A discussion regarding the ADDIE Instructional Design system for elementary school children.
Essay # 86407 |
675 words (
approx. 2.7 pages ) |
2 sources |
2005
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$ 14.95
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Abstract
This paper focuses on ADDIE Instructional Design and the how such a system would benefit young children if implemented into the elementary school system.
From the Paper
"ADDIE Instructional Design could be an extremely effective tool for education for elementary schools that are beginning to include computer instruction in the classroom, library, or research center. For younger children computer work can be both fascinating and frustrating because there is a significant amount of information that has to be learned in order to become proficient in basic computer skills. Therefore, the ADDIE Instructional Design could be quite helpful for many within education in planning a course of action that would lead to successful implementation of this program. Analysis Analysis for the computer program should include an assessment of needs of the students to receive instruction. The needs of these elementary students would be significant because of the societal inclusion of computer and internet functions in almost every facet of the social order."
Tags:addie, instructional, design
An explanation of the ADDIE instructional design model.
Essay # 116333 |
807 words (
approx. 3.2 pages ) |
4 sources |
APA | 2007
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$ 17.95
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Abstract
In this paper, the writer explains the specific layers of the ADDIE instructional design model, namely, the processes of analysis, design, development, implementation and finally, evaluation. The writer also discusses the personal value he has experienced in implementing the ADDIE model in the design and modification of his courses.
From the Paper
"ADDIE is a well-known instructional design model that has been utilized mostly in the academic fields but variations have been integrated in other planning and design models by subject matter experts (SMEs) in many different specialties. While it is not an instructional system per se - such as those discussed in the textbook for this course - the design model is an integral component used when developing aspects of Instructional System Development (ISD). The processes used in the ADDIE model aid designers in incorporating cognitive, constructive, and behaviorist elements in order to analyze the possible success or failure of their system designs. They also allow for easier management and evaluation of those processes to ensure that the programs designed are allowed to grow with the needs of the subject matter and the students."
Tags:analysis, design, development, implementation, evaluation
An examination of the issues related to starting a business in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Analytical Essay # 135614 |
1,000 words (
approx. 4 pages ) |
0 sources |
APA |
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$ 21.95
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Abstract
This paper analyzes factors associated with starting operations in Addis Ababa (capital of Ethiopia) that are centered around the manufacturing and distribution of luxury handbags within the city. The focus of the paper is to understand the resources, political conditions (taxes, government regulations concerning production, and safety issues), transportation and accessibility, skills and educational level of the population, and cultural factors.
From the Paper
"Many issues shape the business environment, it becomes even more pronounced when examining starting operations within an international framework. International business activities require companies to evaluate risks and business opportunities. The methodology employed by many organizations is not ad hoc, but is methodological in its approach to understanding the business, political, and economic factors that can benefit or have an adverse effect on the companies operations. This paper will analyze factors associated with starting operations in Addis Ababa (capital of Ethiopia) that are centered around the..."
Tags:addis ababa, country, analysis
Analyzes Addie's chapter as a depiction of her consciousness as the core of the Bundren family together and its eventual deterioration.
Analytical Essay # 22319 |
1,350 words (
approx. 5.4 pages ) |
1 source |
1995
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$ 27.95
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From the Paper
"Addie's chapter, in William Faulkner's As I Lay Dying, shows us the undiluted innerworkings of the consciousness of the mother and the core of the Bundren family. The chapter and the dry, angry, miserable, cynical tone of the woman gives the reader to knowledge of what has brought and held this unhappy family together as well as what will tear it apart once the children have finished carting Addie's rotting body to Jefferson.
Just as Addie had infected her children with a set of perceptions in which they have become imprisoned, Addie herself is prisoner to the perception left her by her father: "I could just remember how ny father used to say that the reason for living was to get ready to stay dead a long time" (169). Addie, of course, is in the last stages of dying as she mediates on her entire life in this chapter. She is haunted by the lifelessness ..."
Character analysis of Addie as strong woman holding family together.
Essay # 20883 |
1,350 words (
approx. 5.4 pages ) |
6 sources |
1994
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$ 27.95
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From the Paper
" In the novel As I Lay Dying, the central character is the dying matriarch of the Bundren clan, and she is presented as the center of the life of the family in a number of different ways. She represents Faulkner's view of how strong women hold a family together. Albert J. Guerard sees Faulkner as at least partially a misogynist (Guerard 69), but Faulkner's Addie, for instance, is not painted so darkly and is both appealing and repellant at the same time. The fragmented technique of the book, with multiple points of view represented, only emphasizes how central Addie is, since she is the primary issue for every member of her family. Her death and burial marks a turning point for the family as a group and for every member of the family as an individual, and they reflect on what she means to them. In addition, Faulkner includes a number of narrators who are not.."
This paper analyzes the characters and their actions in relation to Addie Bundren's death in the novel "As I Lay Dying."
Analytical Essay # 4415 |
855 words (
approx. 3.4 pages ) |
0 sources |
2001
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$ 18.95
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Abstract
This paper takes a look at the different family members, their individual relationships, and how a death in the family forever changes them in the novel "As I Lay Dying."
