Initial Call

Prior to beginning work on this discussion, please read Chapters 3, 4, and 17 in DSM-5 Made Easy: The Clinician’s Guide to Diagnosis; Case 20 from Case Studies in Abnormal Psychology; and Chapter 1 in Psychopathology: History, Diagnosis, and Empirical Foundations. It is recommended that you read Chapter 1 in Turning Points in Dynamic Psychotherapy: Initial Assessment, Boundaries, Money, Disruptions and Suicidal Crises.

For this discussion, you will choose a case study included in Case Studies in Abnormal Psychology.

 

In your initial post, you will take on the persona of the patient from the case study you have chosen in order to create an initial call to a mental health professional from the patient’s point of view. In order to create your initial call, evaluate the symptoms and presenting problems from the case study, and then determine how the patient would approach the first call.

Create a document that includes a transcript of a call from the patient’s point of view based on the information in the case study including basic personal information and reasons for seeking out psychotherapy. The call may be no more than 5 minutes in length. Once you have created your transcript you will create a screencast recording of the transcript using the patient’s voice. Based on the information from the case study, consider the following questions as you create your recording:

· What would the patient say?

· What tone of voice might he or she use?

· How fast would the patient speak?

· Would the message be understandable (e.g., would it be muffled, circumstantial, tangential, rambling, mumbled, pressured, etc.)?

You may use any screencasting software you choose. Quick-Start Guides are available Screencast-O-Matic (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. for your convenience. Once you have created your screencast, include the link and the name of the case study you chose in your initial post and attach your transcript document prior to submitting it.

Resources:

Gorenstein, E., & Comer, J. (2015). Case studies in abnormal psychology (2nd ed.). New York, NY: Worth Publishers. ISBN: 9780716772736

Morrison, J. (2014). DSM-5 made easy: The clinician’s guide to diagnosis. New York, NY: The Guilford Press.

Craighead, W. E., Miklowitz, D. J., & Craighead, L. W. (2013). Psychopathology: History, diagnosis, and empirical foundations (2nd ed.). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. Retrieved from http://www.ebrary.com

Akhtar, S. (2009). Turning points in dynamic psychotherapy: Initial assessment, boundaries, money, disruptions and suicidal crises. London, England: Karnac Books. Retrieved from http://www.ebrary.com

im Gunn And A Leaky Shower: Welcome To My Life Little Guy”

For this assignment, you will be writing a response to the essay you selected for your Week 2 Outline. The purpose of a draft is to give your instructor a good sense of your organizational writing skills so he/she can examine your use of the strategies of basic argumentation and critical response and provide you with feedback you can incorporate in your Final Essay.

In your paper,

  • Expand upon your prewriting from the discussion forums (if applicable) by providing specific details about the essay you selected and the topic that it explores.
  • Show the steps of the writing process by developing the Week 2 Outline into a workable rough draft.
  • Compose a clear argument in response to the selected essay. Support your response with examples and at least one quote and one paraphrase (a total of two citations) from the essay you selected.
  • State specific details about the reading you selected, the topic that it explores, and your critical response to that topic.
  • Utilize appropriate academic writing tone, style, and citation format as well as correct grammar, spelling, and sentence mechanics.
  • Organize the essay with an introduction, a thesis, support paragraphs, and a conclusion.

The Critical Response Essay – Rough Draft

 

***Please see attached assignments as this shows the progress in order to complete this assignment. Please use references and add one reference.

PressReader – The Washington Post: 2015-01-08 – Tim Gunn and a …

The Family Crucible

Theres a book (The Family Crucible) but i have found alot of info on the internet with this essay. need help getting it together with ZERO plagerism

Parenting Dynamics – The Family Crucible – Brice Family

1,050- to 1,300-word paper describing the parenting dynamics in the Brice family. Include the following information:

Describe how Carolyn and David fit in terms of authoritarian, authoritative, and permissive forms of parenting. (from the notes)

Explain why you placed them in the category you did.

Explain the attachment status of each member of the family as you perceive them.

•Describe how these attachments affect their relationships with other family members.

•Describe how parenting and attachment styles affect therapy.

