Description
prepare a resume for the following job vacancy. Your resume should be able to fit according to the posted job the qualifications are mentioned and relate your past experience in your resume.
Unformatted Attachment Preview
Jul 18% 12:07 AM
+
Z
Are you a fun loving, energetic assistant that enjoys working with kids? We are a growing team-oriented
ediatric Dentistry office in Shoreline. We are looking for a wonderful dental assistant to join our
azing team. We offer a competitive pay and benefits package.
Responsibilities include but are not limited to
- Oral hygiene instruction and cavity prevention education
- Dental charting
Rubber cup prophylaxis
- Chairside assisting
- Taking digital x-rays
- Making confirmation calls
- Checking insurance eligibility
- Sterilization/cleaning
Writing notes
Experience assisting and with Dentrix is a big plus but we are happy to train the right person.
If you are interested in joining our team, please email us your cover letter and resume. We look forward
to meeting you!
Job Types: Full-time, Part-time
License:
Registered Dental Assistant (Preferred)
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Adolfsson & Alvunter (2017) explored how different subsystems of a school district must work together in order to improve student achievement.
Write a 1,050- to 1,400-word paper that addresses the interconnectedness of elements of the organization and the research-based leadership styles you would use to effect change.
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Eichmann was eventually found guilty of war crimes in a widely publicised trial in Jerusalem, where he was executed by hanging in 1962.Trotta's film is essentially a dramatization of Arendt's speculative desire to answer the controversial question, a question treated in her book Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil -- Was Eichman's evil banal -- or in other words, was it an evil carried out naively and/or in ignorance of itself as being evil -- or, by contrast, was Eichman's evil clear-headedly conscious of itself as evil, or in other words, was it carried out as a form of "calculation, manipulation and shrewdness," the shrewdness of a man who was ready to use his psychological insights, his mind to his advantage over innocent Jews? Controversy -- Was Eichman's Evil "Banal" or "Calculated"? Trotta's film essentially dramatizes the above controversy, the above tension implied in Arendt's desire to resolve a controversial question, a controversial tension between two alternative ways of comprehending and adjudicating the nature of Eichman's evil actions as either:1. "banal" -- as an action which is more or less unconscious, un-self-aware of itself as evil; or as...2. "calculated, manipulated, shrewd," which would be to understand Eichman's action of evil as more or less conscious, self-aware of itself as evil. Trotta's film constitutes an exploration of a court-room trial in which what is being adjudicated is the above controversial question. And our Module 8 discussion question will invite you spy out and explain evidence of this controversial question, this controversial tension between banal versus calculated evil in association with Eichmann in Trotta's film. 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Apropos of Trotta's depiction of Arendt's viewpoint, we recall the film critic Roger Ebert's viewpoint: he -- commenting on the banality of evil in the film Silence -- remarked that the act of evil in the film (which indeed is represented by Scorsese vaguely as a "caution," or as a "cautionary" message) is as "matter-of-fact" as the act of merely "showing up for a day's work."If such a "matter-of-fact-ness" can be associated with the motives behind Eichmann's controversial actions, than Eichmann's actions might be viewed not as the actions of a man regarding his actions as "grandiose" or "terrible" or "demonic" but rather as "mundane," "trivial" -- "banal." In the words of Maria Popova taken from our last module's reading -- "A core cause of this perplexity [with regard to "banal evil"] lies in the fact that while acts of evil can mushroom into monumental tragedies, the individual human perpetrators of those acts are often marked not with the grandiosity of the demonic but with absolute mundanity."Taylor's report on Eichmann-- in contrast to Arendt's report on Eichmann -- identifies no such mundanity, no such banality, behind Eichmann's motives. Taylor's report identifies purely shrewd, calculated motives -- motives very much self-aware of themselves as "grandiose," epic, demonic. And it's with the nature of Taylor's optic on Eichmann's evil in mind, that some thinkers continue to characterize Arendt's optic not only as a distortion of the history of the Holocaust – whether by denial, minimization, or by an unfair comparisons or false characterizations of the perpetrators – but as a moral, literary, aesthetic sin. 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He acted without any motive other than to diligently advance his career in the Nazi bureaucracy, the Nazi corporation. Eichmann was not an amoral monster, she concluded in her 1963 case-study. Instead, Eichmann performed evil deeds without evil intentions, a fact connected to his "thoughtlessness," a disengagement from the reality of his evil acts. Eichmann, Arendt argued,"‘never realised what he was doing" due to an "inability… to think from the standpoint of somebody else." Lacking this particular cognitive ability, he "commit[ted] crimes under circumstances that made it well-nigh impossible for him to know or to feel that he [was] doing wrong." What do you think? Learning Goals: 1. To continue to comprehend evil as "banal" in contrast to "calculated" according to Hannah Arendt's philosophical characterization, and Trotta's cinematic / aesthetic representation or Arendt's characterization. 2. To learn the art of identifying philosophical distinctions: which is the art of isolating both the specificity and the implications of two opposed philosophical viewpoints / optics (in this case, viewpoints / optics on evil), so as be able to subsequently avail of that art, that optic in our acts of trying to understanding evil. Study Materials: 1. Margarethe von Trotta's, Hannah Arendt (2012)
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BUSN 128 CMU Selling Overseas and Marketing in Another Country Research Report
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EDD 712 UoP Week 3 Interconnectedness of Elements of the Organization Paper
Using:
Adolfsson & Alvunter (2017) explored how different subsystems of a school district must work together in ...
