Usefulness Essays

  • A Life of Usefulness and Reputation

    1124 Words  | 3 Pages

    A Life of Usefulness and Reputation The moral responsibility of training individuals for a life of usefulness and reputation rests within the university. However, it is difficult to define what this type of life entails. College education, therefore, is not about supplying students with specific moral obligations to be completed over the course of their lives; instead, universities teach their students to be proactive, to question everything, and to never be afraid to make mistakes. I am confident

  • Usefulness of Mathematics Education

    1347 Words  | 3 Pages

    Usefulness of Mathematics Education There has been much discussion over the years about the usefulness of mathematical studies. Everyone seems to have a different viewpoint on the issue. Some believe that mathematics has little use in the working world and so is not a subject that should be taught at higher levels in secondary school. Others argue that mathematics does serve a profound purpose, albeit one that is subtle and not obvious in the vocational world. G. H. Hardy and Underwood Dudley

  • Evaluate The Usefulness Of The Product Lifecycle To A Firm

    669 Words  | 2 Pages

    In this essay I will look at the advantages and disadvantages of using a product lifecycle, as well as evaluating the usefulness of such a model to a firm. The Product Lifecycle is a part of the portfolio analysis, in which a firm can analyse the stages in a products life. It is a model used to aid with decision making in a firm, and part of the marketing planning process. The shape and length of the lifecycle varies with the different products, as each one is unique. The different stages are launch

  • Legacy and Respect: The Usefulness of Feminism

    2043 Words  | 5 Pages

    Legacy and Respect: The Usefulness of Feminism In a letter to students who participate in Bryn Mawr and Haverford Colleges' bi-college Feminist and Gender Studies department, Head of the Department Anne Dalke outlined an argument in favor of changing the program's name. She wrote, "Our argument for re-naming the F&GS program "Gender and Sexuality" is based on 3 claims: 1. that it will be enticing for prospective and current students and faculty, because it names their personal and intellectual

  • Culture and Technology - Tools to Aid in Survival

    1230 Words  | 3 Pages

    must then be incorporated into the society, requiring cultural adjustments. Always, usefulness is the key determining factor. Cultural adjustments must be worth the effort, the technology must meet a societal need. The technologies that each society chooses to adopt are the ones that they find the most useful. Societies have not developed different technologies by accident: the criteria for determining “usefulness” is culturally based. The Near East is not a particularly fertile area. Dry land

  • The Usefulness of Dendrochronology to Archaeology

    1572 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Usefulness of Dendrochronology to Archaeology Dendrochronology is a technique that has been in use for most of the twentieth century. Essentially the process revolves around tree rings. In a moderate environment, trees grow by one ring each year and thus, to an extent, by examining these ring sequences, it is possible to understand the conditions in which the tree grew, year by year. The resultant pattern is then comparable with patterns from other trees found in similar areas, growing

  • The Usefulness of School Vouchers

    1392 Words  | 3 Pages

    The American people have a decline of confidence in the educational institutions in America. This has lead to theories behind how to improve the public schools' situation. The most recent argument has been over school vouchers, which allow students to use a determined sum of taxpayers' money to help in the tuition costs of private schools. This use of public funds for private education should not be allowed because it would discriminate against students who would be going to private schools for

  • The Usefulness of Collaborative Online Learning

    1821 Words  | 4 Pages

    EDU922 has been an interesting experience, allowing me to consider the usefulness of collaborative online learning. Overall, the activities in EDU922 seem to have been designed to have the student become familiar with the idea of e-tivities by working through a set of tasks similar to those in Salmon’s book/model, starting with level one “access and motivation” (Salmon, 2003, p12) and working toward higher level learning, such as week seven’s, critical reflection on practice (stage 5). I feel this

  • The Usefulness of Functionalism for an Understanding of the Family

    661 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Usefulness of Functionalism for an Understanding of the Family Functionalists focus on the roles of the family as an institution and its interaction with other institutions, such as the ratio of functions the family has to perform compared to those that other institutions such as schools and the NHS perform. Functionalism sees the use of the family in society and how it can take pressure from the government by becoming an almost dependent institution that will help support its own members

  • The Usefulness of Functionalism for an Understanding of the Family

    1279 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Usefulness of Functionalism for an Understanding of the Family The Functionalists see the family as an important and vital institution in society. They take a MACRO view and look at interdependence between the family and other organisations. Functionalists look at the positive parts to society but overlook the negatives. They emphasise on the value consensus and see the family as being universal. Other people’s outlooks disagree with this view, such as the Marxists, the Marxist Feminists