•Determine what approach you would use as their therapist to address the parenting issues

Psychology homework help

You were introduced to a family in the structural family therapy demonstration video in this unit’s study (linked in Resources). Use the information about the family from the session you watched as your guide, and keep in mind what you read in each text (chapter 10) about goal development and treatment planning. Then, complete the following: (300 words or more)

  • 1. Identify the presenting problem.
  • 2. Devise three specific goals for this family based on the information from the demonstration. Include one goal addressing each of the early, middle, and late phases of treatment.
  • 3. Clearly and thoroughly discuss how you arrived at these goals and how these goals align with the structural family therapy model.

 

Based on what you learned about the client family from the demonstration video (linked in Resources), imagine you are the therapist who will see them for their next visit. Identify an intervention from the structural family therapy model that you would apply in the session. In this discussion, briefly describe the intervention, including the following: (300 words or more)

  • Its general purpose and goal.
  • Who and what is the target of the intervention.
  • Some questions that would be used to apply this intervention.
  • The desired outcome of the intervention.
  • The elements that make this intervention systemic in nature.

Use the literature from the unit and any additional literature to support your discussion post. (chapter 7)

Case Study Treatment Plan: The Assessment Process

THE ASSIGNMENT:

 

Case Study Treatment Plan: The Assessment Process

For this assignment, complete the Assessment Process sections of the treatment plan for your course project. This treatment plan is based on the case study you selected for your course project. You can review the case studies in the Case Study Treatment Plan media piece available in the resources.

The Assessment Process sections of the treatment plan that you will complete for this assignment consist of the following:

  • Identifying information.
  • Presenting problem.
  • Previous treatments.
  • Strengths, weaknesses, and social support systems.
  • Assessment.
  • Diagnosis.
  • References.

The sections of the treatment plan you submit for this assignment should be 4–5 pages in length, with a minimum of two references from current articles in the professional literature in counseling. Be sure to cite your references in current APA format.

To assist you in completing this assignment, please use the Case Study Treatment Plan Template (available in the resources) to organize your work. Each section of the template includes a description of the type of information you must include. You should type your paper directly into this template, save it as a Word document with your name, and then submit it to the assignment area.

For additional information, see the course project description.

Submit your paper to Turnitin before you post it to the assignment area so you can catch any areas that are showing up as possible plagiarism.

Note: Your instructor may also use the Writing Feedback Tool to provide feedback on your writing. In the tool, click on the linked resources for helpful writing information.

 

THE CASE STUDY

Oscar is a 19-year-old Hispanic male who is the oldest of 5 children. His family has been farming the same land for 4 generations. Currently they grow vegetables for the regional grocery chain’s produce departments. They live in a rural area of the county. Three generations live in two separate houses on their land. They are fiercely independent and have little to do with people in town, although the family itself is extremely close knit.

Oscar is currently a freshman at the same college his father attended, majoring in agriculture. When he came home for spring break, his parents noticed significant changes in his appearance. He had lost weight, looked haggard, wasn’t sleeping and seemed irritable and argumentative. He told his parents that he did not want to return to college after the break. He went on to say that his roommate had placed cameras in the room so he could record everything Oscar did while the roommate was absent. His grades were poor and he expressed that he believed his instructors were prejudiced against him. This poor performance was in stark contrast to his performance in high school, where he was in the top 10% of his class. Within days of coming home he had stopped showering and began wearing multiple layers of clothes (3 pairs of jeans and 4 t-shirts). He became essentially non-communicative, responding to questions with one-word answers and not initiating conversation. Oscar seemed unhappy or irritable whenever he encountered a member of his family and began spending all his time in his room. He even refused to talk with his youngest brother, with whom he had always been close. He did not take meals with his family, a long-standing tradition in his family, and left his room only in the middle of the night. He could then be heard opening drawers in the kitchen, going into his siblings’ rooms and leaving the house for long periods of time.

The family (parents and grandparents) became very disturbed and consulted their priest. The priest recommended that the parents take Oscar to see a fellow parishioner who is also a counselor. This counselor was also disturbed with Oscar’s presentation and recommended hospitalization. The family was very reluctant, but eventually agreed. By the time they got to the hospital, Oscar was essentially non-communicative, only nodding or shaking his head in response to direct questions.

The parents provided history that indicated Oscar had been a good student in high school and had participated in the school’s FFA club. He has always wanted to carry on the family tradition of farming. He did not have many friends, but the family attributed that to their living in the country.

