Research Report on inefficient Rostering

HE708, HOS718, CUL718 Sem 2-2018 Prepared by: Julie London
©William Angliss Institute Page 1 of 5
Assessment 2: Part C – Report
Assessment Type: Report
Weighting: 50%
Word Limit: 2,000 words
Due date: Week 12 – Monday October 29th 2018 23.55
Investigate appropriate solutions to the organisational issue or problem you identified in
Assessment 2 using both actual work place examples and academic research to support your
opinions. Your submission must be in formal Report format and must be supported by at least
8 high quality academic references (including those you annotated in Part B).
**It is highly recommended that you review the on-line report writing tutorial, which you can find
on MOODLE under the Assessment tab.
Assessment 2, Part C Tips
1. Topic
Following Assessment 1 – Part A, you will have finalised your topic for your report. It is
important that you stay within the topic and identify a scope for your investigation so that
you don’t go off track and have a clear objective.
2. Aim of your Report
Just like a science experiment, your report will have an aim or objective. What is the
goal you are hoping to achieve upon completion your report? What is the purpose of the
report? Having an aim will ensure you have something to refer to as you are writing your
report and this will keep you on track. When you are questioning whether to include
something in your report, you can refer to your aim and decide whether the information
is relevant to what you are hoping to achieve.
3. Report Writing Guide
Read the Report Writing Guide in the Assessment Summary Section on Moodle. This
will help you structure your report and understand what to include.
4. Marking Rubric
Read the marking rubric! This includes the weightings and will be a guide of how your
assessment will be marked.

