Miss Natalia

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About Miss Natalia

Levels Tought:
Elementary,High School,College,University

Expertise:
Accounting,Business & Finance See all
Accounting,Business & Finance,Calculus,Computer Science,Environmental science,Health & Medical Hide all
Teaching Since: Apr 2017
Last Sign in: 359 Weeks Ago, 6 Days Ago
Questions Answered: 6064
Tutorials Posted: 6070

Education

  • Doctor of Education in Educational Leadership with a Specialization in Educational Technology
    Phoniex University
    Oct-1999 - Nov-2005

Experience

  • HR Executive
    a21, Inc.
    Nov-1998 - Dec-2005

Category > English Posted 26 May 2017 My Price 3.00

Draw upon personal experience or use other sources to support your discussion.

Civil Disobedience

This discussion forum explores a controversial topic: Civil Disobedience. Remember that any argument asks (or perhaps challenges) us to change something about our perspective on a topic or issue. If we are asking our readers to change their perspectives, we need to be persuasive and civil. Likewise, when we are challenged by others with a different opinion, we need to keep an open mind and keep our responses persuasive and civil.

Finding Sources

Select either Option A or Option B for a selection of articles to read for this discussion forum.

Option A:  Civil Disobedience and Non-violence

  1. King, M. (2009). Letter from Birmingham Jail. Letter from Birmingham Jail, 1.
  2. Brown, T. M., & Fee, E. (2008). Spinning for India's Independence. American Journal Of Public Health, 98(1), 39.
  3. Perlin, R. (2015). Two Occupys: Dissent (00123846), 62(3), 92-100.

Option B:  Civil Disobedience in Cyberspace

  1. Ludlow, P. (2013). Hacktivist Witch Hunt. Nation, 297(26/27), 23-26.
  2. Iltan, C. (2011). Moving targets. Maclean’s, 124(33/34), 63.
  3. Dunion, K. (2011). Viewpoint: In defense of Freedom of Information. Information Polity: The International Journal Of Government & Democracy In The Information Age, 16(2), 93-96. doi:10.3233/IP-2011-0233

Be sure to address all of the following elements in your initial post:

Step 1: Summarize.

Summarize the articles you picked. Write one paragraph. Identify the sources by title and author in your paragraph.

  1. What is the main thesis of each?
  2. How are they are they different and how are they similar?

Step 2: Using sources to support your argument (point of view).

Now, discuss your perspective of the topic. Support your statements by citing supportive evidence from the articles you read. Remember to use appropriate citations when you quote, paraphrase or summarize. Write one paragraph. Here are some questions you can use as a starting point for your one-paragraph discussion.

  1. What is your opinion of the content and the topic? For a researched argument, you would support your opinion by using supporting information from the article. Use in-text citations if you quote, summarize, or paraphrase.
  2. Was the article persuasive? How?
  3. What reaction did you have to the content of the article? Draw upon personal experience or use other sources to support your discussion.
 

Answers

(14)
Status NEW Posted 26 May 2017 02:05 AM My Price 3.00

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