Description
- For this weeks assignment, I want you to compare & contrast The Mom Tax (discussed in class) and one of the following podcast (SYSK or Freakonomics). Provide a short summary of the podcast.What does each model of thinking have in common about the gender pay gap & where do they differ?Which do you ascribe to? Response should be atleast 300 words.
This response is worth 20 points.
Stuff You Should Know Podcast- How the Gender Pay Gap Workshttps://www.stuffyoushouldknow.com/podcasts/how-th...
Freakonomics Radio- The True Story of the Gender Pay Gaphttp://freakonomics.com/podcast/the-true-story-of-...
Anne Crittendon- The Mommy Taxdiscussed in class & attatched
Crittenden, The Mommy Tax.pdf

User generated content is uploaded by users for the purposes of learning and should be used following Studypool's honor code & terms of service.
Explanation & Answer

Attached.
Surname 1
Student’s Name
Instructor’s Name
Course
Date
Gender Pay Gap
Gender pay gap is the difference between man hourly pay between men and women. It is
expressed in percentage in most cases of men earnings. Podcast presents the fact that brings the
current difference in wage pay gap. First, there is the aspect of men having a good bargaining
power when compared to women. As a result, men will ear...

Completion Status:
100%
Review
Review

Anonymous
Really helped me to better understand my coursework. Super recommended.

Studypool
4.7

Trustpilot
4.5

Sitejabber
4.4
24/7 Homework Help
Stuck on a homework question? Our verified tutors can answer all questions, from basic math to advanced rocket science!
Most Popular Content

SDSU Homo Specific Adaptations Discussion
Homo: The Humans (1pg)
During the Pliocene-Pleistocene transition the Homo genus appeared in the fossil record. The Homo g ...
SDSU Homo Specific Adaptations Discussion
Homo: The Humans (1pg)
During the Pliocene-Pleistocene transition the Homo genus appeared in the fossil record. The Homo genus is a a continuation of the Gracile Australopithecines. Like those that came before, Homo is an obligate biped, but unlike its precursors Homo displays a unique set of physical adaptations along with behaviors that make the genus unique among hominins. To begin with, Homo and all its eventual lineages display hunting behaviors along with the associated stone tools necessary to process meat. At the same time, the creation and dependence on stone tools and other cultural technologies is a function of the increase in brain size that begins with the onset of Homo.
Hunting, the new Homo subsistence pattern, required not just a new kind of mind set to create new cultural technologies but at the same time required a specialized hand that would allow for better manipulation of objects while being capable of resisting the unique physical pressures associated with making tools.
In addition, being able to run after prey became essential. The Homo genus was the first to display adaptations that allow for endurance running. The type of running that Homo becomes known for is not a type of running that allows us to be fast but rather it allows us to run for long distances at a pace which forces prey to undergo hyperthermia over the long run.
Your task for this activity will be to compare and contrast the locomotor features of Australopithecus afarensis to Homo erectus. You will accomplish this by answering the following.
Before you begin make sure view all relevant reading material so that you can give me informed opinions.
What anatomical features makes it possible for Homo erectus to be a biped runner.
Pick only one feature discussed in this week's material that allowed Homo erectus to be a biped runner.
How is your chosen feature different from Australopithecus aferensis equivalent feature? Briefly explain the difference.
Lastly, I would like you to briefly explain in your own words how endurance running would enhance the fitness of the Homo genus.

