This is AcaDemon.com

Home Sellers Area Buy Term paper FAQs Custom Term Papers Contact Us Facebook Application Go to AcaDemon UK Go to AcaDemon AU Go to AcaDemon Canada Go to AcaDemon France

Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>

Search results on "RACISM SEXISM KIDS":

Term Paper # 43187 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Racism and Sexism in Kids Books, 2002.
A look at three examples of children's literature where racism and sexism appear.
1,650 words (approx. 6.6 pages), 5 sources, $ 62.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This seven-page undergraduate paper discusses three children's books: "The Indian in the Cupboard", "Huckleberry Finn", and "The Five Chinese Brothers". The criteria are those of Norton and the Course Kit.
Term Paper # 33587 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Racism, Sexism and Resistance in Segmented Labour Markets", 2002.
Analyzes the central arguments in Calliste's chapter "Racism, Sexism, and Resistance in Segmented Labour Markets".
1,900 words (approx. 7.6 pages), 5 sources, $ 71.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This eight-page undergraduate paper identifies the central arguments in Calliste's chapter "Racism, Sexism and Resistance in Segmented Labour Markets", and offers a discussion and analysis of those arguments.
Term Paper # 9350 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Kids and Contemporary Racism, 2002.
A discussion of the issue of racism and discrimination which influence the youth today.
1,520 words (approx. 6.1 pages), 4 sources, MLA, $ 50.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
The writer of this paper addresses the issue of how prejudices and racism are caused by stereotypes. He then examines how this influences children and how youngsters are so exposed to these issues. The paper analyzes certain derogatory words and phrases and how their intentions can be misinterpreted.

From the Paper
"Martin Luther King?s infamous words- ?I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character?- still resonate in today?s society. While it is clear that numerous advances and improvements have occurred in race relations over the past century, difficulties and tensions continue to persist. In recent years, violent rioting has occurred in Los Angeles, California in 1992 (after the white police officers who brutally beat Rodney King were acquitted) and a black man was dragged to his death behind a truck in Texas. Thus, it appears that the United States has a long road to travel if it ever hopes to truly reflect a ?melting pot.?"
Term Paper # 96589 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Sexism and Racism, 2007.
An argument against the points made by Laurence Thomas in his article entitled "Sexism and Racism: Some Conceptual Differences."
1,112 words (approx. 4.4 pages), 1 source, MLA, $ 38.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper presents the writer's personal response to the essay by Laurence Thomas, entitled "Sexism and Racism: Some Conceptual Differences." It argues that Thomas presents an impractical argument, an exercise in rhetoric and semantics, based on subjective analysis. The writer then points to numerous flaws in the specific points that Thomas tries to make and suggests that since Thomas' essay was written, attitudes have changed dramatically.

From the Paper
"And here is still another consideration: taking the position of a chauvinist in order to explain what sexism is ruins his argument in the first place. For example, on page 247 he says in the "traditional male role" a "real man" is one who "wears the pants around the house." This is an old-fashioned concept and has little to do with a man being "sexist" except for the fact that the writer himself seems to have chauvinistic ideas about the man-woman genre."
"Meanwhile, some of the arguments spelled out by Laurence Thomas have value, but others are completely innocuous. How can he say that "sexism" is "unlike racism" because it "lends itself to a morally unobjectionable description"? Both sexism and cultural bigotry are morally objectionable. Both are examples of the cultural confusion in our country."
Term Paper # 38873 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Sexism and Racism in Children's Literature, 2002.
A look at some classic children's literature and examples of sexism and racism in them.
1,650 words (approx. 6.6 pages), 5 sources, $ 62.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper examines sexism, racism and children's literature. Like all literature, children's literature reflects the dominant culture of its origin. This means that many 'classics' of children's literature contain unacceptable bias. This paper examines three examples of this situation.
Term Paper # 33592 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Sexism and Racism as a Means of Cheap Labor, 2002.
Evaluation of the idea that sexism and racism are an intentionally created phenomena for the intention of obtaining cheap labor.
1,900 words (approx. 7.6 pages), 5 sources, $ 71.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper is a critical evaluation of three statements that can be reduced to one (the thesis). Sexism and racism are not accidental phenomena, but exist for the purpose of obtaining cheap labor.
Term Paper # 16379 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Sexism and Racism, 2002.
An insight into stereotyping in society through the review of two books, "Women's Magazines 1940-1960" by Nancy A. Walker and "Black Boy" by Richard Wright.
1,702 words (approx. 6.8 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 55.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper discusses how sexism and racism both involve imposing a set of expectations on groups in society and how sexism has not been eliminated from American life any more than racism has. In "Women's Magazines 1940-1960" by Nancy A. Walker, it shows how women's magazines package a set of behaviors, roles, expectations, attitudes, and values related to domesticity and which, of followed, would enclose women in a relatively narrow range of choices. In writing about blacks and how they are treated in American society, Richard Wright in his book "Black Boy" also suggests ways in which blacks are given a packaged set of roles and attitudes to which they are expected to conform. This paper provides a short biography of Richard Wright and attempts to analyze how he would have viewed the expectations and attitudes imposed on women and how alike or how different would he have seen them from those imposed on blacks.