EDD 712 UoP Week 3 Interconnectedness of Elements of the Organization Paper
Using:
Adolfsson & Alvunter (2017) explored how different subsystems of a school district must work together in order to improve student achievement.
Write a 1,050- to 1,400-word paper that addresses the interconnectedness of elements of the organization and the research-based leadership styles you would use to effect change.
Explore your own home school district’s website and identify how various links in the systems work together to focus on the improvement of students’ academic achievement. (www.pcpsb.net)
Identify the strengths and the challenges that you found and how you would match an appropriate leadership style for each challenge.
Discuss why you would select each leadership style and the theory that accompanies your selection.
Reference -- Carefully read this article prior to completing your assignment.
Adolfsson, C.-H., & Alvunger, D. (2017). The nested systems of local school development: Understanding improved interaction and capacities in the different sub-systems of schools. Improving Schools, 20(3), 195–208.
Case Write-Up: Harley-Davidson: Strategic Competitiveness that Span Decades
Read the case "Harley-Davidson: Strategic Competitiveness that Span Decades" and answer the following questions in a singl ...
Case Write-Up: Harley-Davidson: Strategic Competitiveness that Span Decades
Read the case "Harley-Davidson: Strategic Competitiveness that Span Decades" and answer the following questions in a single Word document.Analyze the impact of the firm's general environment. Highlight the global segment, economic segment, demographic segment, physical segment, political/legal segment, and sociocultural segment.Perform an internal analysis to identify the firm's strengths and weaknesses.Based on the materials available to you, recommend an international corporate-level strategy for the firm and explain its rationale. Also identify the firm's strategic options for entering the China market and focus on the available entry modes. Which mode of entry would you recommended? why?Format Requirement: Papers are to be no more than three pages in length, US letter size paper, single-spaced with one-inch margins all around and 12 point Times New Roman font. Papers not in compliance will be penalized 20% of the score.
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In the last module we explored the way in which Martin Scorsese's film Silence gives expression to Hannah Arendt's concept ...
CUNY Lehman Hanner Arendt’s Banality of Evil in The Film Arendt Discussion
In the last module we explored the way in which Martin Scorsese's film Silence gives expression to Hannah Arendt's concept of the "Banality of Evil"; and in this module we'll explore the way in which Margarethe von Trotta's film Hannah Arendt gives expression to Hannah Arendt's concept. Trott'a film, and so too Scorsese's film, gives expression to one of the central thematics of this course: the struggle to be good in a world that seems to be shot through with evil -- shot through with both systemic evil (atmospheric evil); and individual evil which typically tends to be the byproduct of systemic evil: it's is when the "absence of good" (Aristotle's definition of evil) is felt by the individuals of X-community or X-sub-community to be such a ubiquitous and omni-present human condition that being good comes to be more of a rarified human condition than being evil. Thinkers, artists, prophets, sages through the millennia have long hypothesized that "a good society is a society that makes it easy to be good," which is a hypothesis that comes with the implication that "an evil society is a society that makes it easy to be evil." Critics, including the philosopher-scholar Hannah Arendt herself, have long argued that such a species of society thrived around the time of the Holocaust, insofar as around that time there existed the diabolical influence of a society that, in retrospect, made it easy -- that made it unremarkable and therefore somewhat normal -- to be evil. The perpetrators of the Holocaust – from those who organized it in Berlin to those who carried it out in the death camps and killing fields – included figures who were regarded as some of the most brilliant young men and women in Germany. Many left the university to participate in the “final solution” and returned to highly prestigious jobs in post-war Germany. Figures like Göring, Goebbels, Himmler, Hitler himself and the numerous doctors and lawyers who were tried at Nuremberg, were some of the brightest university students, students who began by burning Jewish books who ended by burning Jewish children.One of Hitler’s key supporters -- as represented in Trotta's film - was the philosophy professor Martin Heidegger, perhaps the most influential philosopher of his day. Arendt was his student and lover. And after the war she tried desperately to rehabilitate him.Another one of Hitler's key supporters was a man who authorized the slaughter of numberless innocent Jews -- Adolf Eichmann. He was one of the major organizers of the Holocaust—the "Final Solution to the Jewish Question" in Nazi terminology. He was tasked by Nazi leaders with the task of facilitating and managing the the mass deportation of Jews to ghettos and extermination camps in Nazi-occupied Eastern Europe during World War II. Eichmann was