Discussion Slave Culture and Resistance
our course pack contains readings from two authors in section XI (pp. 267-299), William J. Faulkner and Peter Kolchin. Th ...
Discussion Slave Culture and Resistance
our course pack contains readings from two authors in section XI (pp. 267-299), William J. Faulkner and Peter Kolchin. These authors provide different perspectives on slave culture, life, religion and resistance. While Kolchin's work is scholarly, the excerpts from Faulkner come from the book The Days When the Animals Talked. This is an amazing book of folklore; I have provided a helpful review of Faulkner's book from Amazon.com to give you a sense of his work:5.0 out of 5 stars Among the best of its kind, March 16, 2011By Andre M. "brnn64" (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. (Mt. Pleasant, SC United States) -This review is from: The Days When the Animals Talked: Black American Folktales and How They Came to Be This is unquestionably hands-down one of the best books ever written on Black American Folklore. This was where William J. Faulkner (not to be confused with the the Nobel-winning Mississippian author of the same name) recalled the tales told to him as a child by an ex-slave handyman named Simon Brown in rural South Carolina circa 1900 when the author was about 10 years old. The title and cover may give you the impression that this is a children's book. It's not. Simon Brown's recollections of slavery (the first half of the book) are often quite raw and similar to the kind of tales told by ex-slaves in the WPA Slave narratives of the 1930s, in regards to beatings, concubinage, and other atrocities. He also delights in telling young Faulkner some tall tales and stories about the religious and social practices of slaves. This is best for about teen age to adults. Faulkner also puts the Brer Rabbit and other animal tales (the second half of the book in the context of being thinly disguised analogies of slaves overcoming masters). The story about Brer Rabbit and the meeting with the long-tailed animals (not found in any of Harris' Uncle Remus collections) deserves special attention as one of the most simple and brilliant analogies of racial injustice-this is a great wasy to articulate this subject with children! Faulkner has done his homework and the tales are recorded in an entertaining style. As with most educated Black writers of the time (Zora Neale Hurston being an important exception), Faulkner eliminates the dialect Simon Brown would have used as he wanted to discourage the use of dialect among schoolchildren (a stance that would horrify the politically correct Utopian thought police of today), but the standard English is not unrealistic to the character and does help the stories to read better. This is important because part of the reason Black Folklore is such a lost art today is because most of the best books on the subject (see below) were written in a "Negro Dialect" so thick that i they are almost unreadable today. In a sense, this book is kind of a flip side to Joel Chandler Harris' Uncle Remus books in that Harris (with rare exceptions such as the opening chapter of "Daddy Jake the Runaway") tended to show the softer side of slavery. However, in reading this book, one really envies Faulkner as he graphically describes the joy of listening to an elder regale him with marvelous stories. Those of us who came of age when this was a common experience will truly identify with this, while those who did not will get an idea of what this was like and wish they had the pleasure of such an experience. I would place this book with other classics of the genre such as Julius Lester's "Black Folktales," Edward C.L. Adams' "Tales of the Congaree," Ted Poston's "Dark Side of Hopkinsville," Charles W. Chesnutt's "The Conjure Woman," Zora Neale Hurston's "Mules and Men," and of course the Harris Brer Rabbit books. Read, think, learn, and enjoy.Once you have read the excerpts from Faulkner, the review on Amazon, and the Kolchin article, please comment on the following question: How did slaves use folklore, religion and African practices to create a unique culture under slavery? How powerful and effective do you think culture would have been in the slaves' efforts to resist the oppression of slavery?

Miami Dade College A Path to Citizenship Discussion
Explain and defend your views on the following: Is there anything wrong in offering unauthorized immigrants "a path to cit ...
Miami Dade College A Path to Citizenship Discussion
Explain and defend your views on the following: Is there anything wrong in offering unauthorized immigrants "a path to citizenship"? Should children brought into a country illegally ever be deported?.
3 pages

Memory Enhancement
The loci method in memory improvement refers to enhancing memory that applies visualizations of familiar spatial environme ...
Memory Enhancement
The loci method in memory improvement refers to enhancing memory that applies visualizations of familiar spatial environments to strengthen the recall ...

SYG2000 Strayer University WK4 Reviewing Research and Making Connections HW
REVIEWING RESEARCH AND MAKING CONNECTIONS Due Week 4: 110 points For your first assignment, you will complete a short ans ...
SYG2000 Strayer University WK4 Reviewing Research and Making Connections HW
REVIEWING RESEARCH AND MAKING CONNECTIONS Due Week 4: 110 points For your first assignment, you will complete a short answer activity in which you will analyze the article following the Ask, Research, Learn, Do process. This process was introduced in your webtext as a simplified version of the sociological research process. It’s a useful tool to help you think critically, answer questions, and solve problems. READ THE ARTICLE “Declining Majority of Online Adults Say the Internet Has Been Good for Society” http://www.pewinternet.org/2018/04/30/declining--- majority---of---online---adults---say---the---internet---has---been---good--- for---society/ USE THE RESEARCH Use the research information presented in the article to answer the questions below. You should write four paragraphs, one for each step listed in bold. Use the Assignment 1 template to complete this assignment. Refer to Chapter 2 of the webtext as necessary. 1