From the Paper
"Richard Wright was born in 1908 on a plantation outside Natchez, Mississippi. His father was a sharecropper, while his mother taught in a country school. Richard's childhood was spent in one of the most poverty-stricken and rigidly segregated regions of the South. When he was six, his family moved to Memphis, Tennessee, so his father could get a better job, and the father then worked as a night porter in a hotel, while the mother worked as a cook for a white family. Richard's father left the family for another woman son after that, and in 1915 Richard's mother became ill to such a degree that she was an invalid for the rest of her life. Richard, his mother, and his brother then moved to Jackson, Mississippi. to live with Richard's grandmother for a time."
Term Paper # 41457 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Sexism, Racism and Canadian Nationalism", 2002.
Analyzes this article by Ng on Canadian "whiteness".
650 words (approx. 2.6 pages), 1 source, $ 26.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper summarizes and critiques the article "Sexism, Racism and Canadian Nationalism." In this paper, Ng reviews analyses of the early formation of the Canadian State and the ways race, gender and class were incorporated by elite classes and state-based institutions on the basis of perceived white superiority. Whiteness is, historically, a paternalistic relation of domination; thus, the State is constantly setting up structural forces (e.g., immigration policy) that constitute sites of struggle and conflict. It is here, in struggle and conflict, Ng argues, that the relations can be understood as historical processes of production and reproduction.
Term Paper # 25288 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Lives of Street Kids, 2002.
A comparison essay that contrasts "Youth Gangs and Moral Panics in Santa Cruz" by Tim Lucas and "Living on the Street: Social Organization and Gender Relations in Australian Street Kids" by Hilary Winchester and Lauren Costello.
1,390 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 2 sources, APA, $ 46.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
Discussing how gang activity is on the rise throughout the United States, along with the poverty that is the root cause. Comparing two articles that deal with this issue - Tim Lucas' article focuses on the general panic across America concerning the presence and spread of gangs. It explores the barriers built between the white majority and the impoverished Hispanic minority in Santa Cruz's Beach Flats area, and discusses how these barriers have affected the rise of gangs. The second article details a study in which Australian street kids were observed and interviewed. This study focused on gender relations between street kids as well as social organization and moral conduct. These two articles are compared on several grounds, this first being an assessment of the main points of each, second is an evaluation of their contributions to the literature on this subject. Next, the differing approaches to research are contrasted, as well as the results of this research. Finally, the strengths and weaknesses of each article are compared.