5. Report Plan
As mentioned in the tips for Part B, writing up a report plan should be one of your first
steps when writing a report. In your report plan, you should layout the structure of your
report and include summary points, views, inferences under each section as a guide to
HE708, HOS718, CUL718 Sem 2-2018 Prepared by: Julie London
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what you will plan to discuss. This will help you guide your research. You can also
include a timeline in your report plan for your own personal time management. The
report plan does not need to be submitted and is for your benefit.
6. Research
Your research is a key aspect of your report, but your references should not be leading
the discussion and we don’t want you to write everything you can find about the topic.
One of the key traps that many students find themselves in is that they include
references in their report that is not linked or irrelevant to the topic or the objective of the
investigation. Remember that the referenced content should be used to support your
own views and ideas. Do not let the references or content from other sources drive the
discussion, let your findings strengthen your discussion. Do not include a referenced
quote just because it sounds like a good punch line to start the paragraph.
Journals and texts are the most credible and recommended sources to use for your
research and you will need 8 high quality references. However, do not be afraid to
explore outside of these if you feel there is some benefit and credibility to your research.
Think about exploring documentaries, TED talks, interviews from experts in the industry.
If you are using sources more than 5 years old, you must justify this in your discussion.
Consider whether any newer research has been conducted on a similar topic and if not,
why? Make recommendations and discuss the impact on your investigation.
You should be using the APA method for your referencing. Please refer to the LRC for
the referencing guide
7. Think 360 Degrees
Remember to consider all viewpoints in your discussion. A recommendation may
present a positive outcome for employees, but does it present a positive outcome for the
business, the government or the customers? Discuss this. In your report, do not be
afraid to discuss how you came up with an idea, but later found it to be not feasible
following the research. This could eventually link to an alternative idea that may be
feasible. From a reader’s point of view, this will demonstrate your ability to form a 360
degree viewpoint and will lead to a higher mark.
8. Discussion
In your discussion, you will be focusing on your investigation and addressing the points
from the assignment brief in the Subject Delivery Schedule. Do not submit a general
discussion on a topic write everything you find about that topic. The idea of a report is
for you to conduct an investigation on a specific area and form recommendations which
could be beneficial to the reader. Do not lead your discussion with a reference or
source. Research is designed to support YOUR investigation.
Whilst you will be submitting your report to WAI, a report would usually be a document
you would present to a key stakeholder such as a manager. Therefore, you need to ask
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yourself “would I be able to present this report to my manager and is my investigation
strong enough for that manager to accept some of the findings and implement my
recommendations?”
9. Word Count
Please remember that only the introduction, body and conclusion (recommendations)
are included in the word count. Other elements such as tables, diagrams, contents page
executive summary, reference lists, etc are not included. As per the marking rubric, you
should keep within 10% of the word count.
2000 words is not a lot of words for a report and despite concerns most students will
find it difficult to keep the word count down. Remember that your report will need to
have enough research and discussion to support your investigation and
recommendations.
10. Privacy
Please be assured that all submissions will not be shared outside of the Institute. Most
likely the only people to be reading your work will be either myself or Julie. For those
concerned about naming your organisation within your assessments, you may instead
wish to identify the organisation as an alias such as Company A.
11. First Person or Third Person
You must write in Third Person.
12. Late Submissions
As mentioned previously, if you are having any issues submitting your report on time,
please let me know the reason before the due date and I will give you an appropriate
extension.
HE708, HOS718, CUL718 Sem 2-2018 Prepared by: Julie London
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Assessment 2 Part C – Formal Report – Marking Rubric Guide
Category Unsatisfactory Pass Credit Distinction High Distinction
General An unsatisfactory attempt at
the report. Does not
demonstrate adequate
research of the topic. No
evidence of critical analysis.
Work place examples not
provided
Solutions and
recommendations are
superficial or not provided.
An adequate to fair report.
Demonstrates adequate
research of the topic.
Evidence of critical analysis.
Limited work place
examples provided.
Limited solutions and
recommendations have
been made in regard to the
identified organisational
issue.
Good to very good report
using several actual work
place examples and
academic research to
support opinions. A good
range of appropriate
solutions discussed in
regard to the identified
organisational issue.
An excellent report, well
structured, well expressed
and demonstrating excellent
critical analysis. Solutions
and recommendations are
well constructed, discussed
from different viewpoints and
supported by credible
academic sources.
An excellent report, well structured,
well expressed and demonstrates
understanding beyond the
requirements of the investigation.
Demonstrates excellent critical
analysis of information. A range of
appropriate solutions,
recommendations and conclusions
are provided. Discussion is broad
and considers different viewpoints.
Supported by a wide range of
credible academic and industry
sources.
Executive Summary
10%
The following are not covered:
the report’s purpose,
methodology, main findings,
and conclusions and
recommendations. Important
information is omitted. No
distinction between the different
outcomes with which the report
deals.
Generally clear but limited
definitions/summaries of the
report’s purpose,
methodology, main findings
and conclusions. May lack
clarity in defining the reports
staring point and direction.
Differentiation between the
outcomes is clear.
Clearly
defines/summarises the
report’s purpose,
methodology, main
findings and conclusions.
Provides necessary
information for a clear
starting point and
direction of the report.
The different outcomes
can be clearly discerned.
Clearly and concisely
defines/summarises the
report’s purpose,
methodology, main findings
and conclusions. Includes all
relevant details to provide a
clear starting point and
direction of the report.
Different outcomes are
clearly distinguished and their
relationship.
Comprehensive and thoroughly
summarises all important aspects of
the report. Gives a clear review of
all the necessary aspects of the
report leaving the reader motivated
to read the full report.
Introduction
10%
Introduction does not contain a
clear purpose for the report.
Details concerning the
framework for the report are not
included. Context analysis is
unclear in that it does not
represent an understanding of
the implementation of the
theory and its relationship to
the workplace. No attempt at
describing methodology
Contains a clear purpose
statement setting out the
different aspects to be
covered by the report.
Context analysis is
adequate but refers mostly
to obvious relationships
between the implementation
of the theory issue and the
workplace. Some attempt to
outline methods and
sources of information/data
to be used.
Clearly sets the
framework for the report.
Contains well expressed
purpose statement,
differentiates between the
different topics that will be
covered. Distinguishes
between the areas to be
covered in the report.
Context analysis shows
understanding of the
issue in relation to the
workplace and the issue
under investigation.
Methods and sources of
data/information to be
used are clearly outlined.
Clearly and concisely sets the
framework for the report.
Clearly distinguishes between
the areas that will be covered
and i.e. the issue under
investigation and the process
used. Context analysis is
clear and demonstrates deep
understanding of the
relationship between the
workplace and the research
topic. Methodology is
appropriate and well
structured.
A well-structured introduction
leading the reader with little topic
knowledge with a clear
understanding of the detail of the
investigation to be covered in the
rest of the report.
HE708, HOS718, CUL718 Sem 2-2018 Prepared by: Julie London
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Body/Discussion
60%
Generally subjective
observations without supporting
evidence. Statements appear
haphazard and the connection
to the issue under investigation
is superficial and/or unclear.
Examples are vague or absent
and academic research is not
evident. Solutions are absent or
inappropriate.
Outlines research findings in
a generally clear and
considered manner but
tends to be broad and
disjointed. Analysis of
information/data at times is
superficial. Source of
information including
academic research is
adequate but lacks depth
and variety. Solutions
minimal.
Research findings are
expressed well and in a
logical sequence. Good
analysis of
information/data.
Supporting
evidence/sources of
information including
academic literature is
credible, relevant and
shows some depth. A
variety of solutions are
provided.
Research findings are well
expressed, relevant and
demonstrate a well structured
thought process. Critical
analysis of relevant
information/data is rigorous
and from a variety of credible
academic and industry
sources. Appropriate
solutions are provided and
clearly supported by a range
of high quality academic
articles.
The discussion is very well
structured, easy to follow and
understand and is critically sound
with high quality supporting
academic references and
examples. Expression, grammar
and use of figures, tables and
illustrations are all excellent. A
broad range of sophisticated
solutions are provided. Report
meets all professional industry
standards.
Conclusions and
Evaluation
10%
Summary of report findings
both in terms of what has been
learned and the process is not
present or is insufficient.
Generally clear summary of
the report’s findings both in
terms of what has been
learned and the process.
Clear and concise
summary of the report’s
findings both in terms of
what has been learned
and the process.
Very clear and concise
summary of the report’s
findings in logical order both
in terms of what has been
discovered and the process.
The recommendations and
conclusions are logically sound and
follow as deductive outcomes of the
investigation. Well expressed and
easy to understand.
Organisation,
referencing and
presentation
10%
Contents page does not include
key information or is incorrectly
formatted.
Headings or numbering system
are incorrect. There is no
logical order to the placement
of the sections. Many errors
both grammatical and in
expression make it difficult to
understand, Lacks clarity of
thought and many statements
are unsubstantiated. Lacks
organization of ideas/paragraph
structures. Poor or references
not to APA standard.
Contents page is adequate
– might contain small errors,
but an attempt has been
made to co-ordinate the
paper’s structure.
Some inconsistencies in
headings and numbering
system, however there is a
logical order of sections and
of ideas/discussion points.
Some explanations although
adequate are not well
expressed. There is some
attempt at consistent
spacing and paragraphing
and acceptable spelling and
grammatical errors.
Contents page is well set
out and denotes the
structure of the report. A
consistent heading and
numbering system is used
throughout with minimal
errors. A mostly well
considered, cohesive and
logical organisation of
sections and
ideas/discussion points.
Spacing and
paragraphing is correctly
formatted and minimal
spelling and grammatical
errors.
Contents page indicates
considerable thought given to
the structure of the paper and
is correct in all areas.
A consistent heading and
numbering system is used
throughout. Skillful
presentation. A mostly well
considered, cohesive and
logical organization of
sections and ideas/discussion
points. Spacing and
paragraphing is correctly
formatted and practically no
spelling and grammatical
errors.
The APA referencing system is
well understood and demonstrated
by correct in-test referencing and in
the reference list. There are no
errors and all references are from
credible sources, including A grade
journals.
Word count originality
and reference
compliance
Word count more than 20% +/-
Originality score above 20%
Originality match/s above 6% to
one source – resubmit required
Academic references below 8
Word count under 20% +/-
Originality score equal to or below 20%
Originality match/s equal to or below 6% to one source
Academic references 88 or more

Short and Long Term Recovery

Assume the role of emergency manager in your local community. Select a disaster that has or could impact your community. If this disaster has previously impacted your community, research the disaster to identify what happened, what factors contributed to declaring it a disaster, how the residents of the community were affected, the extent of the damage, and what mitigation plans were in place prior to the disaster? If your community has not experienced this disaster, consider researching other areas that have faced a similar disaster. It is helpful to recognize how other communities prepared and addressed the disaster.

