Critical thinking concepts and applications
This paper is about critical thinking. It is the analysis of an article about critical thinking. The article is examined for the quality of its methodology, its research design, the research outcomes, measurement and whether the findings were outlined in the introduction. The article was found to be of generally good quality but with some faults in the population – solutions are offered.
The CSI effect: evaluating television's influence on jury expectations in forensics
It has long been suspected that the scenes, stories and situations people are exposed to through the medium of television can eventually distort their view of reality. Phenomena such as the desensitization to violence exhibited by children who watch hours of cartoon combat daily, or the shifting sense of body image experienced by women who only see slim, attractive models on screen serve to confirm the suspicion that television can alter one’s perception of the real world. Although these effects are undoubtedly disconcerting on a personal level, another consequence of televised media’s pervasiveness in modern society has recently emerged, and with it a series of serious implications for the criminal justice system. Dubbed the “CSI Effect” by increasingly incredulous prosecuting attorneys across America, a disturbing trend has developed within courtrooms in all corners of the country. According to proponents of the CSI Effect, Americans serving as jurors in criminal proceedings – having grown accustomed to the neatly presented, incredibly thorough, and utterly convincing forensic evidence presented in every 60-minute broadcast of wildly popular TV series like CSI: Crime Scene Investigation – are now demanding the same level of exacting precision and overwhelming evidence during actual trials. As described by Michael Toomin, an experienced judge with the Cook County Criminal Court in Chicago, Illinois, today’s juries are increasingly “asking where’s the DNA, where’s the fingerprints? … (and) the TV dramatizations have had an eye-opening effect. Some [jurors] have come to anticipate and expect that kind of evidence” (McRoberts, Mills & Possley, 2005). By examining the prevailing scholarly literature on the subject of the CSI Effect, while also reviewing actual instances in which this phenomenon is believed to have influenced a jury’s verdict, an informed and objective stance on the impact of this trend can be properly developed.
Native Americans in Public Schools
This is a short overview of the short story Indian Education by Sherman Alexie. the author tells a story in which the stereotypes that people acquire, simply on the basis of their ethnicity, stifle their educational opportunities and result in Native American students on the reservation to get left behind. In the story, the education the Indian children receive is second-rate, to say the least. In the story’s depiction of the second grade, it portrays how the second grade students are treated unequally even at a young age.
Research Paper
Undergraduate
Comparative analysis of Hungary and Columbia
The study investigates whether it is profitable to use technical analysis for the Columbia capital market. Based on the technical trading rules, the paper argues that the technical analysis has a predictive power to determine the profitability of Columbia financial market. However, the study recommends that traders should estimate the transaction costs and use our system when the transaction costs are very small.