Instruction attached.Company Creation
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Step 1: Pick a social or political issue of your choice.
Wedge issues work best: global warming, gun debate, legalizing marijuana, same-sex marriage, abortion, et cetera. Don\’t take sides, your task is to analyze how these news reports are constructed. The issue itself is irrelevant.
Step 2: Pick two media sources from opposite sides of the political spectrum.
Why pick the extremes on the political spectrum? Because it\’s easier to pluck out the bias, especially when you\’re reading the same story side by side.
Either two magazines/journals (The Nation vs. NRO) or
two local newspapers (NY Times vs. LV Review-Journal) or
two television broadcasts (The Rachel Maddow Show vs. The OReilly Factor)
Use any sources that express opposing views, below are a few examples:
Leftist or Liberal
Rightist or Conservative
The Nation
The Huffington Post
Mother Jones
NY Times, LA Times, Washington Post
MSNBC (Rachel Maddow, etc.)
The American Spectator
National Review Online (NRO)
The Weekly Standard
Wall St. Journal, LV RJ, Washington Times
FOX News (Bill O Reilly, etc.)
Background of the study
Research aims and objectives :
Explore the most effective social media channels that have been developed over the last years
Establish the role of social media for businesses as part of their customer relationship management
Explore the positive and negative affect of social media on both businesses and customers
Research questions:
What are the benefits of social media marketing for a company?
What businesses have done in terms of trying to adapt to this new media environment ?
Why is social media an effective platform for businesses to convey their brands\’ visual and messaging?
What are the most effective social media channels that businesses can use in today\’s society?
What are the impacts of social media on businesses and customers both positive and negative as the internet continues to grow
Literature review
Data collection method
Data analysis
Bibliography
Appendix
I have attached the document that needs to go to the appendix supposed that the dissertation is due in on the 12 of May. Provide actions that will need to be taken to achieve the dissertation starting from September in a table. For instance september 28 to October 10 finding a dissertation topic
From October 28 to April 30 reading and researching into the topic etc
Please include meeting with the dissertation supervisor as well in the action table
Introduction
Topic sentence
Main ideas
Thesis
Body paragraph
Conclusion
Argument
I will send it to you the other instructions.
teachingamericanhistory.org/library/document/cornerstone-speech/
wps.prenhall.com/wps/media/objects/106/109508/ch14_a1_d2.pdf
www.wwnorton.com/college/history/archive/resources/documents/ch15_03.htm
https://www.loc.gov/teachers/newsevents/events/lincoln/pdf/avalonInaug2.pdf
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abraham_Lincoln%27s_second_inaugural_address
These are the link for my essay.
More instruction.
How to Write a College Level History Paper
Section 1: What Is Historical Writing?
This paper is intended to give you a general overview of writing the historical/political/Reflection essay. You will need this guide in order to be successful in most courses in the Humanities or Social Sciences. While standards vary from professor to professor here are some basic guidelines that will help you in your writing for this course. You must also use this paper as a guide to writing in this course. Failure to do so may reduce your grade.
Elements
No matter what type of college essay you write the basic elements of academic essay writing include: thesis, body of evidence and conclusion. These are the basic elements of writing. So before you turn in you paper ask yourself does my paper have a thesis, body of evidence and conclusion?
The thesis and evidence are divided into three parts: an introduction, the systematic development of an argument, and a conclusion. All scholarly writing, from the most concise paper to the longest book, follows these basic guidelines. The best college papers and even academic or scholarly books and articles have these elements otherwise your paper will be considered lacking purpose and direction and will simply be too difficult to read.
Typically, it only takes me a paragraph or two to tell the direction your paper is going. If I dont have a sense that you have put together a well-crafted argument and resulting paper your paper will be severely downgraded. Part of being in college is to learn how to write clearly and effectively. This is one aspect of the educated and professional world that you must master.
Thesis
You must have a thesis in every paper you write in this course. Historical/political or English essay writing is based upon developing a clear thesis. A thesis is a statement, an argument that will be presented by the writer. The thesis is in effect, your position, your particular interpretation, your way of seeing a problem. Resist the temptation, which many students have, to think of a thesis as simply \”restating\” a Professors question or just stating the obvious.
The writer should demonstrate originality and critical thinking by showing what the question is asking, and why it is important rather than merely repeating it. Your own informed perspective is what matters. Many first-year students ask whether the \”thesis\” is not just their \”opinion\” of a historical question. A thesis is indeed a \”point of view,\” or \”perspective,\” but of a particular sort: it is based not only on belief, but on a logical and systematic argument supported by evidence. The truism that we each have \”our own\” opinions misses the point. A good critical essay acknowledges that many perspectives are possible on any question, yet demonstrates the validity or correctness of the writer\’s own view. If you are writing a reflection essay you can really add your own personal perspective to your papers. But remember your paper cannot rest on your personal experiences alone. You must do outside research.
Lets take an example. Lets say that you have to write a reflection paper on slavery. You decide that what interests you is the topic of slave marriages. You remember that you attended an wedding with African American themes (Jumping the Broom, etc.). You could then write a reflection paper on slave marriages. You would write about how these marriages were conducted and their importance to Black culture. Then you could tie into your essay your own experiences at the wedding. This is just and example. You have to bring your own creativity and decide how you will approach the essay.
Evidence/Data
To make a good argument you must have both a strong central thesis and to make your thesis viable you must have evidence; the two are interdependent and support each other. A strong statement of thesis needs evidence or it will convince no one. Equally, quotes, dates, and lists of details mean nothing by themselves. Your task is both to select the important \”facts\” and to present them in a reasonable, persuasive, and systematic manner that defends your position.
To support your argument, you should also be competent in using footnotes or end-notes and creating bibliographies and annotated bibliographies, if required, for your work; neither is difficult, and both are requirements for truly pr
Accounting software allows small business owners the capability to manage all of their business\’s financial transactions. There are many different types of accounting software packages for a small business to consider and invest in with various advantages and disadvantages. Selecting the most appropriate accounting software can be one of the most important decisions a small business must make. Almost all accounting software packages will deliver simple bookkeeping while other accounting systems may have the capability to manage much more with the scalability to expand. Understanding accounting software and the full functionality thereof can contribute to the overall success of a small business over and above minimization of costly bookkeeping mistakes.
IDs
Nationalism
Theodor Herzl
Otto von Bismarck & Gagern
Giuseppe Mazzini & Garibaldi
Alsace-Lorraine
Napoleon III
Assimilation colonization
Paternalism colonization
Open Door
Spanish-American war
Opium war
Entangled alliances
Princip & Franz Ferdinand
Roland Doregeles and Stefan Zweig
Zimmerman Telegram
Armenian Genocide
Wilfrid Owen & Erich Remarque
Trenches, no mans land
Total war
Verdun & Somme
Karl Marx and Engels
Tsar Nicholas II
Gregory Rasputin
Great Depression
Washington Conference
Treaty of Versailles
Stalin
Weimar Republic
Mussolini
Francisco Franco
Auschwitz
Kristallnacht/Nuremberg laws
Munich Conference
Battle of France
Battle of Britain
Churchill
Point du Hoc
Omaha & Utah beaches
Hiroshima and Nagasaki
NATO
Truman Doctrine
Marshall Plan
Yalta
Khrushchev
Vietnam
Korean War
Gorbachev
Tito and Milosevic
Charles De Gaulle