 

Short and Long Term Recovery Plan

 

Assume the role of emergency manager in your local community. Select a disaster that has or could impact your community. If this disaster has previously impacted your community, research the disaster to identify what happened, what factors contributed to declaring it a disaster, how the residents of the community were affected, the extent of the damage, and what mitigation plans were in place prior to the disaster? If your community has not experienced this disaster, consider researching other areas that have faced a similar disaster. It is helpful to recognize how other communities prepared and addressed the disaster.

As the emergency manager, develop long-term community recovery plans to support the response and recovery process in the aftermath of the disaster. Your plans must include the following (1,250-1,500 words):

  1. A description of the disaster that threatens your community.
  2. Components of the current mitigation plans in place to prevent extensive damage and support the recovery efforts.
  3. Potential areas requiring evacuation and/or sheltering. Include possible sheltering options for the various populations, including specials needs, locations, evacuation plans, and volunteer support.
  4. Determine two sources of funding to assist in the response and recovery process. What requirements are necessary to meet conditions of funding opportunities?
  5. How are local businesses expected to contribute to the response and recovery efforts?
  6. Evaluate the volunteer organizations available in your local community. Discuss what is required to receive assistance from the organization, and what services they offer during the response and recovery process.
  7. What are your short-term recovery expectations?
  8. What are your long-term recovery expectations?
  9. Are there challenges the community could face in the recovery of the disaster?

Benchmark- Business continuity

Assume you are a small business owner who has recently opened your first location and you are ready to develop plans to protect your business and employees in a disaster situation. Complete the following:
1.Research and determine your business’s legal obligations for disaster preparedness. You may need to investigate federal, state, and local community guidelines.
2.Determine the recommended process for business continuity planning using resources available from federal, state, and local agencies.
3.Determine financial and other resources available to support small businesses in their efforts to plan for disaster and to assist them during recovery.

Benchmark- Business Continuity Plan

 

One of the primary goals of the recovery phase of disaster is to restore community functioning to its pre disaster state as soon as possible. Critical to that goal is reestablishing regular business and commerce functions, which are critical to any community. While civic leaders have significant responsibility for supporting business continuity, so do business owners and operators. This assignment asks you to look at business continuity planning from within an organization to evaluate its state of preparedness for disaster and recommend recovery plans for ensuring its post disaster continuity.

Assume you are a small business owner who has recently opened your first location and you are ready to develop plans to protect your business and employees in a disaster situation. Complete the following:

  1. Research and determine your business’s legal obligations for disaster preparedness. You may need to investigate federal, state, and local community guidelines.
  2. Determine the recommended process for business continuity planning using resources available from federal, state, and local agencies.
  3. Determine financial and other resources available to support small businesses in their efforts to plan for disaster and to assist them during recovery.

Once you have completed your research. Develop a preliminary business continuity plan that accomplishes the following:

  1. Identify your business’s legal obligations for disaster preparedness (such as insurance available in your state).
  2. Create a preliminary business disaster operations plan that dictates how you will communicate with your employees, suspend or continue operations, and collaborate with civic emergency responders during a disaster. For example, how will you communicate with employees in the event of a disaster that interrupts the normal flow of communication? What process might you use to determine if your business should shut down for a period of time in the event of an emergency? How will employees know what to do during an emergency or disaster? Who will be the point person in your business responsible for communicating with emergency responders in the event of a disaster?
  3. Identify what your business can do to ensure it returns to normal functioning as soon as possible after a disaster. Obviously, many things may be out of your control. Focus on what you can control. For example, if you live in an area where your insurance excludes flood coverage, what will be your alternative plan for recovering after a flood?
  4. Identify the federal, state, and local resources you can potentially use to ensure business continuity in the aftermath of a disaster.

Make sure to demonstrate how your plans align with local, state, and federal recommendations for business continuity planning. Cite specific guidelines within your plan.

According to Bourdieu, how do taste, lifestyle and cultural choice link to class position? In your answer explain his theory of culture and provide examples.

 

 

 

 

 

 

How Bourdieu Linked Taste, Lifestyle and Culture to Class Position

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Introduction

Pierre Bourdieu was born in 1930 n a working class family. He was born in small village called Denguin in southern France. His father was farmer but he later changed his career to a postal worker with little education. He motivated Bourdieu to utilize the education opportunity that his country could offer. He accepted his father’s advice and was enrolled in a prestigious university in Paris where he studied philosophy together with other renowned philosophers such as Louis Althusser and Marxist thinker. After completing his studies, he became a teacher in Algeria which was a French colony. During this time, he undertook ethnographic research in the country which he later used to write an outline of the theory of practice which was among the first influence theoretical statements of the time. Over his career, he published many articles and books (Elley, 2013). He became one of the leading intellectual persons in France because he always spoke out and organized protests against what he considered to be exploitative and unfair neoliberal economic policies as well as globalization. Prior to his death, he was known as one of the most influential social theorist in the world and a great scholar. This work will discuss how taste, lifestyle and cultural choices link to class position according to Bourdieu and his theory of culture while at the same time providing examples.

