A writing space for Olivia Cronk's English 102 classes:
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Is violence a successful tool in social change? • Violence • Social Change • Good Violence • Government change • Social reform
Crowe, Charles. "Racial Violence and Social Reform - Origins of the Atlanta Riot of 1906." The Journal of Negro History 53.3 (1968): 234-56. Print.
Examples of United States history where violence may have lead to social reforms in Atlanta.
Robert, Lipsyte. "Brutality: Who needs it?." USA Today n.d.: Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 14 Apr. 2010.
May give me an opposing view and help give argument against supporters of non-violence.
Senchal de la Rocher, Roberta. "Collective Violence as Social Control." Sociological Forum 11.1 (1996): 97-128. Print.
Shows how violence can help a social issue.
TAYLOR, CHARLES. "Violence as the Best Revenge: Fantasies of Dead Nazis." Dissent (00123846) 57.1 (2010): 103-106.Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 14 Apr. 2010.
Examples of how “Hollywood” or modern culture perceives the use of violence.
Martin, Brian. Paths to social change: conventional politics, violence and nonviolence. N.p., 2006. Web. 14 Apr. 2010. .
Explains how violence has been used in order to create social change.
M, Linda. Families, Violence and Social Change. Maidenhead, England: Open University Press, 2006. Print. Book explains how violence and social change interact.
Monti, Daniel J. "Violence as Social Intervention." Journal of Intergroup Relations 9.2 (1981): 31-45. Print. Explains violence is used to cause a social change.
"Pakistan Edges Closer to Banning Domestic Violence." New York Times 7 Apr. 2010. Web. 14 Apr. 2010. . Gives modern day example of how violence causes social issues.
PRIMARY SOURCE Plan to interview a family member who has worked as a Lieutenant in the Colombian Armed forces and how has the country dealt with violence.
RQ: What are the effects humans have on the environment?
Subject Terms
Environment
Nature
Agriculture Industry
Pollution
Habitat
BRODER, JOHN M. "New E.P.A. Scrutiny Is Set for a Chemical in Plastics." Environment. New York Times, 29 Mar. 2010. Web. 12 Apr. 2010. .
This newspaper article will be used to contact the important facts about factories releasing toxics into the environment and they are harmful to both human and animals.
Camacho-Muñoz, M.D., et al. "Presence of pharmaceutically active compounds in Doñana Park (Spain) main watersheds." Journal of Hazardous Materials 177.1-3 (2010): 1159-1162. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 12 Apr. 2010.
This source will be used to let the people know that in Spain, wastewater have been discharged to the Donana bodies water were water is not treated their could be possible affects to the environment.
This magazine article discuss about pollution which deals with human effect the environment causing animals to behave differently.
Foley, Jonathan. "BOUNDARIES FOR A HEALTHY PLANET." Scientific American 302.4 (2010): 54-57. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 12 Apr. 2010.
This source will be used to discuss the effect the human have on the environment during the revolution that cause the expansion of pollution.
Marshall, Andrew R., et al. "The species–area relationship and confounding variables in a threatened monkey community." American Journal of Primatology 72.4 (2010): 325-336. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 12 Apr. 2010.
This source will be used to communicated the interaction between humans and primate habitat and how the human influence the way a primate (monkey lives).
Robbens, Johan, et al. "Eco-, geno- and human toxicology of bio-active nanoparticles for biomedical applications." Toxicology 269.2/3 (2010): 170-181. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 12 Apr. 2010.
This source will be used to discuss the effect human have done to the environment relating to toxics that can affect the human body.
Pollan, Michael. The Botany of Desire: a Plant's-eye View of the World. New York: Random House, 2002. Print.
This book will be use to discuss the interaction between humans and nature (environment).
Yang, Z.F., et al. "Limiting factor analysis and regulation for urban ecosystems—A case study of Ningbo, China." Communications in Nonlinear Science & Numerical Simulation 15.9 (2010): 2701-2709. Academic Search Premier
This will be used to understand the human carrying capacity and how it will effect the amount of resources the environment can provide.
"PR EPA TO BETTER PROTECT PUBLIC HEALTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT FROM ANIMAL FEEDING OPERATIONS." EPA United States Environmental Protection Agency. EPA, 05 Mar. 1998. Web. 12 Apr. 2010. .
This website will be used to discuss the effects the human have on the environment because their are factories in the area where animals are kept and knowing what they do to these animals effect everyone and everything.