The psychiatrist diagnosed Oscar with major depressive disorder, single episode, severe with psychotic features and prescribed anti-depressants. He was released three weeks later, with some improvement. One week later he was readmitted, with the same presentation he had at the previous admission. This time, though, his father reported that he had found a cache of knives in the barn, some from the house, some from the grandparent’s house and some from the barn itself. When he asked Oscar about them, Oscar responded that he needed them to protect himself from attacks. When his father asked from whom, Oscar responded that he had seen one of his college professors in the field of broccoli. That same day, Oscar’s mother found notes stuffed between Oscar’s mattress and box springs in Oscar’s handwriting. The content of them was Oscar arguing with someone about killing his younger siblings. One side did not want to do it and begged to not have to; the other side ordered the killings, saying that was the only way to keep them safe. In light of these two events, both parents were afraid for Oscar to remain at the house. Oscar swore that he would never hurt any of his family and said that was why he had been keeping away from them. His parents could not be sure that no harm would come and were unable to watch Oscar day and night. Therefore, they readmitted him to the hospital.

During this admission, Oscar was more forthcoming with his treatment team. Once they had this additional information, the team realized that Oscar’s initial diagnosis had been wrong. They began a re-assessment. Oscar acknowledged that the problems began about the time of the new semester. He was unable to complete his school work, as he was “consumed” with the need to follow instructions that were being given to him. These instructions actually began with a buzzing in his head, which quickly evolved into specific directions. When pressed, he acknowledged that he did not know who was giving him the directions, though he sometimes thought it might be Jesus. These instructions were for him to keep a log of every time he heard a door close on his hallway in the dorm. Oscar came to believe that doing this was the only way to keep his family safe from dark angels. Oscar tried to keep these voices quiet by smoking marijuana on a daily basis. While this helped in the short term, it also made it more difficult for him to complete any of his school work. By the time for spring break, the messages had begun to change. He was no longer able to keep his family safe by keeping a list; the voices told him he would have to kill them. Oscar knew that he did not want to kill his family. He could also not avoid going home for spring break. Therefore, he devised the plan to isolate himself.

Once the family recovered from their initial shock and as Oscar began to show some improvement with his new, anti-psychotic, medication, his parents and grandparents wanted to take him home to the farm. They believed that life on the farm, being outside and with hard, physical labor would cure Oscar. Finally, Oscar agreed to tell them what has been happening with him. At that point, the family agreed to residential treatment for Oscar. When asked if anyone else in the family has ever had symptoms like this, the grandfather acknowledged that he had a brother (Oscar’s uncle) who had religious visions. This brother left the family and became a monk. Later the family heard that he had died under mysterious circumstances. One of the other monks at the monastery told Oscar’s grandfather that his brother had died from engaging in a prolonged fast. The family is very lucky on two counts: 1) they have their medical insurance through the farmer’s co-op and it includes coverage for residential treatment for up to a year, and 2) this hospital has a residential treatment unit for late adolescents and young adults. You are working as a counselor at the Residential Treatment facility where Oscar has been placed. He will be here for a minimum of 6 months and as long as one year. Professional staff at this facility includes 3 counselors, an addictions counselor, a social worker (currently on maternity leave), a psychologist, and 2 nurses on every shift. Oscar’s psychiatrist is also on staff and will continue to follow his care.

The social worker usually coordinates clients’ treatment plans; however she is currently away on maternity leave so you will be the lead therapist who is coordinating Oscar’s treatment during the next 45 days. Once she returns, you will collaborate with her for developing Oscar’s post-residential treatment and resources for him and his family.

THE TEMPLATE FOR THE ASSIGNMENT IS ATTACHED

Counseling Theory- Psychoanalytic Theory

I need this assignment back by Jan 19, 2018 Friday 10am EDT . Must have two references

 

  • The psychoanalytic approach emphasizes the importance of early childhood development and events.  Do you find that current problems are mostly rooted in early childhood events or influences?  To what extent do you believe people can resolve their adult problems that stem from childhood without exploring past events?  When you apply this basic psychoanalytic concept specifically to yourself, what connections between your own past and present are you aware?

