Description / Question
1. Seminar in Social Psychology
(700 words) (APA citation) (in-text citations are a must) (No Plagiarism)
Must cite this text: Swift, Jonathan. “A Modest Proposal.” The Broadview Anthology of Expository Prose, edited by Laura Buzzard, Don LePan, Nora Ruddock, and Alexandria Stuart, 3rd ed., Broadview Press, 2016, pp. 19-27.
Concentration: Religious Studies
In this writing assignment, you’ll choose one of the prompts below to respond to, based on your MA concentration or MFA specialization (Religious Studies).
Literature: Add one entry to your Annotated Bibliography (3 single-spaced paragraphs 700 words total). Choose one of the Broadview readings for this week (Swift) and write an annotation that includes three short paragraphs: a summary of the text and assessment of the discourse community (audience), a brief craft analysis of the text’s thematic concerns and/or stylistic or formal qualities in relation to any aspect of “Naming Nonfiction,” by Robert L. Root. Then reflect on any aspect of Swift to your own critical thinking.
Begin a draft of your final analysis by either writing the first page or pages, or by including a draft of an outline, pre-thoughts on your topic and how you might structure your paper relying on the resources you have gathered so far. You may use five bullet points or number/letter system, a word cloud graphic, or you are free to record a three-to-five-minute recording of your thoughts.
2. Seminar in Social Psychology
(700 words) (APA citation) (in-text citations are a must) (No Plagiarism)
Must cite this text: Wallace, David Foster. “Consider the Lobster.” The Broadview Anthology of Expository Prose, edited by Laura Buzzard, Don LePan, Nora Ruddock, and Alexandria Stuart, 3rd ed., Broadview Press, 2016, pp. 516-532.
Concentration: Religious Studies
In this writing assignment, you’ll choose one of the prompts below to respond to, based on your MA concentration or MFA specialization (Religious Studies).
Literature: Add one entry to your Annotated Bibliography (3 single-spaced paragraphs 700 words total). Choose one of the Broadview readings for this week (Wallace) and write an annotation that includes three short paragraphs: a summary of the text and assessment of the discourse community (audience), a brief craft analysis of the text’s thematic concerns and/or stylistic or formal qualities in relation to any aspect of “Naming Nonfiction,” by Robert L. Root. Then reflect on any aspect of Wallace to your own critical thinking.
Begin a draft of your final analysis by either writing the first page or pages, or by including a draft of an outline, pre-thoughts on your topic and how you might structure your paper relying on the resources you have gathered so far. You may use five bullet points or number/letter system, a word cloud graphic, or you are free to record a three-to-five-minute recording of your thoughts.
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Chapter 08 Reading: Gene Expression and ControlConcept MapInstructionsCreate a concept map. Concept maps and other mind mapping activities are important tools in developing your understanding of certain concepts. There are many options when it comes to mapping out new concepts. However, the shared objective is to make connections between new concepts and promote a graphical representation of information.To build your concept map:Go to the Chapter Review Summary in the textbook chapters and locate the bolded terms.Create a flashcard for each of the bolded terms. Search through the e-book for reference of these terms. Identify and review the terms you do not understand.Decide how the terms should be organized based on relationships and divisions and start making connections.Once you have your flashcards organized the way you want, design your map using either an online program or by hand.Chapter ReviewSummarySection 8.1 The ability to make proteins is critical to all life processes. Ribosome-inactivating proteins (RIPs) have an enzyme domain that permanently disables ribosomes, but not all of these proteins can enter cells, so not all are toxic.Section 8.2 Information encoded within the nucleotide sequence of DNA occurs in subsets called genes. Cells use a gene’s coding sequence to produce an RNA or protein product.Gene expression is the conversion of information in a gene to an RNA or protein product. During gene expression, information flows from DNA to RNA to protein.Transcription produces several types of RNA. Messenger RNA (mRNA) carries a gene’s protein-building message into translation. Translation is