How Bourdieu linked taste with class position

In consideration to taste, Bourdieu argue that individuals preferences to food, music, art, sport, future and clothing a person usually consider a choice which seems discernment to him o her. He believed that each person has his or her own taste. Taste is usually seen to be too randomized peculiarity and person and hence it does not warrant meaningful research. Bourdieu used it to examine the trivial daily decisions of the French people using qualitative and quantitative research. He conducted his research to understand the relationship between class and taste. He also used his research to scrutinize the reason behind the taste based decisions. He lofted educational to give a tinged image of a class that followed the footsteps of Weber (Tsang, 2014). He also demonstrated the concepts of social and cultural capital. In his research he discovered that within the two types of capital there was flavor to consume, accumulate and make profit.  He understood that speaking loosely in regard to the overall capital can be misleading or dangerous because apart from the theoretical nature of the framework, the various kinds of capital have exchange rates subjected to endless fluctuations (Garner & Hancock, 2014).

In his analysis, he gave function of structure a privilege over the agency in determining the taste of the people.  In order to demonstrate the effect of cultural and class choices, he inspected quantitative data in regard to social origin and educational capital. He measures the social origin using the father’s daily work and education capital using the education level attained by a person (Douglas, 2007). He discovered that both of these two factors affected taste. He suggested that people of the same social class usually make choices related with peers of the same educational standard and social origins. He viewed the two groups as overlapping each other but they are still different. He suggested that economic and educational capital might e linked but they cannot be identical (Garner & Hancock, 2014).

Understanding these differences provided vast rich information. It is from this foundation that Bourdieu discovered that some taste decisions were intimately related with educational capital while others were intimately related with social origin. His discovery indicated the educational capital is a significant factor in shaping tastes although not what is simply learned from textbook or classroom. He suggested that the function of schooling structure goes beyond the school curriculum (Garner & Hancock, 2014). The peer expectations and the teacher promote appreciation of high culture and unwarranted knowledge. He claimed that the knowledge of film directors name is related more educational capital rather than going to the cinema (Robson, & Sanders, 2009). Bourdieu taste analysis included qualitative observations such as the degree of repulsion for taste preferences for the rival class in the community.

Similarly, Bourdieu discovered that social origin dominated in influencing the choices which were related to domestic and personal situations such as clothing, furniture and food. His research revealed that working class preferred simple and well prepared meals, clean and tidy homes while the upper class proffered harmonious, exotic, décor and delicate meals. The status derived skills allowed the holder to remain effortlessly elegant in satisfying the social and cultural demands of the situations despite them being familiar to the legitimate cultural realm (Paton, 2014). Therefore, the questions of knowledge can be tuned into the question of preference. According to him, ignorance can be decorated of hidden with appropriate manors, bearing and presence. The taste determining framework that was discovered by Bourdieu was built on an overlapping background such as the family and the school. He noted that both the family and the school are centers of learning where the choices are either rewarded or punished according to the culture of the environment. Both are market environment for cultural goods where the cultural investment may lead into peer acceptance and class distinction (Roberta & Hancock, 2014).

He claimed that taste is a practice operator in the changes of things which have distinct and distinctive signs of continuous and discontinuous opposition. Taste is raised in different states which might be physical or psychological. It usually changes the classified behavior in which the circumstance reveals itself into other practices which is class position expression (Mills, & Gale, 2010). Therefore, given that taste is an operator which may create class and the difference it is usually defined through the difference of empowerment, he reveals that the dominant class in the society as the taste makers. Economic capital imply that there exist an economic distance from economic necessity and the cultural capital which he believed that its accumulation require an extended withdrawal from the necessity. He suggested that such perceptible of freedom does not always leads to agency of decisions which might be made out of a particular taste or navigated reference circumstance (Roberta & Hancock, 2014).

As the distance from the necessity expands lifestyle becomes a dominance of necessity. The lifestyle which is not constrained defines itself against the lifestyle of necessity in order to establish a circumstance of superiority. It is not all the taste that is defined against the lifestyle of necessity. Nonetheless, the taste of necessity is normally welcomed by individuals who are rich according to the cultural capital (Manlow, 2007). The experience is usually enormous as intellectuals with immersive experience may put themselves into a working class circumstance. The intellectual embracement of taste of necessity does always illustrate agency. This is because it not all intellectual in our ability goes to the people and the option for doing that is viable to the people who are close to it (Roberta & Hancock, 2014).

Although Bourdieu considers structure more than agency, interaction of the structure within the generative conditions of practice, lifestyle and habit usually provide separation through which agency opportunities may emerge. His structure which was within the lifestyle gave us a subjective and embedded sense to the structures which would seem to be disembodied (Lull, 2000). He therefore, presented us with a structure which constantly was required to be reproduced. According to him, agency primarily lied to those people who were rich in the cultural capital and the taste makers. This group of individuals was enabled by the distance of their necessity and the ability to appreciate taste in their dominance class. Therefore, outside the dominance class, opportunities for agency still existed for those individuals who were able to exploit and understand the symbolic struggles of the other individuals in the different lifestyle (Roberta & Hancock, 2014).

Bourdieu used his study to claim that the taste of the people is correlated with education and upbringing. He proved that there is a relationship which among the social origin, education capital and cultural practices. Different tastes are usually associated with people from different classes. Class distinctions have different levels of legitimate taste. According to Bourdieu, the value attached to legitimate taste is determined by the education system. People in good education systems find it easier to succeed than people from poor education system. When a person attain a given amount of legitimate taste through education and upbringing it is possible for him or her to cultivate her own (Douglas, 2012).

However, good taste alone does not guarantee a well paying job but it can be of great help in some circumstances. Bourdieu claims that the key function of the education system is to eliminate social function. This therefore involves eliminating individuals of the working class from high levels of education. This is attained by self elimination and making sure that the working class children fails in their examination (Grenfell & Hardy, 2007).