Psych 635 Ethics In Condiditoning Research

Complete Parts 1 and 2 for this assignment.

Part 1

Watch “Pavlov’s Experiments on Dogs” and “Pavlov’s Experiments on Children” in the Week Two Electronic Reserve Readings.

Part 2

Prepare a research proposal for one of Pavlov’s research experiments involving children, adjusting it for current principles of ethical guidelines

  • Read the article ““The General Ethical Principles of Psychologists”
  • Identify one of the ethical violations and propose an alternative approach that would meet current ethical standards.

Format your paper consistent with APA guidelines.

Analyse TCP Data traffic

Sydney Institute of Higher Education Pty Ltd | ABN 49 618 742 813
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Individual ASSIGNMENT COVERSHEET
Unit of Study: MIT504 Networking
Assignment Title: Analyse TCP Data traffic
Semester and Year: S3, 2023
Lecturer Name: Dr. Zawar Shah
DECLARATION
The work contained in this assignment is my own work and has not been copied from other sources or been previously submitted, unless otherwise specifically acknowledged.
I understand that failure to comply can lead to severe penalties.
Student ID: ___________________________________
Student Name: _________________________________________
Date Submitted: ____dd____mm____yy
Signed: ____________________ Date: ____dd____mm____yy
Sydney Institute of Higher Education Pty Ltd | ABN 49 618 742 813
TEQSA Provider ID PRV14323 | CRICOS Provider Code 03866C
Assignment Details and Submission Guidelines
Unit Code
MIT504
Unit Title
Networking
Assessment Type
Individual written report (Assignment 3)
Assessment Title
Analyse TCP Data Traffic
Purpose of the assessment (with ULO Mapping)
After successful completion of this assignment, students should be able to:

Apply the core concepts of computer networks to the design of an architecture.

Evaluate networking scenarios and propose solutions.

Design small to medium sized switching and routing network.
Weight
20% of the total marks
Total Marks
100
Word limit
1500 words
Due Date
11:59 pm on Friday 5 January 2024
Submission Guidelines

All work must be submitted on the moodle by the due date along with a completed Assignment Cover Page.

The assignment must be in MS Word format, 1.5 spacing, 11-pt Calibri (Body) font and 2 cm margins on all four sides of your page with appropriate section headings.

Wireshark trace file is also needed along with the word file.

Both files are to be put in a zip folder and submitted on the moodle.
Extension

If an extension of time to submit work is required, a Special Consideration Application must be submitted directly to the School’s Administration Officer, on academic reception level.
Academic Misconduct

Academic Misconduct is a serious offence. Depending on the seriousness of the case, penalties can vary from a written warning or zero marks to exclusion from the course or rescinding the degree.
Sydney Institute of Higher Education Pty Ltd | ABN 49 618 742 813
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Assignment Requirements
• In this assessment, you are required to capture 6 screenshots and answer 10 questions. Each screenshot carries 5 marks, and each question carries 7 marks. They make up a total of 100 marks. All screenshots must show date and time from the task bar.
• Marks will be subject to quality of screenshots and answers to questions.
• Upon completion, zip both files (your word file and capture trace in Wireshark) and upload it on the moodle.
• Assessment_1_YourName_YourID.docx (with cover sheet )
• TCP-Trace-YourStudentID.pcap
• Zero mark if screenshots do not show date and time from the computer task bar.
• Zero marks if you do not submit your Wireshark capture trace file.
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Assignment
In this assignment, we will investigate the behaviour of the celebrated TCP protocol in detail. We’ll do so by analysing a trace of the TCP segments sent and received in transferring a 150KB file (containing the text of Lewis Carrol’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland) from your computer to a remote server. We’ll study TCP’s use of sequence and acknowledgement numbers for providing reliable data transfer; we’ll see TCP’s congestion control algorithm – slow start and congestion avoidance – in action; and we’ll look at TCP’s receiver-advertised flow control mechanism. We’ll also briefly consider TCP connection setup and we’ll investigate the performance (throughput and round-trip time) of the TCP connection between your computer and the server.
1. Capturing a bulk TCP transfer from your computer to a remote server
Before beginning our exploration of TCP, we’ll need to use Wireshark to obtain a packet trace of the TCP transfer of a file from your computer to a remote server. You’ll do so by accessing a Web page that will allow you to enter the name of a file stored on your computer (which contains the ASCII text of Alice in Wonderland), and then transfer the file to a Web server using the HTTP POST method (see the lecture slides or section 2.2.3 of your text book). We’re using the POST method rather than the GET method as we’d like to transfer a large amount of data from your computer to another computer. Of course, we’ll be running Wireshark during this time to obtain the trace of the TCP segments sent and received from your computer.
Do the following:

In command line type ipconfig /all Take a screen shot (1)

Start up your web browser. Go the http://gaia.cs.umass.edu/wireshark-labs/alice.txt and retrieve a copy of Alice in Wonderland. Store this file somewhere on your computer.

Next go to http://gaia.cs.umass.edu/wireshark-labs/TCP-wireshark-file1.html.

You should see a screen that looks like:

Use the Browse button in this form to enter the name of the file (full path name) on your computer containing Alice.txt (or do so manually). Don’t yet press the “Upload alice.txt file” button.

Now start up Wireshark and begin packet capture (Capture->Start) and then press OK on the Wireshark Packet Capture Options screen (we’ll not need to select any options here).
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Returning to your browser, press the “Upload alice.txt file” button to upload the file to the gaia.cs.umass.edu server. Once the file has been uploaded, a short congratulations message will be displayed in your browser window.

Stop Wireshark packet capture. Take a screen shot (2) .Your Wireshark window should look similar to the window shown below.

Save the capture file as TCP-Trace-YourStudentID.pcap
2. A first look at the captured trace
Before analysing the behaviour of the TCP connection in detail, let’s take a high level view of the trace.

First, filter the packets displayed in the Wireshark window by entering “tcp” (lowercase, no quotes, and don’t forget to press return after entering!) into the display filter specification window towards the top of the Wireshark window.
What you should see is series of TCP and HTTP messages between your computer and gaia.cs.umass.edu. You should see the initial three-way handshake containing a SYN message. You should see an HTTP POST message. Depending on the version of Wireshark you are using, you might see a series of “HTTP Continuation” messages being sent from your computer to gaia.cs.umass.edu. Recall from our discussion in the earlier HTTP Wireshark lab, that is no such thing as an HTTP Continuation message – this is Wireshark’s way of indicating that there are multiple TCP segments being used to carry a single HTTP message. In more recent versions of Wireshark, you’ll see “[TCP segment of a reassembled PDU]” in the Info column of the Wireshark display to indicate that this TCP segment contained data that belonged to an upper layer protocol message (in our case here, HTTP).
You should also see TCP ACK segments being returned from gaia.cs.umass.edu to your computer. Take a screen shot(3).
Answer the following questions, by opening the Wireshark captured packet file TCP-Trace-YourStudentID).pcap Whenever possible, when answering a question you should hand in a printout of the packet(s) within the trace that
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you used to answer the question asked. Annotate the printout1 to explain your answer. To print a packet, use File->Print, choose Selected packet only, choose Packet summary line, and select the minimum amount of packet detail that you need to answer the question.
1.
What is the IP address and TCP port number used by the client computer (source) that is transferring the file to gaia.cs.umass.edu? To answer this question, it’s probably easiest to select an HTTP message and explore the details of the TCP packet used to carry this HTTP message, using the “details of the selected packet header window” .
2.
What is the IP address of gaia.cs.umass.edu? On what port number is it sending and receiving TCP segments for this connection?
3.
What is the captured packet number when the gaia.cs.umass.edu reply to your computer?
Since this lab is about TCP rather than HTTP, let’s change Wireshark’s “listing of captured packets” window so that it shows information about the TCP segments containing the HTTP messages, rather than about the HTTP messages. To have Wireshark do this, select Analyze->Enabled Protocols. Then uncheck the HTTP box and select OK. You should now see a Wireshark window that looks like:
This is what we’re looking for – a series of TCP segments sent between your computer and gaia.cs.umass.edu. We will use the packet trace that you have captured (and/or the packet trace TCP-Trace-YourStudentID.pcap in to study TCP behaviour in the rest of this lab.
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3. TCP Basics
Answer the following questions for the TCP segments:
4.
What is the sequence number of the TCP SYN segment that is used to initiate the TCP connection between the client computer and gaia.cs.umass.edu? What is it in the segment that identifies the segment as a SYN segment?
5.
What is the sequence number of the SYNACK segment sent by gaia.cs.umass.edu to the client computer in reply to the SYN? What is the value of the Acknowledgement field in the SYNACK segment? How did gaia.cs.umass.edu determine that value? What is it in the segment that identifies the segment as a SYNACK segment?
6.
What is the sequence number of the TCP segment containing the HTTP POST command? Note that in order to find the POST command, you’ll need to dig into the packet content field at the bottom of the Wireshark window, looking for a segment with a “POST” within its DATA field.
7.
Consider the TCP segment containing the HTTP POST as the first segment in the TCP connection. What are the sequence numbers of the first six segments in the TCP connection (including the segment containing the HTTP POST)?
a.
At what time was each segment sent? When was the ACK for each segment received? Given the difference between when each TCP segment was sent, and when its acknowledgement was received, what is the RTT value for each of the six segments?
b.
What is the EstimatedRTT value (see lecture slides of week 5 or see chapter 3 of your textbook) after the receipt of each ACK? Assume that the value of the EstimatedRTT is equal to the measured RTT for the first segment, and then is computed using the EstimatedRTT (see the equation in week 5 lecture slides or see chapter 3 of your textbook) for all subsequent segments.
Note: Wireshark has a nice feature that allows you to plot the RTT for each of the TCP segments sent. Select a TCP segment in the “listing of captured packets” window that is being sent from the client to the gaia.cs.umass.edu server. Then select: Statistics->TCP Stream Graph->Round Trip Time Graph.
8.
What is the length of each of the first six TCP segments? Take a screen shot (4)
9.
What is the minimum amount of available buffer space advertised at the received for the entire trace? Does the lack of receiver buffer space ever throttle the sender? Take a screen shot (5)
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4. TCP Congestion Control in Action
Let’s now examine the amount of data sent per unit time from the client to the server. Rather than (tediously!) calculating this from the raw data in the Wireshark window, we’ll use one of Wireshark’s TCP graphing utilities – Time-Sequence-Graph(Stevens) – to plot out data.

