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Doctors have doctor conventions, pediatrician conventions, and surgeon conventions every year. Well known and successful doctors in those field stand up and give speeches detailing any experiments or trials and research successes they had that year. They have years of experience and notebook full of their research results and medical trials to site so being a new doctor and ordinary bystander you instinctively believe them because they are credible. They have evidence and months, sometimes years, of research and statistics backing them up. If a 1st year doctor got up and started talking about what he had going on you’d be less likely to listen and think of him as credible. He hasn’t got much experience and he probably doesn’t have much research to back him up being he’s just starting out. He doesn’t seem as credible as say a 10 year doctor with years of experience and surgeries under his belt. I think personal experiences make a speaker more credible. You can search a topic all day long on the internet but that doesn’t make you an expert. Someone can youtube and google how to change a tire and think they know everything there is to know, but when it comes down to actually changing the tire they could have some difficulty. I don’t think online research always constitutes credibility but i think it also depends on the situation of the speech

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When hearing a presentation on evidence-based practice, such as new guidelines to be adopted by a hospital to reduce the infection rates of central lines in patients, the most compelling presentation would be one that is well supported with research and statistics backing these new safety measures.  Terri Russ (2017) discusses that an element of critical thinking is to not just jump to conclusions but instead that the critical thinker is inquisitive, that they “question everything that confronts us” (p.2). In other words, what would impress me most by this specific speaking situation would be the clear presentation of the facts, and what quality peer-reviewed sources have to say on the topic. 

Does the statistical analysis in the research studies cited, for example, show statistically significant  improvement after adopting a particular safety measure that was implemented to reduce the incidence of central line infections? Also, it may seem obvious but credibility of the speaker is also a key factor in determining the legitimacy of the message delivered.  Watt (2017) says this in a great way, in the context of reviewing source credibility, “One of the most important elements of credibility is qualification” (p.10).  Is the presenter someone who is well educated or whose background is specific to infections? Do they possess the title of epidemiologist, or someone who specializes in emergency preparedness and environmental safety? Do they have a doctorate in their respective field? Russ (2017) also elaborates that critical thinkers evaluate the evidence that is presented to them. In the context of central line infections, my thoughts would be what kind of research was cited? Are they from qualitative or quantitative studies? I would ask this question as the answer impacts the strength of the overall evidence provided. Were they randomized controlled studies and then also, what was the sample size in the study? The purpose of these questions is to scrutinize whether a study is valid, how much we can generalized the findings to the population at large, and whether the quality of information matches the seriousness in addressing patient safety issues.

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During a recent training, a co-worker opposing remote work arrangements made an impromptu speech. Her complaints were COVID isn’t serious, and we are wasting money and productivity working from home.

COVID is not as severe as the seasonal flu. She quoted her favorite news host. His information was reliable because the host was a friend of the President. This is an example of the fallacy, appealing to authority. Other than the word of the talk show host, she offered no supporting details. When presented with contradictory evidence from the WHO, she exercised genetic fallacy by saying the WHO is fake news and our co-worker a politically biased.

She next argued working remote would cost millions of dollars because everyone would need printers and scanners. She failed to understand that digitalizing the department eliminated the need for printing and scanning, and if required, we would still have access to our offices.

In her final argument, she used the false analogy, not having scanners and printers cause a lack of productivity because we can’t print documents for our bosses. Being remote, we can’t give documents to them. Therefore, remote work is unproductive.

Chapter 6 (Russ, 2017) reminds us “critical thinking requires we consciously listen to messages.” She already decided working remotely is unproductive. She lacked open-mindedness and did not offer evidence. Chapter 7 (Watt, 2017) concludes that to appear credible you must offer support for each of your ideas. Samuel Warren Carey once said, “If 50 million believe in a fallacy, it is still a fallacy.” We must always use logic and critical thinking to analyze information and come to logical conclusions.

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As a speaker, it is vital to give to good reasons os to why someone, or the audience should believe what you say. Personally, I am a person that identifies with feelings more than logic and what is true. I tend to make decisions too quickly based on my emotions and what I am feeling rather than stepping back, and truly evaluate what I am thinking or a situation. My emotions somewhat drive what I say in a speech. The trick, i guess you can say, for me, is figuring how to use logic and fact, and my emotions. I am a very emotional speaker, which is a good trait. If I only use emotion and what I feel, that can leave me unvalidated. But if I can use logic and fact first, and then drive home those points personally and use my emotions, that can make for a very powerful speech. Emotions and how we feel should evident and in a speech, but they most coincide with logic and facts. That what makes someone’s speech believable and powerful, you must have both. What makes something very compelling and believable is facts and personal experience. Everyone loves identifying with someone, knowing we all go through the same things as humans. So, personal experience can be very powerful, the speaker relating and becoming vulnerable with the audience. 