Interpersonal and Self Psychology Theory Paper
Provide a 3 page essay covering your understanding of Interpersonal theory and Self-Psychology theory. The paper should re ...
Interpersonal and Self Psychology Theory Paper
Provide a 3 page essay covering your understanding of Interpersonal theory and Self-Psychology theory. The paper should reflect a basic understanding of each theory, use, and benefits of the theory as well as limitations of each theory. Examples of understanding, one theory Preferences the importance of the social and cultural and how that environment contributes to our way of being....etc.
Levenson, E. A., 1996a: A Monopedal Presentation of Interpersonal Psychoanalysis, In: Reviewof Inrterpersonal Psychoanalysis, Vol. 1 (No. 1, 1996).
Bromberg, P.M., (1989) Interpersonal psychoanalysis and self psychology: A clinical comparison. Self psychology: Comparisons and contrasts
Flannigan, L.M. (2021). Chapter 6: The Theory of Self Psychology. In J. Berzoff, L.M. Flannigan, & P. Hertz. Inside out and outside in (5rd Ed.). UK: Rowman & Littlefield.
Berzoff, J. (2021). Chapter 7: Relational and Intersubjective Theories. In J. Berzoff, L.M.Flannigan, & P. Hertz. Inside out and outside in (5th Ed.) (p.249-268). UK: Rowman & Littlefield.
Tummala-Narra, P. (2016). Psychoanalytic theory and cultural competence in psychotherapy (Chapter 4, pp 85-110). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Notes - citations only from readings. No plagiarism. Easy vocabulary. The bibliography is separate, should have its own page. No summary of readings. Integration of personal experiences, how it impacts you, any thoughts, compare and contrast (IF APPLICABLE), focus on theories. I will be attaching pdfs.
Similar Content
SWK 306 Salisbury University The Charity Organization Societies Discussion
This time period marked the development of the Charity Organization Societies and the Settlement House Movement. How did t...
Final Paper
In this course, you have looked at classical ethical theories of
utilitarianism, deontology, and virtue ethics. You have...
Kaplan University ABC Bank Case Study
analyze the ABC Bank case study and consider the sample contract for ABC Bank from the unit readings. This contract has so...
SOC 116 Bryant and Stratton College Knowledge and Skills Discussion
Brainstorm and create a list of knowledge and skills needed to enter into and advance in your chosen profession. Consider ...
Social Science Inquiry Discussion
Reflect on the concepts presented in the video and overview and the example of a growing body of research as captured in t...
EDU 573 Strayer Fix Lesson Plans to Accommodate Students Learning Barriers Discussion
Using an example from your lesson plan assignment, discuss how your plan is flexible to accommodate the needs of learners ...
Supreme Court Ruling Analysis
The chosen case law is the National Federation of Independent Businesses v. Sebelius. The state of Florida filed a lawsuit...
Research Proposal
Identify the topic you selected and explain two (2) reasons for using it. Include a defensible, The chosen topic is whethe...
Exam On Food
Question one: Explain Why Food Memories Can Feel So Powerful” by Julie. R. Thomson Food has, for a long time, been assoc...
Related Tags
Book Guides
Of Mice and Men
by John Steinbeck
The Eyes Were Watching God
by Zora Neale Hurston
The Call of the Wild
by Jack London
The Picture of Dorian Gray
by Oscar Wilde
The Calcutta Chromosome
by Amitav Ghosh
Team of Vipers
by Cliff Sims
The King Must Die
by Mary Renault
The Glass Castle
by Jeannette Walls
Dune
by Frank Herbert

Get 24/7
Homework help
Our tutors provide high quality explanations & answers.
Post question
Most Popular Content