eventually found guilty of war crimes in a widely publicised trial in Jerusalem, where he was executed by hanging in 1962.Trotta's film is essentially a dramatization of Arendt's speculative desire to answer the controversial question, a question treated in her book Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil -- Was Eichman's evil banal -- or in other words, was it an evil carried out naively and/or in ignorance of itself as being evil -- or, by contrast, was Eichman's evil clear-headedly conscious of itself as evil, or in other words, was it carried out as a form of "calculation, manipulation and shrewdness," the shrewdness of a man who was ready to use his psychological insights, his mind to his advantage over innocent Jews? Controversy -- Was Eichman's Evil "Banal" or "Calculated"? Trotta's film essentially dramatizes the above controversy, the above tension implied in Arendt's desire to resolve a controversial question, a controversial tension between two alternative ways of comprehending and adjudicating the nature of Eichman's evil actions as either:1. "banal" -- as an action which is more or less unconscious, un-self-aware of itself as evil; or as...2. "calculated, manipulated, shrewd," which would be to understand Eichman's action of evil as more or less conscious, self-aware of itself as evil. Trotta's film constitutes an exploration of a court-room trial in which what is being adjudicated is the above controversial question. And our Module 8 discussion question will invite you spy out and explain evidence of this controversial question, this controversial tension between banal versus calculated evil in association with Eichmann in Trotta's film. For because Arendt was not the only correspondent reporting on Eichmann's trial: professor Telford Taylor - who had been the chief prosecutor at the Second Nuremburg Trial -- was invited to report on the trial as well. Taylor's account of the trial varied enormously from that of Hannah Arnedt. Where she saw banality, he saw calculation, manipulation and shrewdness. And so Trotta's film constitutes an examination of the tension, the controversy between Arendt's and Taylor's opposed view points. Apropos of Trotta's depiction of Arendt's viewpoint, we recall the film critic Roger Ebert's viewpoint: he -- commenting on the banality of evil in the film Silence -- remarked that the act of evil in the film (which indeed is represented by Scorsese vaguely as a "caution," or as a "cautionary" message) is as "matter-of-fact" as the act of merely "showing up for a day's work."If such a "matter-of-fact-ness" can be associated with the motives behind Eichmann's controversial actions, than Eichmann's actions might be viewed not as the actions of a man regarding his actions as "grandiose" or "terrible" or "demonic" but rather as "mundane," "trivial" -- "banal." In the words of Maria Popova taken from our last module's reading -- "A core cause of this perplexity [with regard to "banal evil"] lies in the fact that while acts of evil can mushroom into monumental tragedies, the individual human perpetrators of those acts are often marked not with the grandiosity of the demonic but with absolute mundanity."Taylor's report on Eichmann-- in contrast to Arendt's report on Eichmann -- identifies no such mundanity, no such banality, behind Eichmann's motives. Taylor's report identifies purely shrewd, calculated motives -- motives very much self-aware of themselves as "grandiose," epic, demonic. And it's with the nature of Taylor's optic on Eichmann's evil in mind, that some thinkers continue to characterize Arendt's optic not only as a distortion of the history of the Holocaust – whether by denial, minimization, or by an unfair comparisons or false characterizations of the perpetrators – but as a moral, literary, aesthetic sin. One critic -- Alan Dershowitz -- has argued that "Eichmann is presented [in Trotta's film] in his multifaceted complexity, in the manner in which Shakespeare presented Iago, Lady Macbeth and many of his other evil villains – not as banal but as brilliantly evil" -- as an ingenious, mastermind of evil.Dershowitz argues --It is essential to the memory of the victims of the Shoah, as well as to the future efforts to prevent recurrences of genocide, that we not simplify with ideologically driven and historically false oversimplifications such as “the banality of evil.” That mendacious and dangerous phrase should be struck from the historical vocabulary of the Holocaust and the trial of Eichmann, lest we look in the future for banality and miss the brilliance of those who would repeat Eichmann’s crimes.In opposition to Taylor's and Dershowitz' optics on Eichmann, Arendt found Eichmann an ordinary, rather bland, bureaucrat, who in her words, was "neither perverted nor sadistic," but "terrifyingly normal." He acted without any motive other than to diligently advance his career in the Nazi bureaucracy, the Nazi corporation. Eichmann was not an amoral monster, she concluded in her 1963 case-study. Instead, Eichmann performed evil deeds without evil intentions, a fact connected to his "thoughtlessness," a disengagement from the reality of his evil acts. Eichmann, Arendt argued,"‘never realised what he was doing" due to an "inability… to think from the standpoint of somebody else." Lacking this particular cognitive ability, he "commit[ted] crimes under circumstances that made it well-nigh impossible for him to know or to feel that he [was] doing wrong." What do you think? Learning Goals: 1. To continue to comprehend evil as "banal" in contrast to "calculated" according to Hannah Arendt's philosophical characterization, and Trotta's cinematic / aesthetic representation or Arendt's characterization. 2. To learn the art of identifying philosophical distinctions: which is the art of isolating both the specificity and the implications of two opposed philosophical viewpoints / optics (in this case, viewpoints / optics on evil), so as be able to subsequently avail of that art, that optic in our acts of trying to understanding evil. Study Materials: 1. Margarethe von Trotta's, Hannah Arendt (2012)