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I will pay for the following essay Bio u4gp. The essay is to be 2 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page.

Also contained in the digestive tract is a layer of muscle that helps in the process of breaking down food (The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, 2008).

In addition to the aforementioned hollow digestive organs, there are also solid organs that produce or store digestive juices to aid in the digestive process. These solid organs are the liver, pancreas, and gallbladder. The liver and pancreas produce digestive fluids that travel to the intestine via ducts. The liver’s digestive juices are stored in the gallbladder until the intestine needs them. Also, there are parts in the nervous and circulatory system that play serious parts in the overall digestive process (The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, 2008).

Also according to the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, “When you eat foods—such as bread, meat, and vegetables—they are not in a form that the body can use as nourishment. Food and drink must be changed into smaller molecules of nutrients before they can be absorbed into the blood and carried to cells throughout the body. Digestion is the process by which food and drink are broken down into their smallest parts so the body can use them to build and nourish cells and to provide energy.”

According to Merck (2008, pg. 1), “Although an organ has a specific function, organs also function as part of a group, called an organ system. The organ system is the organizational unit by which medicine is studied, diseases are generally categorized, and treatments are planned.” The organ systems within the human body include the cardiovascular, respiratory, nervous, skin, musculoskeletal, blood, digestive, endocrine, urinary, male reproductive, and female reproductive systems.

Organ systems do not function by themselves. Instead, they work with each other to accomplish tasks that are needed for the human organism to

 

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write my assignment 714

BrO3-(aq)+6I-(aq)+6H3O+(aq)—>Br-(aq)+3I2(aq)+9H2O(l)

rate=k[bro3-]b[i-]i[h3o+]h

Consider the data below representing a run for the Clock Reaction you’ll be performing in lab.  Calculate the rate of reaction in M/s if the volumes of reagents indicated are combined and 219 seconds elapse before the color appears.

0.50 mL 0.00050 M Na2S2O3

0.50 mL 0.010 M KI

0.50 mL 0.040 M KBrO3

0.25 mL 0.100 M HCl

0.75 mL DI H2O

1-2 drops 1% starch indicator (negligible volume)

A) 2.3 x 10-6 M/s

B) 9.1 x 10-7 M/s

C) 4.6 x 10-7 M/s

D) 3.8 x 10-7 M/s

E) 7.6 x 10-8 M/s

 

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write my assignment 21687

OBJECTIVES

To complete my course in English and masters in Technology and Marketing in order to enter the highly competitive global job market

WORK EXPERIENCE

Delta

Customer Care Assistant, November 2007 – November 2009

Responsibilities:

Ø Communicate with customers and solving any problems that they may have.

Ø Archiving and sorting daily, weekly and monthly reports for easy access.

Ø Reporting to the customer care manager on daily, weekly and monthly progress.

Ø Coordinating with company drivers to make sure they follow their schedules without delay

EDUCATION

University

MBA in Technology and Marketing, January 2017 – Present

Specialty: MBA in Technology and Marketing.

University

English language (Foundation – Level I – Level II – Level III – Level VI), March 2014 – December 2015

Specialty: Academic English language.

University

Bachelor degree in Management Information System (MIS), 2009 – 2013

Specialty: Management Information System (MIS)

PROFESSIONAL COURSES:

University

Principles of success, September 2012

University

Professional Visio, May 2012

University

How to cope with stress, February 2012

University

Secretarial Executive, 2012

University

Front Page, 2012

University

Excel, SPSS, Maple, 2012

Development of Cultural center for Ladies,

English Conversation Level 1, October 2007

RELEVANT SKILLS

Computer skills:

Microsoft office Word, Excel, Power Point, Access, Front Page, Visio and Visual Basic

Personal Skills:

Efficient, accurate and detail oriented

LANGUAGES

Good written and verbal communication skills in Arabic, English language as a second language.

Thanks.

 

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