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What is Personal?

The concept of the personal sits at the intersection of nearly every academic discipline, making it a recurring focus in English courses and beyond. Essays on this topic examine how individual identity, values, and experience shape and are shaped by larger social, ethical, and cultural forces. What makes this topic academically rich is its range: a paper can explore how personal values operate within organizational or family structures, how individuals make ethical decisions, or how literature and poetry give voice to private human experience. Works like Philip Terman's "Rabbis of the Air" and Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni's "Clothes" appear as anchors for literary analysis, while frameworks drawn from psychology, business ethics, and sociology ground more analytical papers.

Student papers on this topic take a wide variety of approaches. Literary analysis papers examine symbolism and identity in fiction and poetry. Case study essays apply ethical frameworks to real organizational scenarios, weighing personal values against professional demands. Other papers take a reflective or theoretical angle, exploring sexuality, development stages, or the relationship between social influences and individual behavior. Still others engage empirical or applied perspectives, touching on standardized assessment, corporate structure, and personal finance, demonstrating how broadly the personal can be defined in academic writing.

A strong essay on this topic establishes a clear, specific thesis about how personal experience or values interact with a defined external context — whether that is a literary text, an organization, or a social system. Evidence drawn from close reading, case analysis, or cited theory tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is remaining too vague or anecdotal; grounding personal observations in a recognized framework or text gives the argument necessary academic credibility.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Countless Theories Regarding the Effective
¶ … countless theories regarding the effective manner in which nursing practice might be conducted and developed. The value of theoretical frameworks has in fact been foundational to the development of nursing practice.
Essay Undergraduate
Discipline and grievances in organizational management
The Chartered Institute of Personal Development (CIPD) Survey report of February 2007 entitled: "Managing Conflict at work" reports a survey of 798 participant organizations that employ in excess of 2.2 million employees.
Essay Doctorate
The Responsibility Project: ethics and short films resource
The short film chosen for this paper is called "The Entrepreneurial Spirit: Birds Barbershop. Birds Barbershop is a chain of barbershops that were started by two childhood friends in Texas. They describe their barbershop as a throwback to a classic era with a modern twist on getting one's haircut. Above all, they value the input of their employees & customers, wishing to keep the barbershop experience simple and to provide utility to the public.
Paper Undergraduate
Student Affairs Over the Last
Over the last several years, a variety of colleges and universities have been forming cross campus coalitions and partnerships. Part of the reason for this, is because they are using these alliances between educators…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Chip Censorship Vchip Significance /
Link between television violence and juvenile crime
Research Paper Undergraduate
Mexican Religion in the U.S.A.
2003 national survey on the Hispanic Churches in American Public Life found that 70% of all Latinos were Catholic, 22% of them Charismatic (Espinosa 2008). The rest identified with various non-Catholic denominations,…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Dystopian literature and social commentary
The idea of the dystopia is related to the idea of the utopia, and it has become a staple in speculative literature and film. A dystopia is a society that does not work for the benefit of its members, while a utopia is…
Paper Undergraduate
T. S. Eliot's Four Quartets as response to The Wasteland
Among the best-known and most respected poems in American literature,
Paper Doctorate
Mobile Computing: A Disruptive Innovation Whose Time
The pervasive adoption of mobile computing devices, combined with cloud computing and the quantum gains in application software are creating a globally diverse collaborative platform. These elements taken together are deliver an exceptionally fast and pervasive level of disruptive innovation across all sociocultural and technology sectors (Bernoff, Li, 2008). The impact of this disruptive innovation is so significant that IT departments have to drastically reorder their policies in smartphones, tablet PCs and other devices that employees are using to streamline their lives (Thomson, 2012). Smartphones, tablet PCs and devices like them are becoming so pervasive today that they are considered a formable cultural and socioeconomic factor in the planning and execution of business and government strategies well into the future (Bernoff, Li, 2008). This platform of technology is so pervasive, that it requires in-depth support to