"Humans and the Environment." AlbertaSource Websites. Web. 14 Apr. 2010. .
This website will be used to discuss the first human interaction with the environment thousands years ago.
Research Question: How do people cope with Tragic Events?
Subject Terms: Grief Death Death in families Rwanda Death at Universities Tragedy Coping with Tragedy
·Scholarly Journal Forde, Susan, and Carmel Devaney. "Postvention: A Community-based Family Support Initiative and Model of Responding to Tragic Events, Including Suicide." Child Care in Practice 12.1 (2006): 53-61. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 14 Apr. 2010.
Shows how families respond to tragic events and what it takes for someone to try and get over such tragedies.
·Newspaper Article Gary, Mihoces. "Dealing with a player's death." USA Today (n.d.): Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 14 Apr. 2010.
Describes how a mother found it in her to deal with the death of her college football player of a son.
·Newspaper Article ARI L., GOLDMAN. "The World: Dealing With Death; Confronting Grief, Not Burying It." New York Times 07 Sept. 2003: 5. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 14 Apr. 2010.
Psychology urges people to confront their grief rather than bury or ignore it. Religious rituals help provide a regularized outlet for mourners' emotions.
Provides information on how to help children to cope up with the grief following the death of someone close. Children's perception of death; Stages of grief; Abnormal reactions to death; Conveying concepts of death.
·Magazine Article Schneider, Jodi. "COPING WITH A SPOUSE'S DEATH." U.S. News & World Report 134.19 (2003): 58. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 14 Apr. 2010.
Methods for coping with a spouse's death; Depression that sets in when people lose a spouse; Importance of exercise.
·Primary Source Sand, Lisa, Mariann Olsson, and Peter Strang. "Coping Strategies in the Presence of One's Own Impending Death from Cancer." Journal of Pain & Symptom Management 37.1 (2009): 13-22. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 14 Apr. 2010
Twenty patients were interviewed in depth. The patients were enrolled in an advanced hospital-based home care team. The interviews were taped, transcribed and analyzed with a qualitative, hermeneutic interpretative method.
·Book Peck, Rosalie, and Charlotte Stefanics. Learning to Say Goodbye: Dealing with Death and Dying. Muncie, Ind.: Accelerated Development, 1987. Print.
Explains that emotions are normal and natural. Speaks on how to deal with emotions and accepting death.
·Book Cutter, Fred. Coming to Terms with Death: How to Face the Inevitable with Wisdom and Dignity. Chicago: Nelson-Hall, 1977. Print.
It is a helpful book that provides help in coping with the last things before, during and after a death.
·Website Jaffe, Ellen. "Coping with Grief and Loss." Help Guide. Ed. Melinda Smith. N.p., Jan. 2009.
Explains that there is no right or wrong ways to grieve and gives ideas on what to do to cope.
Other than race and class what are other types of discrimination, and how do they affect people?
Subject Terms:
·Race
·Emotions
·Class
·Sexual preferences
·Politicians
·Adults
·Teenagers
·History
1.Karon, Bertram P. Black scars; a rigorous investigation of the effects of discrimination, with an appendix on the southern white. 4th ed.th ed. New York: Springer Pub. Co., 1975. 193-96. Web. 14 Apr. 2010. .
I found this book in the NEIU catalog. I think it will be helpful because it informs you on the effects that discrimination had on African Americans. I am not just focusing on African Americans, but I think it would be a good place to start from. I can form ideas with this.
2.Jackson, Mary A. Policing in a diverse society: another American dilemma. 17th ed. Durham, NC: Carolina academic press, 2006. 165-78. Web. 14 Apr. 2010. .
This book was found on the NEIU catalog also. I feel like this is going to be one of my most important sources. This book goes into detail of all the different things that people can discriminate on. For example: at your work, how you work, age, class, economically, sex, ect.
3.Herszenhorn, David M. "House approves broad protections for gay workers." The New York Times 8 Nov. 2007, new york ed.: 1+. Web. 14 Apr. 2010. .
This newspaper shows an article about a rare thing that you don’t really get to hear too much about. It focuses on gay workers and what they are going through, and also why protection needed to be made. I am also not focusing the attention on gays, but I am focusing on all types of discrimination.
