In COVID positive adults, ages 35-65, what is the effect of COVID vaccination in comparison to no COVID vaccination on incidence of mechanical ventilation during first 48 hours of hospitalization?

Description
PICOT Question:In COVID positive adults, ages 35-65, what is the effect of COVID vaccination in
comparison to no COVID vaccination on incidence of mechanical ventilation during first 48 hours of
hospitalization?
This PICOT research question is going to be used to do a literature review to identify articles that relate to
the research question.
Document provided for the guidelines and template for how each article has to be translated with the PICOT
question.
For each article, the review of literature should be a page long with the template provided.
So it should be at least 6 pages total for the 6 sources being translated to the review of literature.
Each Research article must be found on https://www.cochranelibrary.com or other nursing database that
includes nursing journals and publications from the National League for Nursing and the American Nurses
Association or google scholar.
Must be qualitative or quantitative and put in each summary.
See guideline from additional material for the rubric and template.

Produce an analytical paper, between 8-12 pages long, that examines our understanding of power and inequality through one mechanism reproducing inequality

Description
Task: Produce an analytical paper, between 8-12 pages long, excluding (optional) cover page and
(mandatory) bibliography. This final paper will examine our understanding of power and inequality through
one mechanism reproducing inequality (ie. the relationship between wealth and school inequalities; the
relationship between gender and labor market inequalities, etc). You may choose any mechanism of
inequality that is of interest to you. If you are unsure which topic to choose, or are stuck between topics, the
instructor will provide early feedback.
In this assignment, you must use academic sources (peer-reviewed journal articles or edited volumes only) in
order to build an argument and ground a policy suggestion. The intention is to explore the relationship
between a mechanism of inequality and its consequences – and provide at least one concrete policy solution
to address that inequality.
Your argument must be firmly situated within empirical evidence, and must be focused on addressing some
form of inequality in a manner that is directed at social justice. For example, you cannot argue that food
insecurity perpetuates educational inequality (and so schools should provide nutrient-rich meals to attendees)
without first 1) explaining the importance of nutrition to children, and 2) connecting systematic disadvantage
to justice (ie. poor nutrition correlates to lower academic performance, which is further disadvantaging kids
in impoverished districts). You also must display critical thinking in your policy suggestion, to minimize
collateral injustice. For example, you can argue that mentorship mitigates discrepancies in high school
graduation rates so mentorship programs must be implemented – as long as you show how mentors would not
add to the Youth Control Complex (Rios, 2011).
In the paper you must:
Cite at least 10 academic sources (peer-reviewed journal articles or edited volumes; no more than 3 may be
from class)
Have a clear argument
Provide at least one policy suggestion (rooted in evidence, not opinions)
Responses will be graded on:
Concrete thesis
Evidence from appropriate type/number of sources
Professional academic writing (cohesive literature review and thesis, not series of short-answers)
APA, Chicago-Turabian, MLA, or ASA style citations

State one of the basic designs (descriptive, correlational, predictive correlational, experimental, or quasi-experimental) and describe a possible study that could be done using that design.

Answer the following questions and reply to at least two colleagues:

  • State one of the basic designs mentioned in Chapter 8 (descriptive, correlational, predictive correlational, experimental, or quasi-experimental) and describe a possible study that could be done using that design.
  • What are the strengths and weaknesses of that design? Be sure to cite the source of your information.

Post your initial response  Module 2 and post your replies of Module 2. Late posts do not get any credit. Posts must be substantive and reflect thought and effort in the discussion. If you see your peer got something wrong, point it out to them. It is better to let them know now, because in a future assignment they will have to identify this type of information for a grade. Always remember to cite and reference your resources appropriately using APA format.  You should be using in-text citations in your initial response.  Use in-text citations as needed in your replies.

Discuss how your results make a contribution to the literature.

CAPSTONE SEMINAR

COURSE DESCRIPTION
This advanced capstone seminar culminates your graduate program at Baruch. The chief
goal of this course is for students to apply the knowledge and skills learned over their
graduate experience toward the development and completion of a capstone thesis project
that focuses on an organization of choice, a specific policy of interest, or a combination of
both.