 

How Bourdieu linked lifestyle with class position

Habitus theory is one of the most influential concepts of Bourdieu. It referred to the physical personification cultural capital to the deeply embedded habits, dispositions and skills which are possessed due to our life experiences. Bourdieu used sport metaphors while talking about this concept and he referred to it as the feel for the game. Therefore each of us has a personified kind of feeling the different social situations that we find ourselves into (Lui, 2013). While in the right situation, our habits usually allow as to pilot the social environment. For instance a person brought up in a violent environment will be scared of the policemen or he might engage himself into violence when he grows up (Grenfell & Hardy, 2007). Lifestyle also extends into our taste for cultural objects such as the clothes, food and art.

Bourdieu links the taste of the French citizens in art to the social class positions arguing that the artistic awareness is shaped by the cultural embedded on our lifestyle. For instance, upper class individuals have a lifestyle for fine art because they have trained and exposed appreciation since they were at a tender age. The working class individuals do not get access to high art and they have not therefore cultivated their lifestyle appreciation to match with the game.  According to Bourdieu, people misunderstood the feeling for the game to be natural rather than culturally creating their own lifestyle (Livadra, 2012). He therefore inclined the social justice that exist in the society with the mistake that people make by believing that some people in the society are naturally blessed to enjoy fine and expensive things while others are not.

Habitus refers to the values lifestyle, expectation and disposition of a specific social group. A particular lifestyle is established through experience. People do learn in the best way through what they see and what they expect in life. Since different people have different life experience, the life style of each group is actually different. People do control their values but they cannot manage to be in total control of the whole lifestyle (Lindhardt, 2012). The people are free to do what they wish but they will always be necessitated to make choices in regard to their behavior. Bourdieu claim that individuals will be necessitated to react in certain circumstances but they tend to react according to the behavior they had previously regarded to be reasonable and making sense (Grenfell & Hardy, 2007). This therefore means lifestyle is the infinitive ability to generate products. This comprise the perception, idea of thought, expression and the actions whose boundary are established by socially and historically situated condition of the taste, education, products and education.

According to Bourdieu, lifestyle is created through social process rather than individual process hence leading into patterns that are transferrable and enduring from once situation to another. He claimed that the changes occur according to particular circumstance and over time. Lifestyle is neither permanent nor fixed and it can shift in unexpected situation or in a long period of time. Habit is not a result of a free will and it is never determined by structures but it is established between the interaction of the will and the structures over some times. The two are shaped by both the past structures and events. He suggests that the current structures and practices shape our perception. This indicated that habitus is established and reproduced automatically without any deliberation of coherence. He identified perception as a product of habitus and taste as a product of class (Lavelle, 2012). In support of his ideas Bourdieu rejected the theory of taste as being something personal and hence making it something hard to learn. This creates a room for agency of individual freedom to navigate a variety of works and practices which aligns into incorrect and correct system. However in bringing lifestyle and taste in the stratified social groups, he created an obstacle in determining the ingredient for taste based on structure, projection of capital and volume (Grenfell & Hardy, 2007). Nevertheless, individual evaluation of practices begins to be seen as less powerful and begins to appear as a market with fluctuating currencies but with no price list. In such a circumstance, the value of something is based on the opposition while opposition is articulated through taste.

The social class is usually defined in regard to the means of production but this does not inform us how these classes are established. It does not also tell us the hierarchy’s status of capitalist in the society which are internalized and articulated by people or how the status subordination is integrated within the domination of class system (Lui, 2013). Bourdieu showed how the knowledge used his work to illustrate how cultural artifacts and taste are used by people to develop a culture which is constituted and the transformation that comes with it in relation with the dominant class and the moderating struggles between the fractions of power in the society. His ideas contributed in understanding how the relationship of subordination such as gender and age combines with cultural and economic factors of subordination to become sublimated forms which shed light on how different kinds of subordination are connected to one another (Lui, 2013).

According to Bourdieu, the concept of economic capital usually takes different forms. What is then required is to differentiate between economic capital and non economic capital. He extends his concept of capital by investigating how convertibility of capital may determine the normal sense of an economy. Capital is usually a resource which enables us to exercise our opinion or resist dominance from the social relations or maintain our position in the society’s hierarchy. The composition of capital is therefore made up of both economic and cultural capital which creates a dominance that increases monotony towards upwards (Giroux, 2001). According to him, capital is something which is capable of ordering the relationship of people between two different societies. The principle therefore does not necessarily produce a complete order of the society (Lui, 2013). The concept of capital can therefore spread across different social situation rather than only in his society which represent a certain degree of command which offer the rights of the dominant groups in the society to the less privileged groups in the society. Bourdieu accepted economic capital as a dominating principle in a capitalistic society but believed that the effectiveness of it is always challenged by a fraction of the dominating class in our society whore are the relatively poor people. Hence, the struggles which occur in the dominant class in our society also exist in the class position (Giroux, 2001).

The link between culture and class position

Cultural capital is the ability to interact with the cultural games by knowing how to approve and disapprove, how to internalize appropriate manners and taste, and how to avoid necessity to appropriate ensure that the ends meet. Bourdieu believes that possession of certain type of cultural capital will generally be predicted using the social origin (Giroux, 2001). According to him, education system usually offers a way of acquiring certificate of prove and culture. His research showed that scholastic culture cannot at one time suppress the depth and the ease of the cultural capital which is usually acquired through a person’s exposure to the environment (Hall, 2001). Given that the education system is open to wider circumstances and sectors, its struggles goes ahead to redefine the qualifications and to restore the social order. Therefore, every human being has a judgment of classification which assists him or her to classify the actions (Giroux, 2001). He claimed that there is no difference which is so much important as that of the society and that a person has all the rights of refusal in which something which might be valued by a person might not be valued by another. Thus, the major struggle within the dominance class is in between those who lack the economic capital and those in possession of the economic capital. Professionals of different kids usually promote their status by trying to change their dominant principle towards a cultural means and also differentiating themselves from the uncultured wealth which emphasize their taste (Giroux, 2001). For those people lacking the economic capital, their professional skills are usually acquired from the public education system through hard work in the dominant class of lower ranks. In the same way, appreciation of culture is usually reduced by people by acquiring and expressing taste which express their affectation that is recognized in a given class fraction according to the needs of distinction.

