Writing Competency Test Going To Essay

PAGES
3
WORDS
1109
Cite

Like Audubon, it is easy for us to fall into the attitude that the chicken is simply too ubiquitous, too entrenched in our daily lives to be threatened by our greed. Even if we protect its numbers, however, we have come very close to taking away from the chicken anything resembling its natural life. They are now born and raised in commercial farms, allowed little room to move, and force-fed antibiotics and far too much food in hopes of fattening them. What we are creating is not a chicken, but a cog in the economic wheel and a line in the bank ledger. But there are some people recently who recognize this, and who are bucking the system. In an article in the New Yorker, Susan Orlean describes the burgeoning trend of backyard chicken flocks. After Martha Stewart published a romanticized image of herself tending her home chicken flock, more and more urban and suburban residents have been entranced by the simple, nostalgic pleasures of scattering feed and gathering eggs; Orlean herself even became a chicken owner (27). As one of her mystified neighbors noted, "Chickens are the new hot pet, I guess" (Ibid). Unfortunately, everything hot eventually cools, and the heightened respect and attention that chickens are receiving now could easily be abandoned as the trendiness of it fades.

In the end, the only real way to protect bird populations is to fundamentally change the way we view them. We need to become like John Muir, who saw birds as "God's feathered people" (qtd. In Ecotopia). If we can forge a personal connection to birds that outlasts our Sesame Street dreams and the latest urban trend towards "rural chic," then perhaps we will be able...

...

"Flying object identified!" Rev. Of the Grail Bird by Tim Gallagher. The Times Literary Supplement (15 September 2005): 36. Print.
"In Memoriam: The Passenger Pigeon." EcoTopia USA. Web. 8 October 2009.

Orlean, Susan. "The it Bird." The New Yorker Sept. 2009: 26-31. Print.

Writing Test Outline

I. Thesis: Too often, the survival of a bird species rests on whether or not we care to take an interest in them at the right time. Many times this interest comes too late, or not at all.

II. In the case of the Passenger Pigeon, utilitarian attitudes crowded out any concern for the well-being of the birds, driving the country's largest bird population to extinction. (Ecotopia Article)

III. In the case of the ivory-billed woodpecker, we got lucky. The species survived despite our callousness, and is now protected by its legendary status. (Grail Bird Review)

IV. The case of the chicken is an interesting mix. While it has never been on the brink of extinction, utilitarian attitudes nearly relegated the chicken to a cog in the wheel of industry, subjecting them to horrendous conditions. The trendiness of home chicken raising may change this attitude short-term. (Orlean article)

V. Ultimately, bird populations won't be safe from human self-interest until we change the way we see them, learning to view them as creatures worthy of respect and protection BEFORE they become scarce, not afterwards.

Sources Used in Documents:

Works Cited

Barrow, Mark V. "Flying object identified!" Rev. Of the Grail Bird by Tim Gallagher. The Times Literary Supplement (15 September 2005): 36. Print.

"In Memoriam: The Passenger Pigeon." EcoTopia USA. Web. 8 October 2009.

Orlean, Susan. "The it Bird." The New Yorker Sept. 2009: 26-31. Print.

Writing Test Outline


Cite this Document:

"Writing Competency Test Going To" (2010, May 26) Retrieved April 23, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/writing-competency-test-going-to-10754

"Writing Competency Test Going To" 26 May 2010. Web.23 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/writing-competency-test-going-to-10754>

"Writing Competency Test Going To", 26 May 2010, Accessed.23 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/writing-competency-test-going-to-10754

Related Documents
Tests and Measurements
PAGES 10 WORDS 3787

Tests and Measurements The activities of the classrooms are revealed to the learners, instructors and the institutions through administering normalized tests. They encompass gathered knowledge in reading, mathematics, and English for learners starting from kindergarten up to the high school level. Several instructors detest from organizing and evaluating tests and a majority of the students are scared of appearing in them. But tests are potent didactic instruments which provide at the

Consent Regarding Qsen Competencies14 The following paper describes patient safety as being one of the concerns of patient care. It also discusses the QSEN competency related to patient safety. Moreover, the paper describes the significance of patient safety with reference to the QSEN competency. A review of literature and a case example related to the aforementioned topics are also included. Lastly, the paper gives implications related to better patient safety. Patient

Michael Krause has written a new book that provides eight sales strategies that are supposed to help increase sales, engendered a more motivated sales staff, and help sustain both. The eight strategies are: USP and UVP; Strategic planning; SWOT analysis; Engage your ideal clients; Build a cash reserve; Core capabilities and realistic goal setting; Balanced scoreboard, and; Do you have what it takes? The author looks at the entire organization

tests (CRTs) and scales vs. norm-Referenced Criterion-referenced tests (CRTs) are often the preferred method of assessing the performance of many practitioners in the healthcare and 'helping' professions such as nursing. An example of a criterion-based objective is that a student mastered 90% of the terms on a particular test (McDonald 2002). The NCLEX (National Council Licensure Examination) for nurses is an example of such a test: all nurses that pass

21st Century Leadership What does leadership mean today? The 21st Century environment presents totally different challenges and needs from the previous centuries with regards to leadership. Studies have shown that emotional and social intelligence are two big areas that pertain to 21st century leadership, as they relate to how well leaders can effectively establish positive relationships with followers (Boyatzis, 2008; Den, Deanne, Belschak, 2012; Higgs, 2013; Schyns, Schilling, 2013). There are,

In traded industries where there is fierce competition, it is not possible to pay men more than equally productive women -- every little disadvantage can be fatal to a company's survival. This means that gender equality emerges faster in these industries, as U.S. evidence shows. On virtually every criticism of globalization, one can find good, rather than bad, things to say. So globalization does have a human face. The