Upon completion of the course, students will:
1) Identify a research question with social, political, management or policy significance.
2) Design and execute a research strategy using qualitative and/or quantitative methods.
3) Critically assess processes and outcomes.
4) Develop recommendations for action by public institutions or nonprofit organizations.
5) Present research findings, analysis, and recommendations persuasively.

REQUIRED TEXT
1. Creswell, John W. & J. David Creswell. 2018. Research Design: Qualitative,
Quantitative and Mixed Methods Approaches. Sage Publications, 5th ed.
Available at Baruch’s bookstore.

RECOMMENDED TEXTS/PAPERS
· Corbin, Juliet, Anselm Strauss, and Anselm L. Strauss. Basics of qualitative
research. Sage, 2014.
· Elo, Satu and Helvi Kyngas. 2008. The Qualitative Content Analysis Process.
Journal of Advanced Nursing. 62(1), 107-115.
· Krippendorf, Klaus. 2004. Content Analysis: An Introduction to its Methodology,
2nd edition. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
· Remler, Dahlia K., and Gregg G. Van Ryzin. (2014) Research Methods in Practice:
Strategies for Description and Causation. Sage
· The Chicago Manual of Style. University of Chicago Press.

Organizational Analysis: Problems and Solutions
This paper option involves identifying, contextualizing and offering solutions to an
organizational problem. In addition to the elements that appear in the “Manuscript
Guidelines” on pages 5-6 of the syllabus, your organizational analysis paper should include:
(1) background information on the origins of the organization, including its mission; (2) a
description of the organizational structure –detailing the number of employees and the
hierarchical levels of the organization. Be sure to include (3) policy recommendation(s): a
series of recommendations specifically designed to target whatever organizational problem
you have identified in the process of carrying out your organizational analysis. Your
proposed policy may be informed by your literature review, the course readings, exercises,
and/or classroom discussions. Your policy recommendations must be realistic and “doable.”
Final recommendations should also reflect your depth of knowledge about the
organizational policy itself and the needs of the organization. To be sure, designing a
tailor-made policy requires creativity, vision, and a talent for solving organizational
dilemmas. Feel free to draw on literature to inform your policy recommendations.

The Seven Wanna Be’s:
Be creative in selecting a topic. Be flexible enough to modify your topic if necessary. Be
tenacious in finding sources in the literature to anchor your topic. Be passionate about your
topic. Be disciplined and systematic when working on the project. Be prepared to collect
information on your topic via one or more techniques including: in-depth interviews,
archival research, participant observation, etc. (see Creswell for details and more
examples). Be receptive to learning something new about yourself as the research process
unfolds.

 

MANUSCRIPT GUIDELINES

Title Page
Table of Contents
Abstract or Executive Summary (not to exceed 150 words)
· Purpose
· Method
· Results
· Overall Conclusion

  1. Introduction (See Creswell–Chapter 5)
    The research problem.
    2. Studies that have addressed the problem.
    3. Limitations of prior studies.
    4. The importance of the study for an audience.
    5. The purpose statement (See Creswell–Chapter 6)
  2. Literature Review (In-depth) (See Creswell–Chapter 2) (Be sure to pick a topic that has a
    literature to draw from)
    What does the literature have to say about your topic?
    2. Your job is to locate, evaluate, and summarize the key literature surrounding your topic?
    3. How does your paper contribute to the existing literature? Are you replicating, extending,
    or adding to a prior study? (See Creswell’s discussion of the “literature map” p. 36)
  • Research Questions and Hypotheses (See Creswell—Chapter 7)
    What specific question(s) do you plan to answer?
    2. What hypotheses are you testing?
  1. Methods of Data Collection (See Creswell—Chapters 8 – 10)
    Discuss the methodological approach you will use to collect your data.
    2. You may follow one or more of the strategies offered by Creswell in explaining the method
    you have selected or you may cite another legitimate source (see p. 2 of recommended
    texts).
    3. Be sure to explain why the method is appropriate to address your research questions and/or
    test your hypotheses. You may do this by citing research from your literature review or
    citing Creswell.
    4. Your methods write-up must include a draft of all data collecting instruments (e.g., surveys,
    interview questions, content analysis description, etc.).
  2. Results/Findings
    What are the major findings of your study? (i.e., what is the answer to your research
    question(s)?). Or, if you started with a set of hypotheses, were they supported or refuted by
    your findings? Provide a detailed and systematic discussion here.