Despite the fact that economic and cultural capital comprises the principles of subordination within a capitalism society, Bourdieu related it to other kinds of capital in his argument of linking culture to class position. He claimed that social connections required making use of one’s cultural capital. Body capital which is acquired or inherited through socially approved exercise and diet comprise of a resource which gives an individual power in social struggles. Linguistic capital is normally a subset of cultural capital which contain an appropriate means if the command language (Swartz, 2012). Although different forms of capital correlate with the conditions of production of both social and economic capital, there is great time which is given for their special consideration. At the end of the cultural distinction, everything appears to solely appreciate the purpose of establishing a maker of one social status which might be unconsciously.

Taste in our life respond to two different kinds of stimulation of pleasure which is interconnected with the basic human needs and our association with other forms of cultures in the universe that is conversational. This usually creates a gap between the material world and social world structures which might either are cruel, heavy or light (Zeuner, 2003). The differences might undergo a transformation in dominant fractions and the use similar contrast in indicating the differences in cultural and economic class. Bourdieu also used his basic principles of culture and class to show hoe age and gender are destroyed while reinforcing the differences of the cultural dominance. He revealed that the contest that exist between the mature and the immature, the young and the elderly. He suggested that these distinctions have a crucial role in expressing and penetrating the language of the cultural subordination (Swartz, 2012).

Hence, although the dominant class appreciation to art is indicated through different social transformation it activates the need for a feeling of differentiation from the actual necessity of life for the dominating class in the society (Epstein, 2007). Through different interactions, culture usually reveals itself as an independent domain despite the fact that taste for work is ultimately placed upon the pleasures of domination. Therefore, we have a window in which we can be able to understand the class struggles as it is played on the domain of culture. Bourdieu believes that taste is at the epicenter of symbolic struggles which go at all times between the fractions of the dominating class and which are absolutely less based on the key belief which bid each agent to the individual’s lifestyle (Zeuner, 2003). Materialistic preferences to the social and economic conditions of production and the social function is the most interesting practice which doubtfully reveal itself in the human life either culturally or in psychological forms (Dahms, & Hazelrigg, 2010). The conflict between the arts of living is staked in the imposition of the dominant principle for the dominant class or in securing the best conversion rate for the type of capital which is provided by each group through their ultimate values and in their inner interests.

Bourdieu understood the world as a social world divided into different distinct fields of practice such as law, education, art and religion. He views each field as having unique sets of knowledge’s, rules and forms of capital (Zeuner, 2003). He understood that this field had the possibility of overlapping each other and that each field was relatively free from the other. He believed that each field had sets of practices and positions. He viewed each field as having the energy for struggles for position as people brought together their capital to claim for positions in a particular social arena (Chopra, 2008). According to him, each generation of artists had the power to throw away the established position for the educationalist that came prior to them. Just like in a game, social fields are arenas where people usually struggle for power, position and victory in their life (Chopra, 2008).

How Bourdieu link culture with class position

The cultural deprivation theory was established by Pierre Bourdieu. The theory meant that higher class cultures are usually better whenever they are compared with the working class cultures. Given the perceived superiority given to higher class cultures, middle and upper class people believe that individuals in working class are supposed to blame themselves for the failure of their children in the education sector. Bourdieu believed that the cultural capital was influenced by Marx. He suggested that individuals should assume that working class is worse than higher or middle class (Caine, 2004). He support the failure of working class children in education sector by claiming that their failure is not as a result of the working class culture but the failure of the education system. He said that the education system determines the success of the working class through exams which does not rely indicate the actual capacity of an individual. The key function of the education system is cultural reproduction according to Bourdieu. The education systems usually ensure that that it reproduces the culture of the dominant class (Bluden, 2004). This is because the high class individuals have the authority to give meaning to culture and ensure that it is part of law. The middle class has the power to define their own culture as something that is worth of being sought and establish the foundation for knowledge in the education system. However, he never shown how these upper class cultures are worse or better that other society’s cultures (Chopra, 2008).

Bourdieu the ownership of the dominant cultures as a cultural capital because the use of the education system it can be transformed into power and wealth. Cultural capital is no longer distributed evenly into the class structure and it therefore account for the class variance in attainment of the education. Individuals who grew in upper class culture have already built an advantage within them because they are always able to socialize with the dominant culture. He suggests that earlier accomplishments in life determine one’s success (Berlin, 2003). The dominant class children usually internalize their knowledge and skill while they are still as compared with the working class children who internalize culture when they have already grown up. The amount of cultural capital that a certain class in the society possesses determines their education attainment. Hence, the higher class children have higher success rate as compare with children from working class. This happens because the upper class subculture is closely related with the dominant culture. In some instances, Bourdieu in not clear when he attempt to explain the knowledge and the skill required to attain education success. His argument is based upon the children’s way of behavior in explain how the dominant culture is more superior in upper class than the working class rather than presenting the actual content of his argument. He claims that the character of the children counts more than the actual educational content of work. He argues that by teachers rewarding grades to the students they are usually influenced by the style of leadership and the people in position of power. Hence, there is a high likelihood for a person to succeed if he is close to the dominant class in the society.  This kind of style discriminates working class children because their way of life is different from that of the middle class. The circumstance ensures that their work is penalized for not being part of the upper or middle class in the society (Ben-Zion, 2009).