From the Paper
"The issue of urban poverty, homelessness and gangs is a very serious one, and will only continue to gain importance as more and more of the world develops. These two articles both deal with this issue but in very different ways. Lucas tries to develop a model that can be universally applied to urban gangs, and does this through the example of the Beach Flats area of Santa Cruz. It?s main conclusions are that although youth crime is increasing, there is an over inflated fear of this increase, and that it is the boundaries formed in the midst of this moral panic that the problem of youth gangs is exacerbated. Winchester and Costello?s article is at the opposite end of the spectrum, in that it focuses solely on a single group of homeless children, in an attempt to understand their nature more thoroughly, but with no attempt made to provide deeper insight into the problem of homelessness as a whole."
Term Paper # 104912 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Myspace: Your Kids' Danger", 2008.
A rhetorical and semiotic analysis of a CBS news item, "Myspace: Your Kids' Danger: Popular Social Networking Site Can Be Grounds For Sexual Predators," by Sandra Hughes.
3,101 words (approx. 12.4 pages), 7 sources, MLA, $ 90.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper presents a rhetorical analysis of Sandra Hughes' CBS news item, "MySpace: Your Kids' Danger? Popular Social Networking Site Can Be Grounds For Sexual Predators." It aims to move beyond the implicit and relatively superficial review of the text to a fuller understanding of how the text creates meaning, how it helps the reader to construct knowledge and how it sways us to take action. The paper specifically looks at how the language of this article works.

From the Paper
"Visually, the story is arranged as a headline, a smaller-font secondary headline, and then twenty-two paragraphs, this for a story containing not quite 650 words. Immediately below the headlines, half of the reading column is taken up by a graphical image showing a computer in silhouette with transparencies of several young children, mostly girls, and several of them using cellphones. Below the graphic is a quote, suggesting the danger the article warns of. The effect of the graphic, the quote, and the headlines is to draw readers to the story that follows, a story that opens with three suggestive vignettes about children being approached in a sexually explicit manner on the Internet. Two of the three teenage girls described in the opening vignettes were murdered."
Term Paper # 85033 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Egbede World Outreach for Saving the Kids, 2005.
An overview of the Nigerian Egbede World Outreach for Saving the Kids.
675 words (approx. 2.7 pages), 0 sources, $ 26.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper presents a brief introduction to Egbede World Outreach for Saving the Kids, a benefaction of the Edo prince Nosa Okunbor and others, often of the Nigerian elite abroad. The paper shows that the organization is typical of those that emerge in response to particular, topical developments, in this case, the news that Nigerian anti-AIDS treatment was being extended to adult cases, ignoring the countries thousands HIV positive children.

From the Paper
"The mass media can give the idea that large and longstanding non-governmental organizations, or United Nations agencies, are the main source of relief or development work in poor societies. However, Nigeria's Egbede World Outreach for Saving the Kids provides a reminder of how important quite small, and privately financed projects can be. The charity's main sponsor has been Prince Nosa Okunbor, a member of a family much involved in different kinds of Christian and other Edo activism, alert to the need to invest in children in sub-Saharan Africa, as the only chance for the future."
Term Paper # 67882 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Not All Kids are Created Equal, 2005.
This paper argues that, because not all kids are created equal, the educational system of tracking as represented by the core curriculum approach should be abolished.
1,730 words (approx. 6.9 pages), 5 sources, APA, $ 55.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper explains that, by schooling low-ability pupils and high-ability pupils together, the low-ability pupils may wrongly come to understand their position in the hierarchy as a reflection of individual worth and most often do even worse academically than before. The author points out that many European schools do not employ tracking and yet their students as a rule perform better than American students. The paper stresses that, if a child runs into problems, only a careful analysis of his own personal case can ever hope to resolve the difficulties rather than imposing a core curriculum that is the same for every child.

