be maintained and enforced?Analyze how different voices in the readings challenge or reject these differences. Justify why they reject them. What are the benefits of inclusion and diversity?Write a 4–5 page paper in Word format (not counting title and reference page). Include an APA formatted title page and reference page. Use the following file naming convention: LastnameFirstInitial_M3_A2.doc.By the due date assigned, deliver your assignment to the Submissions Area.All written assignments and responses should follow APA rules for attributing sources.Assignment 2 Grading CriteriaMaximum PointsDemonstrates command of two author’s ideas of what it means to be American.52Explains how each author understands society in terms of the roles and responsibilities of specific individuals.52Analyzes differing points of view within the text that challenge or complicate these definitions.52Organization (12 points): Introduction, Thesis, Transitions and ConclusionUsage and Mechanics (12 points): Grammar, Spelling, and Sentence StructureAPA Elements (16 points): Attribution, Paraphrasing, and QuotationsStyle (4 points): Audience, Word Choice44Total:200M3 Assignment 3 SubmissionAssignment Due January 24 at 11:59 PMAssignment 3: The Journal AssignmentFor your journal entry this module, reflect on the topics and concepts covered as part of the readings and your reactions to these. What is familiar and what is new? What poses a challenge to the way you have customarily thought about these concepts? What connections are you making to your family’s views on these concepts?When writing your journal entry, you may use the following questions to prompt your ideas:What are your initial reactions to the topics covered in the assigned readings? Did you experience any conflict with what you read in the assigned topics?What is your point of view on the issues covered in the assigned readings?Discuss and examine the assertion made in the article “The End of White America” that “according to an August 2008 report by the U.S. Census Bureau, those groups currently categorized as racial minorities—blacks and Hispanics, East Asians, and South Asians—will account for a majority of the U.S. population by the year 2042″ (p. 3). What are the implications of this demographic shift?Looking ahead to the next twenty years or more, as the effects of modern immigration become clearer, as English ceases to become the predominant language, and as the ratio of Caucasians to people of color shifts dramatically, how will you regard yourself? Will you resist these changes or embrace diversity and become a positive agent of change in these times?How has the discussion with your classmates affected your view of exclusion and inclusion when it comes to American identity?Create your journal entry in a Microsoft Word document and save it as M3_lastname_firstname_journal.doc. Your journal entry should be of approximately 250–500 words. You may include photographs, drawings, audio pieces, and other memorabilia in your journal entry to express yourself and your reflections and reactions to what you’re learning in the course.Submit your journal entry to the Journal by the due date assigned.All written assignments and responses should follow APA rules for attributing sources.

Union Memberships

instructions:Labor unions were an important part of the development of many industries within the United States. They shaped the interaction between employees and companies significantly. They can also be credited for many of the workplace laws currently in effect.Considering this please address the following prompts in a page:How has union membership in the United States changed over the past few decades?How does union membership in the United States compare with union membership in other countries? How might these patterns in union membership affect the HR decisions of an international company?Please be sure to validate your opinions and ideas with citations and references in APA format.

week 4 critical thinking

Working individually, students should complete the Critical Thinking questions per the list assigned.Prepare responses to the questions below after viewing the Negotiation Strategy and Tactics Tutorial in this week’s lesson. In drafting your answers to the questions, make sure that you apply course concepts in your answers.Part A: What are the objectives of both parties in the exchanges? How would you describe the general tone of the exchanges?Part B: Were Marilyn’s objectives achieved in the first exchange? Were Len’s objectives achieved in the first exchange? What do you project the outcome of the first exchange to be?Part C: Were Marilyn’s objectives achieved in the second exchange? Were Len’s objectives achieved in the second exchange? What do you project the outcome of the second exchange to be?Part D: Identify two points of transition in each exchange and analyze the impact of the transitions on the negotiation.The paper should be a minimum of 3 to 4 pages.Remember to submit your assignment for grading when finished.

Case 9-Man in Black

Submit your answers to these questions as a file (DOC) attachment below:1 Does the Man in Black live by a system or Ethical Absolutism or Ethical Relatism? Explain your answer.2 Would a theme park such as Westworld likely be financially successful? Why or why not?3 What would some of the costs to society be of a theme park like Westworld?4 In what ways might working in a developing country as an American executive expatriate be like visiting Westworld?Watch clips from “Man in Black”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M5ED9B4mFyw (Links to an external site.)Cast:Evan Rachel Wood (Links to an external site.)as Dolores AbernathyJames Marsden (Links to an external site.)as Teddy FloodEd Harris (Links to an external site.)as the Man in BlackPremise:In an unspecified time in the future, a theme park named Westworld allows guests to experience theAmerican Old West (Links to an external site.)in an environment populated by “hosts”,androids (Links to an external site.)programmed to fulfill the guests’ every desire. The hosts, who are nearly indistinguishable from humans, follow a predefined set of intertwining narratives but can deviate from these narratives based on interactions they have with guests.The hosts repeat their multi-day narratives anew each cycle.At the beginning of each new cycle (typically following the host’s “death”), each host has its memories of the previous period erased. For guests’ safety, hosts’ programming prevents them from physically harming human guests; this allows guests nearly unlimited freedom to engage without retribution in any activity they choose with the hosts, including rape and murder.The Man in Black (William):His first trip to the park began with noble intentions, but the longer William spent inside the park and the more he became enamored with Dolores, the quicker he descended into darkness. But as William himself explains, the process of experiencing Westworld for the first time was like a snake shedding his skin, revealing the monster within. When William looks in the mirror, he sees an agent of chaos. By choosing to believe this darkness is innate to his own nature, William deflects blame for his actions in the park. It was never really a choice, William believes, because this was always what he was like on the inside. William simultaneously acknowledges he’s an awful person without taking any responsibility for it.Scenes in this clip:The Man in Black kills Delores’ father and Teddy, then attacks Delores.