  • The Usefulness of Participant Observation as a Sociological Method

    610 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Usefulness of Participant Observation as a Sociological Method Unlike other research methods participant observation allows the sociologist to look at people in their natural environment. It is often referred to as a naturalistic approach. The research does not artificially interfere with people’s lives and they are free to act as normal. This allows the researcher to gain an insight which surveys cannot produce. This is illustrated by a well-known quote: “As I sat and listened,

  • Assessment of the Usefulness of Functionalism in Understanding the Family

    1235 Words  | 3 Pages

    Assessment of the Usefulness of Functionalism in Understanding the Family Functionalism is a structuralist theory. This means it sees the individual as less important as the social structure of society. It is a ‘top down’ theory. The family can be defined as an intimate domestic group composed of people related to each other by blood, sexual relations and legal ties. When assessing how useful functionalism is when looking at the family, other views/perspectives need to be taken into

  • The Usefulness of a Holistic Model for Mental Health

    1623 Words  | 4 Pages

    University, 2010, p.31-51). The effectiveness of the medical model providing an explanation will be considered and differing frameworks of understanding will be discussed. This essay will consider the opinion of different user groups regarding the usefulness of a holistic model and whether those within a particular group have the same view. A holistic approach views the person as a whole. Seedhouse (2000) suggests that we can only understand separate parts when we look at the whole, even when we understand

  • The Usefulness of the Analogy Between Society and a Biological Organism

    890 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Usefulness of the Analogy Between Society and a Biological Organism One set of sociologist that use the Biological or Organic analogy of societies are the Functionalists. Functionalism first emerged in Europe in the 19th Century. The French sociologist Emile Durkheim was the most influential of all the early functionalists. The theory became the dominant theoretical perspective in the 1940's and 1950. The functionalist theory is that within society there are many small parts

  • The Usefulness of Sociological Theories in Explaining Crime and the Control of Crime

    3034 Words  | 7 Pages

    The Usefulness of Sociological Theories in Explaining Crime and the Control of Crime This paper seeks to explore the usefulness of Sociological Theories in explaining crime and whether in doing so there arises implications for probation practice. I shall begin by providing a brief explanation for the historical development of criminological thinking, starting with Classicism and moving onto Positivism both which lay the foundations for the development of sociological theories in the 1960’s

  • The Usefulness of the Atomic Bomb in World War II

    720 Words  | 2 Pages

    With America and Britain’s supplies and money quickly becoming exhausted towards the end of World War II, the war with Japan had to cease. Even though the US had significantly weakened their numbers, the US needed a strong military win to get Japan to surrender. Without the use of the atomic bomb the war between Japan and America could’ve persisted for a few more years, but with the bombing or Hiroshima and Nagasaki the war was ended swiftly and with fewer casualties than if the war had continued

  • Usefulness of the United Kingdom's Rehablitation of Offenders Act

    1009 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Rehablitation of Offenders Act 1974 has been put in place to ease offenders back into society and also make sure that offenders’, that are given under a 30 month prison sentence, convictions are spent. Therefore employers of the recent offender are not allowed to discriminate against that person, allowing the offender more opportunity to gain employment. This briefing note outlines the strengths and weaknesses of rehabilitating sex offenders. By analysing the literature and statistics surrounding

  • Usefulness of The Statement of Cash Flows Versus The Income Statement

    1574 Words  | 4 Pages

    USEFULNESS OF THE STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS VS THE INCOME STATEMENT PART 1: A. A cash flow statement records the actual movement of a company’s cash, it shows where cash has come in from and what has actually been paid during the year. The cash flow statement records cash movements from three activities: operating, financing and investing. Operating activities adjusts the profit for non-cash expenses and gains and the changed in working capital and provides the cash actually received after conducting

  • The Usefulness of Structuralism as an Analytical Tool for Uncovering How Meaning is Generated in The Wizard of Oz

    1920 Words  | 4 Pages

    In the words of Michael O’Shaughnessy, ‘narratives, or stories, are a basic way of making sense of our experience’ (1999: 266). As a society and a culture, we use stories to comprehend and share our experiences, typically by constructing them with a beginning, middle and an end. In fact, the order that a narrative is structured will directly impact the way it is understood, particularly across cultures. This idea originated through Claude Lévi-Strauss’s concept of structuralism in anthropology which

  • Research Article Analyzation: A Study of the Usefulness of the HESI Exit Exam in Predicting NCLEX-RN Failure

    789 Words  | 2 Pages

    Spurlock’s paper aims to examine the effectiveness of using HESI Exit Exams to accurately predict NCLEX-RN pass rates. The research will determine if there is a correlation between the imposed mandatory pass rates of HESI Exit Exams imposed by institutions to allow their students to sit for the NCLEX-RN. The variable being considered is whether students taking the HESI Exit Exam failing to achieve a score of 850 or higher could improve their scores. Would they do better on the NCLEX-RN if they had