Please be aware that your specific outline may slightly differ depending on whether you have elected to write an organizational analysis or policy analysis paper.

 

  1. Discussion & Conclusions
    Link your results/findings to the broader literature discussed in section II.
    2. Discuss how your results make a contribution to the literature.
    3. Briefly explain any limitations of your study.
    4. What policy implications or recommendations (if applicable) flow from your study?
    5. What major and minor conclusions can be drawn from your study?
  • Overall Observations
    What was it like conducting the research?
    2. What challenges did you encounter and how did you overcome them?
    3. What did you learn from conducting the research that you did not know before you started?
    (Please be specific)
  • References (see below)
  1. Appendix
    Place all data collecting tools in this section (i.e., surveys, interview questions, notes from participant observation, etc.). You may also place tables, graphs, and charts here or you may insert them where appropriate in the body of your paper. Tables, charts, figures etc. should all have titles and labels (e.g., Table 1: Percent of Workers in Agreement) and a corresponding discussion in the text.

ADDITIONAL MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION ITEMS:
1. FORMAT: All papers should be typed, double-spaced, on 8½ by 11 inch white paper. Use 12-point typeface and be sure to staple your paper together or provide a secure binder clip.
2. HEADINGS: Use the above section headings for your paper. You may use additional sub-headings if necessary, but be sure to use the main headings listed above.
3. CITATIONS: There are at least two ways to cite authors in the text of your paper. You may give the last name of the author(s) and year of publication (i.e., Jones (1999))—a comparatively easier approach relative to footnoting. Include page numbers whenever you quote directly from a work or refer to specific passages: (Jones 1999, p. 29). Or, you can use a footnote—a more challenging approach. You may go with the first option while using a footnote, note for citations, but, used sparingly, to clarify a point or provide additional information.
4. REFERENCES: All references cited in the text must be listed in the references section and all references must have a corresponding citation in the text. Provide the full reference including full name, title, date, publisher, and page numbers (for periodicals). References may take the following form:

  1. Books: Bernard, Claude. 1957. An Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine.
    Translated by H.C. Greene. New York. Dover.
    2. Periodicals: Goodman, Leo A. 1947. “The Analysis of Systems of Qualitative Variables
    When Some of the Variables Are Unobservable. Part I—A Modified Latent
    Structure Approach.” American Journal of Sociology. Vol. 79: pp. 1179-1259.
    3. Edited Volume: Moss, Philip and Chris Tilly. 2001 (eds.) Stories Employers Tell: Race, Skill,
    and Hiring in America. New York. Russell Sage.
    4. Websites (use sparingly): //http: www.provide the complete web site address here. Date retrieved.
    5. Newspapers: Title Here. New York Times, section 2; A1.

Proofread: All documents should be proofread before handing them in. Asking a friend or
colleague to read your work is a good way to detect errors. Errors: Papers with errors in
spelling, grammar and punctuation will be marked down accordingly. Length: As a rough
guide, your final paper should not exceed 50 pages—not including references and
appendices. Numbering: Your pages should be numbered with the Table of Contents and
Abstract as lower case Roman numeral (i) and (ii) respectively. Your introduction should
begin page 1.

What is Special Event Security?

Description
What is Special Event Security?
When is it used?
What are the steps taken to secure a large-scale event?
What support and outside agencies would you utilize and why?
Provide at least one example of a special event and identify what security measures you would implement to
adequately secure your chosen event.
Technical Requirements
Your paper must be at a minimum of 6 pages (the Title and Reference pages do not count towards the
minimum limit).
Scholarly and credible references should be used. A good rule of thumb is at least 2 scholarly sources per
page of content.
Type in Times New Roman, 12 point and double space.
Students will follow the current APA Style as the sole citation and reference style used in written work
submitted as part of coursework.
Points will be deducted for the use of Wikipedia or encyclopedic-type sources. It is highly advised to utilize
books, peer-reviewed journals, articles, archived documents, etc.

Compare and contrast China and India’s relationship to the post-Cold War US led international order. What are the similarities and differences.