Bourdieu theory of culture

Bourdieu theory of culture connects his bother empirical and theoretical ideas of people’s everyday life. The theory of practice extended the idea of capital into cultural, social and symbolic capital. According to Bourdieu, each person occupies a position in the social space. A person is not only defined his social class but by every kind of capital which can be articulated through social relationship. The capital comprises of the social networks values which was believed to reproduce and produce inequality. Hence, each field of the modern life brings about a specific complex social relationship where a person is allowed to engage with the everyday way of life (Appelrouth, & Edles, 2008). Through a particular relationship a person will be able to develop certain temperament for social action which will be controlled by an individual’s position in the field. The combination of temperaments which an individual develop as he or she interact with the multidimensional social world will eventually become the sense of the game in understanding a certain field and the social order in general. As the social fields become autonomous and complex, individuals are always able to establish certain lifestyle that is typical with their position in the social environment (Chopra, 2008). Through this system, the society will accept, legitimate and produce the different forms of dominance and the usual opinions of each field and the power of relation. As the individuals’ lifestyles are a mixture of multiple engagements through a person’s life, the social fields are always put into practice through the individuals’ agency (Alexander, 2005). Hence, there is no social order which can be stable without appropriate social structures. Bourdieu claimed that if a person’s social structures pre-temperament are much stronger that what common sense might believe them it might not be a perfect match of ideas.

Conclusion

Bourdieu theories elaborate how social classes such as upper, middle and working class achieve their privilege across different generations. His main work was divided into three major categories which included: the cultural capital, the peoples’ lifestyle and the field that each person might be positioned in the society. His suggested that there is a link between people’s taste, lifestyle and culture. Therefore, attainment of one of the three will demand achievement of the other. The social field are usually found where people struggle for power and authority.

 

 

References

Alexander, J. C. (2005). Fin de siècle social theory: Relativism, reduction, and the problem of reason. London: Verso.

Appelrouth, S., & Edles, L. D. (2008). Classical and contemporary sociological theory: Text and readings. Los Angeles, Calif: Pine Forge Press.

Ben-Zion, S. (2009). A roadmap to the heavens: An anthropological study of hegemony among priests, sages, and laymen. Boston: Academic Studies Press.

Berlin, J. A. (2003). Rhetorics, poetics, and cultures: Refiguring college English studies. West Lafayette, Ind: Parlor Press.
Bluden, A.(2004) Bourdieu on Status, Class and Culture. Retrieved from: http://home.mira.net/~andy/works/bourdieu-review.htm
Caine, A. (2004). Interpreting rock movies: The pop film and its critics in Britain. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Chopra, R. (2008). Technology and nationalism in India: Cultural negotiations from colonialism to cyberspace. Amherst, NY: Cambria Press.
Dahms, H. F., & Hazelrigg, L. E. (2010). Theorizing the dynamics of social processes. Bingley, UK: Emerald.
Douglas, E.(2012) Consumption and Social Stratification: Bourdieu’s Distinction. Retrieved from: http://www.acrwebsite.org/search/view-conference-proceedings.aspx?Id=7565
Elley, S. (2013). Understanding Sex and Relationship Education, Youth and Class: A Youth Work-Led Approach. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Epstein, I. (2007). Recapturing the personal: Essays on education and embodied knowledge in comparative perspective. Charlotte, NC: Information Age Pub.
Garner, R., & Hancock, B. H. (2014). Social theory: Continuity and confrontation : a reader.
Roberta, & Hancock, (2014). Social Theory: From Modern to Contemporary Theory. Univ of Toronto Pr Higher education.
Giroux, H. A. (2001). Theory and resistance in education: Towards a pedagogy for the opposition. Westport, Conn: Bergin & Garvey.
Grenfell, M., & Hardy, C. (2007). Art rules: Pierre Bourdieu and the visual arts. Oxford [u.a.: Berg.
Hall, J. R. (2001). Reworking class. Ithaca, N.Y: Cornell University Press.
Lavelle, J. F. (2012). Blue collar, theoretically: A post-Marxist approach to working class literature. Jefferson, N.C: McFarland.
Livadra, M. (2012). Power in powerlessness: A study of Pentecostal life worlds in urban Chile. Leiden: Brill.
Lindhardt, M. (2012). Power in powerlessness: A study of Pentecostal life worlds in urban Chile. Leiden: Brill.
Lui, M. (2013) Structure and Agency in Bourdieu’s Distinction. Retrieved from: http://simulacrum.cc/2013/03/20/structure-and-agency-in-bourdieus-distinction/
Lull, J. (2000). Media, communication, culture: A global approach. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Manlow, V. (2007). Designing clothes: Culture and organization of the fashion industry. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers.
Mills, C., & Gale, T. (2010). Schooling in disadvantaged communities: Playing the game from the back of the field. Dordrecht: Springer.
Paton, K. (2014). Gentrification: A working-class perspective.
Robson, K., & Sanders, C. (2009). Quantifying theory: Pierre Bourdieu. Dordrecht: Springer.
Douglas , D. (2007). Culture & power: The sociology of Pierre Bourdieu. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Swartz, D. (2012). Culture & power: The sociology of Pierre Bourdieu. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Tsang, E. Y.-H. (2014). The New Middle Class in China: Consumption, Politics and the Market Economy. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
Zeuner, L. (2003). Cultural sociology from concern to distance. Copenhagen: Copenhagen Business School Press.