SDSU Homo Specific Adaptations Discussion
Homo: The Humans (1pg)
During the Pliocene-Pleistocene transition the Homo genus appeared in the fossil record. The Homo g ...
SDSU Homo Specific Adaptations Discussion
Homo: The Humans (1pg)
During the Pliocene-Pleistocene transition the Homo genus appeared in the fossil record. The Homo genus is a a continuation of the Gracile Australopithecines. Like those that came before, Homo is an obligate biped, but unlike its precursors Homo displays a unique set of physical adaptations along with behaviors that make the genus unique among hominins. To begin with, Homo and all its eventual lineages display hunting behaviors along with the associated stone tools necessary to process meat. At the same time, the creation and dependence on stone tools and other cultural technologies is a function of the increase in brain size that begins with the onset of Homo.
Hunting, the new Homo subsistence pattern, required not just a new kind of mind set to create new cultural technologies but at the same time required a specialized hand that would allow for better manipulation of objects while being capable of resisting the unique physical pressures associated with making tools.
In addition, being able to run after prey became essential. The Homo genus was the first to display adaptations that allow for endurance running. The type of running that Homo becomes known for is not a type of running that allows us to be fast but rather it allows us to run for long distances at a pace which forces prey to undergo hyperthermia over the long run.
Your task for this activity will be to compare and contrast the locomotor features of Australopithecus afarensis to Homo erectus. You will accomplish this by answering the following.
Before you begin make sure view all relevant reading material so that you can give me informed opinions.
What anatomical features makes it possible for Homo erectus to be a biped runner.
Pick only one feature discussed in this week's material that allowed Homo erectus to be a biped runner.
How is your chosen feature different from Australopithecus aferensis equivalent feature? Briefly explain the difference.
Lastly, I would like you to briefly explain in your own words how endurance running would enhance the fitness of the Homo genus.

Discussion Slave Culture and Resistance
our course pack contains readings from two authors in section XI (pp. 267-299), William J. Faulkner and Peter Kolchin. Th ...
Discussion Slave Culture and Resistance
our course pack contains readings from two authors in section XI (pp. 267-299), William J. Faulkner and Peter Kolchin. These authors provide different perspectives on slave culture, life, religion and resistance. While Kolchin's work is scholarly, the excerpts from Faulkner come from the book The Days When the Animals Talked. This is an amazing book of folklore; I have provided a helpful review of Faulkner's book from Amazon.com to give you a sense of his work:5.0 out of 5 stars Among the best of its kind, March 16, 2011By Andre M. "brnn64" (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. (Mt. Pleasant, SC United States) -This review is from: The Days When the Animals Talked: Black American Folktales and How They Came to Be This is unquestionably hands-down one of the best books ever written on Black American Folklore. This was where William J. Faulkner (not to be confused with the the Nobel-winning Mississippian author of the same name) recalled the tales told to him as a child by an ex-slave handyman named Simon Brown in rural South Carolina circa 1900 when the author was about 10 years old. The title and cover may give you the impression that this is a children's book. It's not. Simon Brown's recollections of slavery (the first half of the book) are often quite raw and similar to the kind of tales told by ex-slaves in the WPA Slave narratives of the 1930s, in regards to beatings, concubinage, and other atrocities. He also delights in telling young Faulkner some tall tales and stories about the religious and social practices of slaves. This is best for about teen age to adults. Faulkner also puts the Brer Rabbit and other animal tales (the second half of the book in the context of being thinly disguised analogies of slaves overcoming masters). The story about Brer Rabbit and the meeting with the long-tailed animals (not found in any of Harris' Uncle Remus collections) deserves special attention as one of the most simple and brilliant analogies of racial injustice-this is a great wasy to articulate this subject with children! Faulkner has done his homework and the tales are recorded in an entertaining style. As with most educated Black writers of the time (Zora Neale Hurston being an important exception), Faulkner eliminates the dialect Simon Brown would have used as he wanted to discourage the use of dialect among schoolchildren (a stance that would horrify the politically correct Utopian thought police of today), but the standard English is not unrealistic to the character and does help the stories to read better. This is important because part of the reason Black Folklore is such a lost art today is because most of the best books on the subject (see below) were written in a "Negro Dialect" so thick that i they are almost unreadable today. In a sense, this book is kind of a flip side to Joel Chandler Harris' Uncle Remus books in that Harris (with rare exceptions such as the opening chapter of "Daddy Jake the Runaway") tended to show the softer side of slavery. However, in reading this book, one really envies Faulkner as he graphically describes the joy of listening to an elder regale him with marvelous stories. Those of us who came of age when this was a common experience will truly identify with this, while those who did not will get an idea of what this was like and wish they had the pleasure of such an experience. I would place this book with other classics of the genre such as Julius Lester's "Black Folktales," Edward C.L. Adams' "Tales of the Congaree," Ted Poston's "Dark Side of Hopkinsville," Charles W. Chesnutt's "The Conjure Woman," Zora Neale Hurston's "Mules and Men," and of course the Harris Brer Rabbit books. Read, think, learn, and enjoy.Once you have read the excerpts from Faulkner, the review on Amazon, and the Kolchin article, please comment on the following question: How did slaves use folklore, religion and African practices to create a unique culture under slavery? How powerful and effective do you think culture would have been in the slaves' efforts to resist the oppression of slavery?

