Category: English and Literature (Page 39 of 60)

Effects of Autism

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Describe how Autism affects social Interactions, communication, language, behavior patterns, response to sensory stimuli, and intellectual functioning Use journals and textbooks as sources of reference and provide a thoroughly researched for each of these aspects. Continue reading

The Health Benefits of Medical Marijuana

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Discuss the health benefits of medical marijuana in reference to people with anxiety, depression, and other mental health issues. You should examine points such as how Marijuana is safer to use than opioid medications, and how it has been used in the past to treat such issues. Examine different types of marijuana and explain how one type differs from the other.  What would happen if medical marijuana was legalized in some states and how would they benefit from it? Continue reading

A Glimpse into Sensory Impairment

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In this activity, you are going to experience what it may be like to have to function without your vision.
Please keep in mind that the activity you are going to do is just one very small glimpse into sensory impairment and is in no way a comprehensive representation of the challenges that students with a sensory impairment may face. Continue reading

A court Case Analysis

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Find a recent case in the past six  months on a Constitutional Law or Tort Law topic and discuss the facts of the case, what happened prior to trial that led up to the case, and the law(s) that were affected. Also, discuss the issues at hand. This will be the topic that you chose; if there are more issues than your topic, just concentrate on your issue, and the trial Courts ruling.  Continue reading

A Court Case Analysis

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Analyze one case that the U.S. Supreme Court or the California Supreme Court has written a decision on preferably within the last five years, although older cases may be selected if of particular interest to the student. The case brief should have a case citation (parties involved and year of the case), brief facts (only the most important facts that the court relied on), issues (the question(s) to be resolved by the court), holding/rule of law (the precedent established by the case, which is the court’s answer(s) to the issue(s), reasoning/rationale (why the court ruled as it did), other opinions (e.g., concurring, dissent), and your own brief analysis. Continue reading

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