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Arts
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The arts encompass a broad range of human creative expression, including visual art, music, theatre, cinema, and architecture. Students across disciplines — from art history and cultural studies to political science and education — are asked to write about the arts because the field raises fundamental questions about how societies represent, critique, and understand themselves. Papers on this topic explore everything from the patronage systems of the Renaissance, as seen in the role of the Medici family, to the development of European art music within westernization movements, making it a subject with deep historical and cross-cultural dimensions.

The papers archived here reflect a wide variety of approaches. Historical and biographical analysis appears frequently, with studies of individual artists such as Jacob van Ruisdael and Toulouse-Lautrec grounding broader arguments in specific careers and movements. Formal analysis is another common method, asking writers to examine compositional and structural elements within a single work. Other papers take a policy angle, such as arguments surrounding the National Endowment for the Arts, while still others use cultural criticism to connect artistic production to social forces — linking cinema's early development between 1900 and 1929 to shifting public life, or examining Harold Pinter's theatre in relation to Aristotelian dramatic conventions.

A strong essay on the arts begins with a clearly scoped thesis that moves beyond simple description to make an arguable claim about meaning, influence, or value. Evidence drawn from close formal observation, historical context, or documented cultural impact tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating art as mere illustration of a social trend rather than analyzing it on its own terms as a constructed, deliberate object worthy of sustained critical attention.

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Paper Undergraduate
Dual task interference in cognitive performance
I have witnessed first hand just how limiting dual-task interference is, and how it results in a longer time to complete tasks (oftentimes with less efficacy than completing just one. There is a host of empirical evidence that validates these findings as well. A bottleneck effect occurs, wherein there is a delay in the completion of the task.
Research Paper Doctorate
Arts Propel: a framework for arts education and student assessment
¶ … conceived by educational and cognition psychologist Howard Gardner
Research Paper Doctorate
Russian Constructivism: Art, Revolution, and Design
Russian Constructivism artistic and architectural movement arose in Russia after the Revolution of 1917. The Revolution set the stage for one of the most remarkable transformations of artistic theory in the history of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Constructivism in the classroom
As long as there were people asking each other questions, we have had constructivist classrooms. Constructivism, the study of learning, is about how we all make sense of our world, and that really hasn't changed."
Paper Doctorate
Performing Arts in the Age of Digital Reproduction
While some may believe we are close to achieving the purest art form that technology has to offer, I see it another way. Understanding the differences between live performance and a recorded performance are often…
Paper Doctorate
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SLIDES FOR A PRESENTATION OF HUMANTIES AND NURSING: CHRONIC AND TERMINAL CARE ISSUES PRESENTED IN ALICE MUNRO'S "THE DAY OF THE BUTTERFLY," BELLE & SEBASTIAN'S "IT COULD HAVE BEEN A BRILLIANT CAREER," AND TONY KUSHNER'S…
Paper Masters
Upon the Way Imagination Interact With Historical Elements in Those Poems
¶ … patterns in literary forms allows the opportunity for reading skills to grow. The subtle interplay between imagination and historical events, captured literally, provides the basis for fine art.
Paper Undergraduate
Asperger Syndrome: Symptoms, Causes and Effects Symptoms
Hang Asperger, a pediatrician, researched on Asperger syndrome but Lorna Wing, a psychiatrist and physician, was the one who familiarized the world with Asperger syndrome (Lyons, Fitzgerald, & Fitzgerald, 2005). In 1994, Asperger researched on four children who were unable to interact socially due to their lack of nonverbal communication skills. He called this condition "Autistic psychopathy". But in 1981, Dr. Wing published some case studies of children with similar symptoms. She was the one who called it "Asperger's syndrome". The term was added to world Health Organization's diagnostic manual in 1992, although it was equated with highly functioning autism (National Institute of Neurological Disorder and Stroke, 2012).
Paper Doctorate
Working disciplines and their organizational contexts
This essay is a commentary on the fragmented nature of educational institutions. The scientific discipline of physics is used to highlight this point. Personal commentary is used to develop an argument against institutional educational fragmentation to contextualize the status quo as it relates to multidisciplinary research methods and procedures. Ultimately the essay takes a positive position on cooperation.
Research Paper Doctorate
Alice Walker: Pioneer of Womanism in African-American Literature
African-American Literature -- Alice Walker