Description
This essay is 1500 words based on the following question: Compare and contrast China and India’s
relationship to the post-Cold War US led international order. What are the similarities and differences.
Please use all core readings and lecture slides to refer to when writing this essay. I have uploaded them
below. You may use other readings but make sure to use the core readings as they are essential for this essay.
There are 5 core readings.

Critically analyse the impact on your understanding of your role and your schools/settings role?

PGCE Essay

Title: A critical review of supporting children’s wellbeing in education (3000 words)

Assignment Guidance

Using a key article from one of the module themes, evaluate how you have adapted your teaching and the impact on learning having developed critical insights from theory and research.

Discuss how this has impacted on your practice as a professional.

  • Identify the article you have chosen: https://www.unicef.es/sites/unicef.es/files/IPSOS_UNICEF_ChildWellBeingreport.pdf
  • Explore the article and readings
  • Understanding the wider context (internationally, nationally) and how this has informed your schools/setting policy?
  • How is this research shaping your thinking or practice of educational issues?
  • Critically reflect and unpack the debate around ‘supporting children’s wellbeing in schools.
  • How has the research informed your understanding on teacher professionalism, policy and practice.
  • Critically analyse the impact on your understanding of your role and your schools/settings role?

Plan

Structure of the essay: Criticality – Reflection – Analysis – Depth and Breadth

  • What is meant by wellbeing? (Mention the literature by Ipsos Mori) – Compare different definitions.
  • International Context and picture (Sweden? Spain? UK? Other countries) – How well does England do in student well-being compared to other countries? Well-being league tables.
  • National Context/Policy and picture (Early Years, Primary and Secondary) – Across the education continuum.

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/1020249/Promoting_children_and_young_people_s_mental_health_and_wellbeing.pdf

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/747709/Mental_health_and_wellbeing_provision_in_schools.pdf

  • Local Policies – What does this look like? (Your age phase – Secondary school) What is your setting’s policy related to wellbeing? Develop an awareness of the different strategies and initiatives that are in place to support wellbeing.
  • Rutlish (Placement 2) – Demography of the area. Inclusion (Mentoring, Inclusion Team), Place2Be, Physical and Mental Wellbeing, PSHE Lessons, mindfulness of teachers. The impact of Covid-19 (Mention briefly). Staff well-being.

https://www.rutlish.merton.sch.uk/school-life/wellbeing

3000 words

15-20 references

Writing in the third person.

Create a baseline analysis report focusing on a particular topic that you have identified through the analysis of a range of data sources.

Description
Your first assignment is a baseline analysis report focusing on a particular topic that you have identified
through the analysis of a range of data sources. This will include producing MS Excel based data analysis,
presentation and statistical analysis, ArcGIS PRO choropleth mapping, overlaying other data layers on your
base map (i.e. Using the overlay technique in ArcGIS PRO) and undertaking spatial analysis (e.g. buffering).
Your baseline assessement you typically focus one of the following topics:
The analysis should be undertaken at what is called the OA level for the Parish of Wilmslow. Your analysis
should be put into context and examine how this compares to the whole of the Cheshire East Council area. A
full assessment briefing will be issued in week 5.
WORD COUNT: 2000 WORDS
Building on assignment Part I, you will produce a report which identifies a number of proposals to tackle the
various issues you have identified in your previous analysis. The report should highlight/summarise the key
issues you have identified and then focus on your various solutions and proposal for your chosen topic. The
report should be illustrated with a series of maps, plans, diagrams, illustrations etc. to show how you intend
to address the matter. You proposals report should include:Provide a written explanation to support and
justify your proposals.
Provide a written explanation to support and justify your proposals.
Include a summary or conclusion at the end.
A list of references for data sources, ideas etc.
Provide a written explanation to support and justify your proposals.
WORD COUNT 1000 WORDS
LINKS/ RESOURCES
https://mapmaker.cdrc.ac.uk/#/dwelling-age?lon=-2.2313&lat=53.3277&zoom=13
https://ec.europa.eu/statistical-atlas/viewer/?
mids=BKGCNT,BKGNT22016,C01M01,CNTOVL&o=1,1,1,0.7&ch=PEO,C01&center=50.00754,19.98211,3&
http://european-crt.org/map.html
http://infuse.ukdataservice.ac.uk/
https://www.nomisweb.co.uk/
https://www.nomisweb.co.uk/reports/localarea?compare=1170221279
http://www.commute-flow.net/
http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/holding-pages/uwcms.aspx
https://magic.defra.gov.uk/
http://maps.cheshire.gov.uk/ce/interactivemapping/
https://www.gov.uk/check-long-term-flood-risk
https://www.ppgis.manchester.ac.uk/skills/
https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/department-for-environment-food-rural-affairs/about/statistics
https://datashine.org.uk/
http://www.plumplot.co.uk/