From the paper:
"Self-interest is what drives the characters in this novel, and self-interest is what destroys them as moral human beings. This aspect is what turned this story into a tragedy. There is a decent level of intellect within the minds of certain characters, but they are still nothing more and nothing less than a poor, southern, white trash family. That is all they will ever be, for their own selfishness and arrogance is what keeps them from evolving as human beings."
Tags:dying, layfamily, death, town
An analysis of the characters in William Faulkner's novel "As I Lay Dying".
Analytical Essay # 32003 |
900 words (
approx. 3.6 pages ) |
2 sources |
2002
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$ 19.95
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Abstract
Mistrustful of language, of rhetoric, Addie has lived and dies through accomplishment. Anger, hatred, jealousy, loyalty, reverence, fear-- Faulkner creates a panorama as he presents the characters dramatically. Faulkner seems to have intended to expose the Bundren family to the two greatest disasters known to man: flood and fire. This read of the novel establishes Addie imperatively at its center. Cash's birth was the dividing line in Addie's relationship with her husband. Jewel lives in the terms of Addie's being.
Tags:as, lay, dying
Compares and contrasts three models of instructional design.
Comparison Essay # 139812 |
1,250 words (
approx. 5 pages ) |
0 sources |
APA |
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$ 25.95
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Abstract
This paper compares and contrasts three models of instructional design. These models include the Gagne-Briggs Intellectual Skills Model, the Gropper Behavioral Approach to Instructional Prescription, and the ADDIE Model. In addition to comparing and contrasting these models, the discussion includes subjective comments regarding which of these models is most suitable for my teaching style.
From the Paper
"The following discussion compares and contrasts three models of instructional design. These models include: the Gagne-Briggs Intellectual Skills Model, the Gropper Behavioral Approach to Instructional Prescription, and the ADDIE Model. In addition to comparing and contrasting these models, the current discussion concludes with subjective comments regarding which of these models is most suitable for my teaching style."
Tags:teaching, instructional design, gropper
An analysis of the theme of alienation in William Faulkner's novel "As I Lay Dying".
Book Review # 103095 |
1,480 words (
approx. 5.9 pages ) |
0 sources |
2008
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$ 29.95
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Abstract
This paper examines William Faulkner's seminal novel "As I Lay Dying", in which alienation is a central theme. The paper maintains that alienation is conveyed through the characters Darl and Addie. Comparing the two characters, the paper finds that the are both alienated from the family and from society as a whole. In addition, they both undergo degradation throughout the novel, and both share the same ideas about words. The paper concludes that the novel brings to light feelings of alienation that are pertinent today, not just in the early 1900s.
From the Paper
"Addie's sense of alienation seems to be the most intense out of any character in the novel. One could say that Addie has reached the ultimate level of isolation. Succinctly: death. Besides the obvious, though, Addie experiences alienation due to Cora Tull's scorn. Cora is able to recognize that Addie adores Jewel to the exception of her other children, something that Cora condemns. Cora says: "the only sin she [Addie] ever committed was being partial to Jewel that never loved her" (Faulkner 1919). It is interesting that Cora says, "only sin," so clearly she does not know Addie that well, as readers are aware that Addie is far from sin free. A major theme of the novel is religion, which Cora represents, and religion and alienation are closely related. Practitioners of certain religions often feel the need to pass judgment upon others, as Cora does, and judgment can lead to alienation and isolation. Addie must feel that she does fit in to a religious society, which the South was during the early 1900s, and still is today."
Tags:estrangement, early, 20th, century, America
This paper looks at the death of the rural South through the eyes of the Bundren family in William Faulkner's book 'As I Lay Dying'.
Book Review # 111206 |
2,274 words (
approx. 9.1 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA | 2009
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$ 42.95
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Abstract
In this article, the writer discusses that the Bundren family in William Faulkner's 'As I Lay Dying', all have their different reactions and coping mechanisms after the death of Addie Bundren, the mother of the family. The writer points out that each of these coping mechanisms represents different levels of success, as well as different levels of symbolic ties to dealing with the slow death of the rural South. The writer maintains that through Faulkner's portrayal of what methods are successful and which are not, the author of the book makes a statement on how Southerners should enter into the new modern world, while leaving their older traditions behind. The writer maintains that the characters of the novel and their methods of dealing with their mother's death prove to have different levels of success and failure. The writer concludes that this story also serves as an allegory for how the rural South can survive outside of it's past.
From the Paper
"Cash did love his mother very much, but as his lack of intense inner monologue in the book shows that he was a man of very little words. Cash's method of coping with death also proves to be successful, in the idea that he cares but still can manage to partake in necessary tasks. Many would not be able to make a coffin for their own mother, but Cash knows what needs to be done, and does it. His simple nature both in his character and in how he copes with death shows that he will live beyond the end of this book. This is also a successful method Faulkner proposes Southerners to live beyond the death of the old South. By internalize the grief of its death, Southerners would prove to be very successful in a modern world. This would allow them to still feel the pain of their past, but also to focus on the necessities of their future. Action and necessity prove to be one of the most successful methods for entering into a new modern South."
Tags:grief, troubles, survive, selfish, motives