“Rethinking Genre from a Sociocognitive Perspective” by Carol Berkenkotter and Thomas N. Huckin discusses genre theory. Berkenkotter and Huckin claim genres help professionals communicate with their peers‚ and genre knowledge is essential to professional success. The authors discuss their thesis statement‚ support their argument with several years of research‚ as well as identify five general principles of genre theory. Berkenkotter and Huckin acknowledge their work is not a fully developed sociocognitive
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violence. Many criminal acts can be explained within the terms of the learned social norms. Acts of misconduct can be viewed as learned‚ influenced or developed (Scully‚ 2016). As others believe criminal intent‚ behavior and acts are learned‚ medical professional says otherwise. According to medical professionals‚ a psychological perspective focus on the mental aspects of criminals and noncriminal behavior. Psychological perspective‚ is based on an analytical approach to understanding criminal behavior
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Top of Form Perspectives of Psychology What is Psychology - and What is it not? Psychology is the scientific study of behavior and mental processes‚ originating from the Greek roots psyche (mind) and ology (study of). The science of psychology is based on objective and verifiable evidence. In order to retrieve accurate information‚ psychologists use an empirical approach as the standard for the methodology of psychology. The use of careful observations and scientific research are examples of an
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Ethical Perspective In the following paper I am going to describe the four different ethical perspectives. I will start by describing my own personal ethical perspective as described by the University of Phoenix Ethical Awareness Inventory. After I describe my personal ethical perspective I will evaluate all four of the ethical perspectives starting with character/virtue based. I will then continue with obligation/ deontology based and results/utilitarianism based. I will conclude with a brief description
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University of Phoenix Material Perspectives of Psychology Matching Match the perspectives of psychology with their correct viewpoint. 1. C________ Biological Perspective 2. A________ Evolutionary Perspective 3. D_______ Psychodynamic Perspective 4. F_______ Behavioral Perspective 5. B_______ Humanistic Perspective 6. G________ Cognitive Perspective 7. E________ Sociocultural Perspective A. Analyzes the relationship between
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Using two different psychological perspectives explain how a worker could apply psychological thinking to one of the following situations. - A teenager who has been diagnosed as having an eating disorder People who work in the industry of Psychology explore the scientific study of behaviour and see many questions arise about human beings and how certain psychological thinking can explain irregular behaviourisms. There are many different perspectives when it comes to Psychology but some of the
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What is the perspective you chose about? Key points and conceptsThe general belief of the conflict perspective is that society is comprised of groups with competing self-interests. Deriving from this competition is a struggle for power. Most often‚ the distribution of power is imbalanced among the groups. People are competing for resources that are in scarce supply. The social groups in a society that tend to dominate over others are the ones who maintain the majority of the wealth‚ prestige
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Chapter 1 - The Sociological Perspective and Research Process: 1. (4) Sociology is the study of man and society that seeks to determine their general characteristics‚ especially as found in contemporary civilizations. ! A society is a large social group that shares the same geographical territory and is subject to the same political authority and dominant cultural expectations. 2. (3-5) Sociologist C. Wright Mills described sociological reasoning as The Sociological Imagination
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"the sociological perspective." Sociologists look for general social patterns in the behavior of individuals as they relate to a group and how the group and social structures affect our individual perception and behavior. Human behavior is patterned‚ and repetitive. We can predict with reasonable reliability what each of us will do generally under given conditions (Seymour‚ 2003). Our uniqueness as individuals is in the context of the group we belong. Sociology studies the social forces that impinge
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Explain how and why the Functional Perspective is the legitimating rationale (explanation or justification) for a Capitalist economy‚ and give examples of this justification through race‚ religion‚ class‚ gender‚ and educational level. Then‚ critique the Functionalist ideology from the Conflict Perspective and describe how the stratification system produces deviants (not criminals‚ but rather those who fall outside the expectations in actions‚ thoughts‚ appearance‚ credit-score‚ etc) and the result
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