YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :The Teaching Profession from a Philosophical Position
Essays 271 - 300
Occupational Facts, 2002). "Courses in quantitative research methods, which include the use of computer-based analysis, are an in...
employees need to have mastery of basic skills, but business is much more specialized now than in decades past. Effective ...
This paper will discuss what corporate spying is, how it is conducted, and how accounting departments can be targets of corporate ...
who choose to use qualitative methods tend to seek a deeper reality, inasmuch as their aim is to "study things in their natural se...
repressed anger" (Shannon, 2001; p. 60). This rudimentary profile can describe hundreds of thousands of Americans, of cours...
home as well. All of this adds up to the fact that officers rarely have a place they can go to relieve their stress; it follows t...
present-day nurse, he notes, this can be construed to mean a caring about the well-being of those the nurse serves which, in this ...
out the parameters of the problem and review previous the results of research in this area. She discusses how patients older than ...
they have witnessed. It sometimes takes a long time for the psychological aspects to come out after these traumatic events, but i...
of postwar survival -- that a person who learns a trade and can take care of himself is not only an asset to his own family but to...
have more opportunity to encounter difficulties involved in nursing the critically ill. "How frequently a given stressor occurs d...
(Hodges, Satkowski, and Ganchorre, 1998). Despite the hospital closings and the restructuring of our national health care system ...
interest that particular vocation. If it holds a significant amount of appeal, then it would be wise to dissect it right down to ...
direct care with advancing age. Care providers cannot set lower fees for uninsured individuals and then penalize the insured and ...
a considerable difference between the garment worker of the nineteenth century and the beat cop of the twenty-first century. Howe...
and was told not to consider having children for fear of passing on defective genes (Sheldon, 1997; p. 34). This occurred d...
to succeed" (Challoner, 2003). From this we see that a dentist who wants success must broaden their perspectives concerning the...
The intent of this paper is to describe these concerns which revolve around agents, contractual obligations, and law. The a...
are simply more capable of performing the tasks well, but that male administrative assistants are deemed to be out of place. A mal...
From this perspective, individuals can be viewed as open systems, in which energy is transformed within the body, gaining or losin...
fairly positive towards the 12-hour shift, but the nursing educators were extremely negative. The teaching staff opposed the use o...
hesitant about coming forward to name their abusers, because the system did not seem to either believe them about the scope of the...
opportunity to do. The earliest nurses were to provide patient comfort and care for patients in the manner that physicians expect...
exist for generations. Though Nightingale promoted a professional demeanor, nursing was not something that most well-bred women w...
manual (Tullmann, 2002). The way ion which there was the absence of a common culture from which power bases were built (Tullmann, ...
"understanding the fit," Beyea and Nicoll (2000) point out that: "A clinical expert continually questions knowledge, constantly le...
Statistics expects that number to rise to more than one million in less than 20 years. The American Nurses Association and Monste...
the issue of work stress, noting that it is often difficult to strike a balance between beneficial and detrimental stress. Writin...
level work. An example is that the nurse practitioner can have his or her own practice under a doctors supervision. Still, they ma...
necessary. Of course, if an individual merely wanted to be the one in charge of directing YMCA activities and not directing the en...