enable integration of systems to supporting data and network access to ensure the stability, security and reliability of performance. All of these factors are leading enterprises to create end-to-end platforms and technologies to enable the use of smartphones and tablet PCs' integration into the most complex workflows companies have (Saltzer, Reed, Clark, 1984). The large-scale investments by Google, Microsoft and others in the area of context-based computing and algorithm development, the continual investments in a technique called cyber-foraging, which is the ability to determine a person's location and interests based on the messaging provided by their smartphone or tablet PCs are nascent yet showing very significant potential (Gaddah, Kunz, 2003). In conjunction with these technologies is the continued reliance on Global Positioning Systems (GPS) to determine relative location of smartphones or tablet PCs and interlink them with local Web servers that have potentially relevant information (Satyanarayanan, 2001). Of the many technologies used for defining relative location of mobile devices to Web and cyber-foraging-based servers, the most reliable to date has been Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) (Welbourne, Balazinska, Borriello, Brunette, 2007). RFID has also emerged as the most reliable and secured technology to build middleware components of an enterprise-wide mobile platform on (Gaddah, Kunz, 2003). Middleware is software that unites the operating systems running the variety of diverse legacy and 3rd party systems enterprises rely on for successfully running their businesses on the one hand, and the application layer of the mobile software that users actually see on their systems. Based on the analysis completed for this study, middleware is a critical component for the overall performance of any mobile network. In evaluating the role of mobility in general and specifically the technologies needed to enable it on a global scale, the need for capturing, interpreting and providing insights in real-time back to mobile devices is critical. One of the most successful approaches for accomplishing this has been developed by Nokia, which uses a cyber-foraging technology that defines relative location of a smartphone or mobile device, also capturing its characteristics and the interests of the owner (Gaddah, Kunz, 2003). Cyber-foraging seeks to capture, classify, aggregate response to and then selectively publish content of interest from localized servers back to a mobile device, all transparently and in real-time to the user. This study evaluates how much more effective users of mobile devices are when the have access to the data they need, both from a personal and professional standpoint (Bernoff, Li, 2008). There has been five years of analysis completed on how to use cyber-foraging to streamline complex selling and services tasks throughout enterprises using this technology (Emmerich, 2007). Middleware's role in the future of mobility enterprise application development and its pervasive adoption is well-documented and known, and will continue to accelerate given the interest in this area by venture capitalists globally (Blair, Coulson, Grace, 2004). This analysis evaluates the advances made in Cloud-based middleware development and its use in enterprise-wide and metro-based network architectures. The third factor this that of usability, an area that has continually be a weakness in the development of mobile-based operating systems and applications. Smaller and lower-resolution screens have made even the simplest applications difficult to use over time. There are significant implications for how the future of mobility will progress based on the development and fine-tuning of operating systems on the usability dimension. The adoption of devices based on operating system is also included in this analysis, as the impact of design and usability standards has an immediate impact on customer adoption and long-term usability. The operating systems including Apple iOS, Google Android and Microsoft Windows and others are included in the analysis. This study has determined that the greater the level of robustness in middleware the higher the level of cross-platform integration support and stability of legacy applications over time (Gaddah, Kunz, 2003). The last section of this analysis includes an assessment of the security aspects of mobility strategies and devices, including the potential of hackers to completely overtake a mobile device and capture al personal data on it. The impact of middleware on the security and stability of any mobility network is evident in how effective Apple has been in creating enterprise-level options for enterprise IT departments to immediately wipe the contents clean off of any iPhone or Ipad that may have confidential data stored on it after it has been lost or stolen (Zhang, Gao, Jacobsen, 2005). This advanced level of functionality is attained through the use of middleware functions and support.
Research Paper Doctorate
Pedagogic Grammar, Written and Spoken
The objective of this work is to give an analytical account of the key concepts and issues in Pedagogic Grammar and Written and Spoken Discourse for the English Language by writing a detailed analysis of selected texts…