From the Paper
"Nor will dividing an individual class into ability groups necessarily alter relative performance. This method, while having the advantage of keeping the students together at least on a social level, still divides them when it comes to learning. If the teaching method used with each group is identical, the division into groups will only benefit that group for whom the teaching method is most suited. A "head start" reading program in pre-school for example, will benefit high-ability students but will likely do nothing for low-ability students who need more attention or cannot keep up with the pace. At the same time, students who flunk out of such a program will then be behind their peers. In other words instead of being on the "fast track," they will be on the road to underachievement. Once a bad apple, always a bad apple."
Term Paper # 39052 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Divorce and Kids, 2002.
Uses studies to determine the effect of divorce on children.
1,400 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 11 sources, $ 53.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper examines the effect that divorce has on kids. Uncertainty is a big factor for kids as they grow. Studies are looked at in this paper in examining this important topic in our society.
Term Paper # 25374 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Kids that Kill, 2002.
A documented comparison of two powerful arguments of why children can become murderers.
6,620 words (approx. 26.5 pages), 36 sources, MLA, $ 151.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper examines the rising trend of cold-blooded, ruthless slayings performed by minors. It looks at recent cases and tries to establish what is turning these children into ruthless killers by analyzing two major issues, the impact of television violence on children and the issue of kids having access to guns as related to violent crime. It reviews the rise of violence on television and attempts to pinpoint the link between viewing violence and acting the violence out as well as evaluate what can be done about the media violence problem. It looks at current gun control laws and the ease in which minors can acquire firearms.

From the Paper
"In Boston, no young people have died from gun wounds in more than two years thanks, in part, to gun tracking. What has made gun tracking easier to do is the fact that the possession of firearms among teens is ?chic??that is, children are bragging to their friends and displaying handguns that make them feel important and brings them attention from others. Nearly 13,000 guns were used in crimes in New York City last year alone. Of those, eleven percent came from juveniles. Nationwide, the figure is ten percent. In Seattle and Memphis, juveniles were responsible for more than twenty percent of illegal gun crimes. Experts have proven that if you want to decrease violent youth crime, you must decrease the supply of guns into the market."
Term Paper # 1353 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Larry Clark's Controversial Film "KIDS", 2000.
A look at how this film is meant to be a commentary on the need for parental supervision in an adolescent's life.
2,120 words (approx. 8.5 pages), 2 sources, $ 66.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper provides an overview of the film "KIDS" and looks at the issues that the film brings up such as AIDS, drugs, violence and teenage sex. The paper shows that the film?s intention is not to encourage the behavioral problems that the teens in this movie portrayed, but to emphasize the importance of the role of a parent in a teenager's life.

From the Paper
"In the summer of 1995 Larry Clark, an established stills photographer, shocked society with his first directed movie known as KIDS. Over the course of one humid Manhattan day this film follows the lives of a handful of teens in the streets of New York. So much controversy has arisen due to the plethora of profanity, drugs, violence, and sex that take place in the brief hour and a half movie. Within this day there are three sex scenes, occurrences of trespassing, stealing, urinating in public, and a disturbing scene where a mob of teens beat up an African American. The director used such extreme measures to force people to think twice about teenagers? activities and actions that are undoubtedly shaping our youth. Since kids are not getting enough attention from their parents they look for it in another place, with their friends. Teenagers find it fundamental to fit in with a group of friends because friendships appear to be the only way to cure loneliness. Friendships allow teens to fit in, but at the same time they can be easily influenced to do things that they would not normally do. Larry Clark portrays teenagers as violent drug abusers, who are being ignorant towards societal rules and end up living unruly lives. Obviously, not all teenagers live this type of fractious life, which is most prevalent in the inner city population. Every teenager does not do drugs and routinely walk down the streets of their neighborhood with forty's of Old English in the mid day. But the movie KIDS portrays what can happen to any teen. While parents are too involved with their jobs, inner city New York teens get lost in the hustle and bustle environment and are forced to experience reality on their own. Lacking love from their family some teenagers take it upon themselves to start doing what they want, when they want. This often results in the teen losing respect for all authority and they become inconsiderate for other beings. As they become their own parents they may get increasingly vulnerable to sexually transmitted diseases, like AIDS. All of these possible results stem in part from the absence of an authority figure in a teenager's life."
Shopping Cart
Cart total : $ 0.00

••• SPECIAL OFFER •••
40 % off 2nd paper *)
Ends December 1, 2008
11 day(s) 10 hour(s) left
*) The least expensive paper

Find Term paper
Search Guide

Search :


Category :
Paper No. :

Options
Show papers between
and pages
Display results per page
Currency :

Enter Coupon Code :
Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>