 

Sources of Information

Conduct a search on a particular patient problem that is under the control of nursing (e.g, pain management, shortness of breath, lack of knowledge about lifestyle changes needed for managing diabetes). a.Use two different databases available in the Walden Library (i.e. Ovid, CINAHL, etc.) AND b.Use at least one popular search engine such as Google. c.Use keywords such as “evidence-based practice” and “nursing” for each search. 2.Compare and contrast the results generated from each search. a.Select a few results and evaluate for reliability or credibility (depending on whether the study is quantitative or qualitative). i.Share the references for articles you find in the Walden Library that have criteria to be used in evaluating Web sites for credibility or trustworthiness. Cite these references using APA format. b.Provide specific examples of the different types of information you find in the two different types of searches, one in a professional library, and the other using a popular search engine. c.Identify the level of evidence for each of the studies. Which findings are most trustworthy based upon the level of evidence? 3.Reflect on your professional experience as a nurse. Consider the findings from your searching exercise and think about the credibility/trustworthiness of the information that you found. Based upon what you have learned so far: a.How would you counsel patients about this topic and the information that you found? How are “individual patient needs and preferences” considered in terms of evidence based practice? b.What would you say to a fellow staff nurse about using the information to change practice? In other words, is this an example that can be used as the research component of evidence based practice?

Minor Qualitative Task

required to undertake a minor research task that covers an aspect of the course or uses available data to answer a sociological question ( I have the question and the topic , issue of focus & the concepts) all you need to do is gather DATA through ONE of the following unobtrusive methods:
1) Qualitative analysis of media or other documents (e.g. newspaper articles, news reports, journal articles,social media, tweets, internet sites, television programs or advertisements films, blogs ect.) and than Analyse your data and discuss ur findings than conclude.

will be assessed in terms of:
appropriateness of the nature and scope of the data chosen
critical assessment and sociological analysis of a social issue
quality of the analysis including some terms specific to qualitative methodologies in sociology

Create a Health Risk Assessment (HRA) form for a private insurer in Saudi Arabia to assess individuals’ health and lifestyle to determine risk and premium cost.

The HRA should include a list of questions in a survey format. The survey should include questions to determine:
  1. Pre-existing conditions,
  2. Lifestyle patterns that could lead to illness,
  3. History of physician visitation, 
  4. Any other issues that would impact risk assessment and healthcare costs of individuals, and 
  5. Include a paragraph describing the reasoning behind the selection of the criteria for all drafted questions.
 
  • The survey should consist of 4-6 questions.
  • The paper should be at least 2 pages in length, not including the cover sheet, reference page, and questionnaire pages.
  • Formatted according to APA and Saudi Electronic University writing standards.
  • Provide support for your statements with in-text citations from a minimum of four scholarly articles. Two of these sources may be from the class readings, textbook, or lectures, but two must be external. The Saudi Digital Library is a good place to find these references.
You are strongly encouraged to submit all assignments to the Turnitin Originality Check prior to submitting them to your instructor for grading. If you are unsure how to submit an assignment to the Originality Check tool, review the Turnitin Originality Check Student Guide.

Managed care does exist in Saudi Arabia but is not as prevalent as other countries.

Draft a paper analyzing the need for or against manage care in Saudi Arabia. Be sure to include the following items:
  • Benefits of managed care;
  • Disadvantages of managed care;
  • Healthcare industries most affected by managed care;
  • Impact of managed healthcare on patients, physicians, and facilities; and
  • How managed care is working for other countries.
 
Your paper should meet the following structural requirements:
  • The paper should be 4-6 pages in length, not including the cover sheet and reference page. 
  • Formatted according to APA and Saudi Electronic University writing standards.
  • Provide support for your statements with in-text citations from a minimum of four scholarly articles. Two of these sources may be from the class readings, textbook, or lectures, but two must be external. The Saudi Digital Library is a good place to find these references.
 
You are strongly encouraged to submit all assignments to the Turnitin Originality Check prior to submitting them to your instructor for grading. If you are unsure how to submit an assignment to the Originality Check tool, review the Turnitin Originality Check Student Guide.

Critical Thinking Assignment – Replacing and EHR System

Evaluate the healthcare information system acquisition process as if you were preparing to initiate those activities. From the case study “Replacing an EHR System” on pages 147-148, use this study as a background for developing the hypothetical project scope, vendor selection process, determine the system goals and requirements, discuss the RFP process, vendor evaluation process including the evaluation criteria and a cost-benefit analysis. Discuss project management tools that will help you accomplish this task and conduct a risk analysis of what can go wrong during a healthcare information system acquisition.

Outline:

  • Introduction
  • Project Steering Committee
    • Scope
    • System Requirements
  • Request for Proposal (RFP)
  • Vendor Proposals
  • Cost-benefit Analysis
  • Recommendations
  • Conclusion

 

Your paper should include the following:

  • 3-5 pages in length, not including the title and reference pages.
  • Provide 4 or more references to support your statements.
  • Remember, you must support your thinking/statements and prior knowledge with references; all facts must be supported; in-text references must be used throughout the assignment and must be included in an APA-formatted reference list.
  • Review the grading rubric, which can be accessed from the module folder.
  • Formatted according to the SEU Guide to Writing and APA.
  • Reach out to your instructor if you have questions about the assignment.

Critical Thinking Assignment – Information Security

 The healthcare organization’s security program (Wager et al., 2017, pp. 306-311), is a critical component to compliance with regulations as well as HIPAA. Describe the steps involved in a security program. Evaluate the risk analysis requirements for HIPAA using the websites furnished in the text. Discuss the security components, vulnerabilities, and security mitigation strategies. Summarize the management action plan and the ultimate goal of conducting such an assessment.

Outline:

  • Introduction
  • Team Selection
  • Documentation
  • Security Risk Analysis
  • Action Plan
  • Manage and Mitigate Risks
  • Conclusion

Your paper should include the following:

  • 3-5 pages in length, not including the title and reference pages.
  • 4-6 references cited in the assignment above the text. Remember, you must support your thinking/statements and prior knowledge with references; all facts must be supported; in-text references used throughout the assignment must be included in an APA-formatted reference list.
  • Review the grading rubric, which can be accessed from the module folder.
  • Formatted according to the SEU Guide to Writing and APA.
  • Reach out to your instructor if you have questions about the assignment.