Select a TCP segment in the Wireshark’s “listing of captured-packets” window. Then select the menu : Statistics->TCP Stream Graph-> Time-Sequence-Graph(Stevens). You should see a plot that looks similar to the following plot, which was created from the captured packets in the packet trace: Take a screen shot (6)
Here, each dot represents a TCP segment sent, plotting the sequence number of the segment versus the time at which it was sent. Note that a set of dots stacked above each other represents a series of packets that were sent back-to-back by the sender.
Answer the following question for the TCP segments the packet trace TCP-Trace-YourStudentID.pcap :
10.
Use the Time-Sequence-Graph(Stevens) plotting tool to view the sequence number versus time plot of segments being sent from the client to the gaia.cs.umass.edu server.
a.
Can you identify where TCP’s slowstart phase begins and ends, and where congestion avoidance takes over?.
End of Assignment

Mental Health in college students – Anxiety

Paper of around 5 pages

Length: 1,100-1,300 words, not including the citation.

Research topic: Mental Health in college students – Anxiety

 

A total of 4 sources related to Mental Health in College Students.
-1 file uploaded has 2 sources talking about Anxiety in students, missing 2 other sources to use.
-2 samples to use as a guide.
-Please follow instructions/guideline file of the job in the CONTENT part explaining all 6 parts to do.
-Is for college, so I need well presented job.

 

Lesson Plan 4

Building on Lesson Plan Parts 1, 2, and 3, write a 4-6 page paper in which you:

  1. Describe and explain reasons for the selection of three (3) oral questioning strategies and align each with your objectives and your students.
  2. Recommend and describe three (3) methods a teacher can use to demonstrate culturally responsive questioning with culturally and linguistically diverse students.
  3. Recommend and explain three (3) methods you will use for assessing students on the content of your unit and align each with your objectives and students. Include one (1) type of performance assessment (e.g., project or portfolio).
  4. Analyze and discuss the issues, benefits, and recommendations involved in preparing students for standardized tests. Explain your views and your recommendations regarding preparing students for standardized tests.
  5. Use at least five (5) scholarly sources published within the last ten (10) years to support your views and recommendations.