defendant’s mouth were “I just shot him and I’m scared!” She tried to defend the father of her children by claiming he was in a disoriented mental state and was scared for his life. Even though he admitted to committing the crime to her‚ she did not report to the authorities with information. The district attorney brought up her while questioning her‚ since it was the vehicle driven
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Justice: What is the Right Thing to Do? The greatest happiness principle / Utilitarianism Example: The Mignonette & the cabin boy Parker (cabin boy) was an orphan. Mignonette sunk at sea. While on the lifeboat‚ Parker had drunk seawater out of desperation and appeared to be dying. On the 19th day Dudley (captain) suggested drawing lots to determine who should die so that others might live. Brooks (sailor 1) refused. Next day Dudley motioned to Stephens (sailor 2) to kill Parker. All 3 men
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Liberty of the person 1. No person shall be deprived of his life or personal liber save in accordance with law 2. Where complaint is made to a high court or any judge thereof that a person being unlawfully detained the court shall inquire into the complain and ‚ unless satisfied that the detention is lawful ‚ shall order him to be produced before the court and release him. 3. Where the person arrested shall be informed as soon as may be of the grounds of his arrest and shall be allowed to consult
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practicing literacy instruction through lesson plans and implementation. Some of the observation criteria fall under communication‚ being a constructivist‚ understanding to activate prior knowledge‚ interaction and concluding with a review and an assessment of some kind. Teacher should work to increase students’ motivation on learning and use systematic instruction throughout the lesson plan. After an observation description‚ linking the strengths‚ weaknesses or improvements that should be made‚ a
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O“Observation” By Henry David Thoreau “Observation‚” by Henry David Thoreau‚ is a passage that presents the idea that there is no such thing as pure objective observation‚ only subjective observation. Written during the Age of Enlightment‚ philosophes Thoreau stated that observations do not need to be true and accomplish an overall purpose because observations come from the individual and what he or she believes in. Thoreau was able to illustrate this idea in this text through examples like “though
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Courtroom Professional Standards Jonathan Evans CJA/224 August 10‚ 2014 John Pierce Courtroom Professional Standards Everyone thinks they have it exactly right on TV shows like Law and Order or CSI. Someone commits a crime‚ is charged and found guilty all in an hour or two. For many crimes this is not the case‚ the offender may never be found‚ or someone maybe falsely convicted. It all hinges on a set of people. The judge‚ the defense attorney and the prosecutor. All of which are not
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At Newport High School‚ all freshmen are required to run four miles as part of the mandatory physical education class. This acts as a measure of improvement in the students’ stamina and speed after two and a half months of training and conditioning in winter. The aim of this exercise is to run 16 laps around the track at Newport‚ with each lap being counted as it was completed with a popsicle stick. Students are graded through a rubric including total time taken‚ number of laps completed‚ and whether
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While I was in Ms. Carrilo’s Pre-K classroom‚ I saw a lot of developmentally appropriate practices being utilized. However‚ I am going to note the three biggest developmentally appropriate practices that I observed. The three biggest developmentally appropriate practices that I saw are the following: the teacher being warm and responsive‚ the teacher following daily schedule‚ and the teacher engaging students in a variety of learning experiences. The teacher‚ Ms. Carrilo‚ was very kind‚ caring‚ and
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Observations What are observations? Finding out what children can do & recording it Evidence of child behaviour & development Factual descriptions of child’s actions & language Observations help us to plan ‘next steps’ for children Why do we observe? To inform our planning To review the effectiveness of areas of provision & use of resources To identify learning opportunities and plan relevant & motivating experiences To reflect on our own practise To protect children To develop
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The scientific method requires observations of nature to formulate and test hypotheses.[1] It consists of these steps:[2][3] Asking a question about a natural phenomenon Making observations of the phenomenon Hypothesizing an explanation for the phenomenon Predicting a logical consequence of the hypothesis Testing the hypothesis by an experiment‚ an observational study‚ or a field study Creating a conclusion with data gathered in the experiment‚ or forming a revised/new hypothesis and repeating
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