What role does feminist theory play in shaping gender-based activism?

1
Gender and Power PPLM7015B
Assessment Brief
Summative Assessment
There is ONE form of assessment for this module:
5000-word essay: critical analysis of relevant case study (100% summative)
Title and task:
What role does feminist theory play in shaping gender-based activism?
The assignment will adopt the format of a traditional academic essay and answer the
question above.
You will select a particular piece of gender based activism and a relevant theoretical focus.
You will answer the question via a critical analysis of your case study, in which you make
explicit connections between your campaign material and your theoretical lens.
Task description
You will select and research a particular campaign/movement/example of gender-based
activism, including its development, actions, impact and materials.
It can be any kind of gender-based activism from a formal campaign like ‘He for She’, a
grassroots movement such as BLM, or some kind of microactivism such as a twitter hashtag
(e.g.#SayHerName). It can be local (e.g.something running by the SU), national or
international. The definition is deliberately vague in order for you to select something you are
interested in/care about.
Throughout the module, you will collect materials from and information about your chosen
campaign, which you will use as a case study to reflect upon the relationship between
feminist theory and activism. These materials will act as your data for analysis.
The materials and information can be (for example):
booklets or pdfs produced by the activist organisation, social media (by or in response to the
campaign), campaign videos, news articles, blogs, public interviews with key personnel
(secondary data)*, comments-sections of online content, etc.
What you collect will depend on the activism you choose. As you come to write the essay,
you may need to narrow down the material you choose to analyse (you do not need to
include absolutely everything produced by the campaign).Where relevant, you can include
screen-shots of your chosen case-study data in appendices (for instance, for online material
that cannot be referenced with a website address).
You will also identify a specific feminist theory or theories which inform, challenge or ground
your campaign. This will be the theoretical ‘lens’ you bring to your analysis.
You will critically analyse your case-study campaign material in order for you to reflect on the
ways in which activism is informed, shaped or challenged by specific kinds of feminist
theory. You are encouraged evaluate the strengths and weaknesses, and comment on the
inclusivity/exclusivity, of the case campaign.
2
*you are not permitted to conduct any primary empirical research with human subjects for
this module.
Please see the Weekly Schedule for information on deadlines.
Assessment Criteria
You will be assessed on:
 Your understanding of relevant feminist theory
 Your ability to critically reflect on academic literature
 Your ability to critically analyse relevant data
 Your ability to make connections between theory and concrete examples (from your
case study), and to reflect on those connections
 Your written communication
 For the highest marks, you will demonstrate an understanding of the epistemology
and ontology underlying both your chosen campaign and the theory/theories with
which you analyse your case study. (More will be said in seminars).
Formative Work
You will have the opportunity to submit formative work.
There are two formative assessments.
Written formative work
A plan of your essay (no longer than 1000 words).
This does not have to be long and can be as brief or as detailed as you like, within the word
limit. The plan can be in prose or bullet points. It is a good idea to include, ideally:
 Your chosen campaign
 At least some of the material you think you might like to analyse
 An indication of your chosen theory/theories
You might also (but do not have to) include:
 A break down of sections / sub-headings
 Resources and academic literature you might draw on
 Questions about your project which you’re unsure about / specific issues you’d like
feedback on
The essay plan is due in week 5 (reading week).You will receive written feedback and we
will discuss general feedback in seminars.
In-class formative presentation
This is a short presentation of your work in progress, to take place in seminars in week 9,
followed by a brief class discussion of the presentation. You’ll receive oral feedback in class.