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Core Values
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Core values are the foundational principles that guide behavior, decision-making, and identity at both individual and organizational levels. This topic appears across a wide range of disciplines, including business management, social work, nursing, education, and ethics. Students engage with it in courses on strategic planning, organizational behavior, professional development, and applied ethics. What makes it academically interesting is the tension between personal values and institutional ones — how individuals align their own beliefs with the communities and organizations they belong to, and what happens when those systems come into conflict. Frameworks around values-driven organizations and ethical codes give students structured ways to analyze these dynamics.

The papers archived on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some are personal and reflective, such as personal mission statements and application essays that ask students to articulate their own goals and guiding principles. Others are analytical, comparing institutional core values against ethical standards — for instance, examining how a university's stated values align with established codes of ethics. Organizational and strategic angles also appear frequently, with essays exploring how core values shape strategic planning, support community-focused missions, and drive organizational change initiatives. Catholic schools in Australia and military social work contexts show that cross-sector and cross-cultural comparisons are equally common.

A strong essay on core values needs a clear, arguable thesis rather than a simple list of principles. Evidence drawn from specific organizational documents, ethical frameworks, or professional codes carries the most weight. Whether the essay is reflective or analytical, grounding abstract values in concrete examples — real policies, mission statements, or observable outcomes — gives the argument substance. The most common pitfall is treating core values as inherently positive without critically examining whether they are consistently practiced or effectively measured.

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Paper Undergraduate
Business Entry Strategy and Ethics Plan for Kava Island
Company Plan Part I: "How to Be, or Not to Be, in Kava"
Essay Doctorate
Cultural Differences and Negotiation Chosen Country: Japan
Chosen Country: Japan Japanese culture is full of many traditional values. For instance, family is tremendously important to the Japanese and traditional gender roles are commonly upheld (Saito et al., 2004). For example, the father is generally the breadwinner and the mother is often a full-time homemaker who takes care of the children (Heapy, 2012). Japanese society is extremely structured and orbits around a conception of hierarchy and people's roles; it's not uncommon for people to be addressed in terms of the position they hold (Heapy, 2012). The culture values things like duty, loyalty, and obligation; in fact the Japanese view the biggest obligation as the one that one carries towards one's parents (Heapy, 2012).
Research Paper Doctorate
FDR's Far Eastern policy toward Japan: strengths, weaknesses, and inevitability
American involvement in armed conflict is a messy topic; since the Civil War the nation has a history of being divided about wars. Today, many Americans question our nation's involvement in the Middle East; in the 1960s…
Paper Doctorate
Elder Willis\' 1936 Motion Picture
Elder Willis' 1936 motion picture Song of Freedom generated much controversy at the time when it was first issued. The masses had trouble accepting the concept of an African individual behaving similarly to a white…
Paper Undergraduate
Catholic schools in Australia
While secularism may be at times undermining the core values of a Catholic school, the school remains the hub of a faith community. One role of the school is to create a community of faith within its grounds, by…
Paper Undergraduate
BMW Organizational Culture, Leadership, and Job Satisfaction
The culture of BMW AG is one that combines both transformational and transaction-based leadership styles in an attempt o create an optimal balance of vision and discipline so innovation can be maintained.
Research Paper Undergraduate
AES Cor the Corporate Culture
The corporate culture at AES is one of its most important and enduring aspects. Indeed, it is this culture that helped the company move through its restructuring process. Before the restructuring process, the company…
Essay Doctorate
AES Vision Social Responsibility | AES\'s Vision
Social responsibility is one of the corporate values at AES (others being fun, fairness and integrity). The founders of the company Roger Sant and Dennis W. Bakke were intent on providing clean, safe and reliable…
Research Paper Doctorate
Org Behavior Forces Organizational Behavior
Organizational Behavior Forces Paper -- External and Internal Forces
Essay Doctorate
Nursing in 2021: Trends, Challenges, and Future Roles
Over the next decade, and for years to come afterwards, the expected growth in the older adult population will have a significant impact on the healthcare system. The baby boom generation, individuals born between 1946…