Miami Dade College A Path to Citizenship Discussion
Explain and defend your views on the following: Is there anything wrong in offering unauthorized immigrants "a path to cit ...
Miami Dade College A Path to Citizenship Discussion
Explain and defend your views on the following: Is there anything wrong in offering unauthorized immigrants "a path to citizenship"? Should children brought into a country illegally ever be deported?.
3 pages

Memory Enhancement
The loci method in memory improvement refers to enhancing memory that applies visualizations of familiar spatial environme ...
Memory Enhancement
The loci method in memory improvement refers to enhancing memory that applies visualizations of familiar spatial environments to strengthen the recall ...

SYG2000 Strayer University WK4 Reviewing Research and Making Connections HW
REVIEWING RESEARCH AND MAKING CONNECTIONS Due Week 4: 110 points For your first assignment, you will complete a short ans ...
SYG2000 Strayer University WK4 Reviewing Research and Making Connections HW
REVIEWING RESEARCH AND MAKING CONNECTIONS Due Week 4: 110 points For your first assignment, you will complete a short answer activity in which you will analyze the article following the Ask, Research, Learn, Do process. This process was introduced in your webtext as a simplified version of the sociological research process. It’s a useful tool to help you think critically, answer questions, and solve problems. READ THE ARTICLE “Declining Majority of Online Adults Say the Internet Has Been Good for Society” http://www.pewinternet.org/2018/04/30/declining--- majority---of---online---adults---say---the---internet---has---been---good--- for---society/ USE THE RESEARCH Use the research information presented in the article to answer the questions below. You should write four paragraphs, one for each step listed in bold. Use the Assignment 1 template to complete this assignment. Refer to Chapter 2 of the webtext as necessary. 1

Interpersonal and Self Psychology Theory Paper
Provide a 3 page essay covering your understanding of Interpersonal theory and Self-Psychology theory. The paper should re ...
Interpersonal and Self Psychology Theory Paper
Provide a 3 page essay covering your understanding of Interpersonal theory and Self-Psychology theory. The paper should reflect a basic understanding of each theory, use, and benefits of the theory as well as limitations of each theory. Examples of understanding, one theory Preferences the importance of the social and cultural and how that environment contributes to our way of being....etc.
Levenson, E. A., 1996a: A Monopedal Presentation of Interpersonal Psychoanalysis, In: Reviewof Inrterpersonal Psychoanalysis, Vol. 1 (No. 1, 1996).
Bromberg, P.M., (1989) Interpersonal psychoanalysis and self psychology: A clinical comparison. Self psychology: Comparisons and contrasts
Flannigan, L.M. (2021). Chapter 6: The Theory of Self Psychology. In J. Berzoff, L.M. Flannigan, & P. Hertz. Inside out and outside in (5rd Ed.). UK: Rowman & Littlefield.
Berzoff, J. (2021). Chapter 7: Relational and Intersubjective Theories. In J. Berzoff, L.M.Flannigan, & P. Hertz. Inside out and outside in (5th Ed.) (p.249-268). UK: Rowman & Littlefield.
Tummala-Narra, P. (2016). Psychoanalytic theory and cultural competence in psychotherapy (Chapter 4, pp 85-110). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Notes - citations only from readings. No plagiarism. Easy vocabulary. The bibliography is separate, should have its own page. No summary of readings. Integration of personal experiences, how it impacts you, any thoughts, compare and contrast (IF APPLICABLE), focus on theories. I will be attaching pdfs.
Earn money selling
your Study Documents