YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Contemporary Educational Profession Issues
Essays 301 - 330
This essay describes the unionization debate in regards to the nursing profession and focuses on the con side. Four pages in lengt...
In a paper of eight pages, the writer looks at rescue work. Legal liabilities are examined that might be encountered in the profes...
This essay offers an analysis of the nursing profession. Specifically, strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats are ident...
not provided. In the Patient Protection Act, the confidentiality provisions list those specific purposes for which all pati...
nurses any more than they could get along without mothers" (Garey et al, 1988, p. PG). A profession that was decidedly more...
any given time, but the Bureau of Labor Statistics has deemed that health care and social service employees are subject to a highe...
Burnout in the coaching profession is the focus of this paper consisting of fifteen pages with a definition and diagnosis of the p...
In six pages this report examines the organizational changes in the law enforcement profession in a consideration of the importanc...
In six pages this statement 'The management of workers in knowledge-based industries poses one of the greatest challenges to the h...
years, or so, and according to the Corporate Development Group (1999),providers of a leadership diagnostic system, the alignment ...
oath of service and protection. This makes law enforcement officers very vulnerable. A willingness to serve and protect carries ...
In five pages the environmental engineering profession is considered in terms of social responsibilities connected with appropriat...
In ten pages this paper examines the burgeoning information technology and computer technology field in an argument that alleges g...
In nine pages this advertising text including the author's recommendation of what represents 'good' advertising based upon nearly ...
In a paper consisting fo 6 pages a hypothetical study of fatigue is discussed in terms of its impact upon emotions and assesses th...
In five pages the cultural aspects of the nursing profession are considered in a discussion that while Canadian and U.S. nurses mi...
population" (Nyman, Butterfield and Shreffler-Grant, 2009, p. 282). Description of farming: Farming is "more than a business; i...
that there is little, if any, true relationship or familial feeling between the two women, as Vivie tells Mr. Praed, "I hardly kno...
found on the Internet is accurate. As researching a topic using a Web browser is simply a matter of using a handful of keywords, t...
most school districts support a process of lifelong learning, and the educational system in general focuses on methods to enhance ...
communication is all the more difficult. Studies have indicated that individuals use a huge variety of nonverbal responses in orde...
profession, these objectives might address such processes as searches (search warrants and consent searches) and acceptable types ...
of the nurses and the nurse population ratio is considered higher than most in the region (MoH, 2002). Recent advances in nursing ...
fairly positive towards the 12-hour shift, but the nursing educators were extremely negative. The teaching staff opposed the use o...
are simply more capable of performing the tasks well, but that male administrative assistants are deemed to be out of place. A mal...
of the great need for Hispanic nurses which has been created by the growing Hispanic population, this occupational choice presents...
From this perspective, individuals can be viewed as open systems, in which energy is transformed within the body, gaining or losin...
hesitant about coming forward to name their abusers, because the system did not seem to either believe them about the scope of the...
exist for generations. Though Nightingale promoted a professional demeanor, nursing was not something that most well-bred women w...
conceivably become a staff member of a national magazine in a foreign country, even though one does not live there. All business w...