University of Nairobi Key Performance Indicators Presentaion
Please complete a powerpoint using the information below. Cite sources and use APA format.Key Performance Indicators Data ...
University of Nairobi Key Performance Indicators Presentaion
Please complete a powerpoint using the information below. Cite sources and use APA format.Key Performance Indicators Data is king! Like other parts of business, measuring success through data analytics is important for assessing the effectiveness of marketing campaigns, investments, and initiatives. For this CT, create a PowerPoint presentation that identifies the top 3 key performance indicators (KPIs) for each of the following areas: Customer experience and brand loyalty Revenue and profit Online community building Integrated Marketing Communications Global For each area, include an analysis that demonstrates why you believe your KPIs are the top 3 KPIs for these marketing areas. Use your sources and facts to justify your choices. Your presentation should be 8-10 slides (not including title page or reference slides) in length and APA. Slides must include well-written speaker notes and informative graphics. Include at least four scholarly references, credible sources outside of the course and its required readings/media.
BUSN 128 CMU Selling Overseas and Marketing in Another Country Research Report
Select a product or service that you currently own (or use) and a country that you’re not familiar with. You are encoura ...
BUSN 128 CMU Selling Overseas and Marketing in Another Country Research Report
Select a product or service that you currently own (or use) and a country that you’re not familiar with. You are encouraged to select a product or service that is unique and innovative.Imagine that you are with the international sales department of the company that manufactures and sells the item (or service) that you are proposing to make or introduce in the country you have selected.The first step is to learn as much as possible about the country where you plan to market the product. Check almanacs, encyclopedias, the Internet, and library databases for the most recent information, paying particular attention to descriptions of the social life of the inhabitants, their economic conditions, and cultural traditions that encourage or discourage use of the product or service.Your Task – Write a five page report that describes the product or service you plan to market abroad (it must be another country other than the United States); briefly describes the country you have selected, indicates the types of people who would find the product or service attractive, explains how the product or service would be transported or introduced into the country (or possibly manufactured if materials and labor are readily available in the host country), recommends a location for a regional sales center, and suggests how the product or service should be sold. Your report is to be submitted to the chief operating officer of the company, whose name you can either make up or find in a corporate directory. The report should include your conclusions (how the product or service will do in this new environment) and your recommendations for marketing (steps the company should take immediately and those it should develop later). You are highly encouraged to include financials, action plan, and a social media strategy.General Format –The paper must be typedUse headings within the report when appropriate (please review Pages 430-445 for Parts of a Formal Report). For this report please include a Cover, Memo of Transmittal, Table of Contents, Introduction, Body, Summary, Conclusions, Recommendations, and a Bibliography (The Cover, Memo of Transmittal, Table of Contents, and Bibliography will not be counted towards the five page requirement).Plan the paper carefully so as to develop an organized and non-redundant report. It should be organized and assembled as a continuous report and should not appear to be several independent segments bound together.You must have a minimum of five sources. Please cite your sources using APA Format – (the Writing Center can offer assistance if you do not know how to do this). These five sources must be SCHOLARLY. You should include peer-reviewed, journal articles.
4 pages
The Road To Hell
During his final touches before leaving the Bauxite Company, John Baker holds a private meeting with his predecessor, Renn ...
The Road To Hell
During his final touches before leaving the Bauxite Company, John Baker holds a private meeting with his predecessor, Rennalls, who is a Barracania ...
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