4.Otto, Anna, John Mcwhorter, Deborah Tannen, Tong McEnery, and Lee Siegel. "Why do educated people use bad words?" The New York Times 12 Apr. 2010, new york ed. Web. 14 Apr. 2010. .
This newspaper article is recent, and I wanted to use something that wasn’t just from the past. I wanted to prove that discrimination still exists today. I like that this article shows what the problem is with politicians using discrimination. It’s happening with everyone, and it goes more into just the simple fact of discrimination. This article studies the language of discrimination.
5."Interracial Relations." Teen Ink 12 Aug. 2009: 5 pars. , new york ed.Web. 14 Apr. 2010. .
The interesting thing about this magazine article is that all these articles are written by teenagers. They mostly do it anonymously, and I find it that more interesting. I chose this one about couples that explored all races and their opinion on it. I find it important to find opinions about discrimination from all ages.
6.Bindas, Kenneth J. "Re-remembering a segregated past; race in American memory." History & memory 22.1 (2010): 113-34. , new york ed.America: History & Life. Web. 14 Apr. 2010. .
This journal is a recent one that I found extremely helpful. This journal contained numerous oral histories on some major events that contributed to discrimination, and how it had affected them. I think this will be useful to see what people who are alive today went through back then. It gives you some history along with the present.
7.Metzler, Christopher J. "Barack Obama's faustian bargain and the fight for America's racial soul." Journal of black studies 40.3 (2010): 395-410. America: History & Life. Web. 14 Apr. 2010. .
This was another journal on things that went back to the 1950’s and to the present day. It showed the presidents view on discrimination, and what we need to do to fix it. This also makes me think on adding solutions at the end of my research paper.
8.Dovidio, John F., Agata Gluszek, John S. Melissa, Ruth Ditlmann, and Paul Lagunes. "Understanding bias toward Latinos: Discrimination, dimensions of difference, and expericence of exclusion." Journal of social issues 66.1 (2010): 59-78. Race relations abstracts. Web. 14 Apr. 2010. .
This journal is going to help me get another view on race, and how it affects the race itself. I am not just focusing on Latinos, but once again, this can give me more education on different things. I’m trying to get an understanding from everything.
9.For my primary source I plan on doing an interview with my Aunt. Her name is Heidi Sanchez, and she has experienced discrimination. At one point her roommate wouldn’t allow her black boyfriend in their apartment because of his skin color. My aunt went through struggles with her friend, and eventually moved out because of it.
10.I would like to do two interviews. I think it would really connect with the feeling aspect part of my paper. The second person that I would like to interview is a professor at Northeastern Illinois University. His name is Manuel Cuba, and he is the most amazing person I have ever met. He would be one man who knows a lot about this. He came her in the United States as a foreign exchange student, and was just thrown into our culture. He succeeded, and he inspires Latinos to do so as well. He would be a great help to this paper.
How do people respond to direct orders from their superiors whether they are morally correct or not? Is changing social status a large motivator?
Subject Terms: Morality Education Social Status Ethics Direct Orders Superiors Direct responses to orders Social status changes in America
Brigley, Stephen. "Teach ethics." Education for Primary Care 17.5 (2006): 511-515. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 13 Apr. 2010. The main focus of this article is regarding on the job ethical training of doctors in Great Britain. I thought it would be interesting to compare some of the teaching techniques to those found in the U.S. The article will also be beneficial in describing how individuals are challenged by ethically situations and have to depend on individual values.
Garrod, Andrew. Approaches to Moral Development: New Research and Emerging Themes. New York: Teachers College, 1993. Print. Focuses on moral development of adolescent, young adults and college students. This information can be used to explain how people morals are formed and developed.
Hall, Mimi, and Richard Wolf. "Executive Orders Are Tradition." USA Today 17 Nov. 2008, News sec.: 6a. Academic Search Premier. Web. 13 April 2010. This article describes the executive orders that Barack Obama could have made when he took office as President. This information can be used to describe the ultimate superior’s roles and showcase how quickly orders can be given once authority positions are earned.
Kaminski, Gary E. "Orders Don't Absolve Abusive Soldiers." USA Today 12 May 2004, News sec.: 11a. Academic Search Premier. Web. 13 April 2010.
This article is based on the idea of human rights being abused from orders being followed. This information can be used as examples of, when it is acceptable to disobey orders and realize the negative impact of obeying the command.
Labich, Kenneth, and Ann Sample. "CLASS IN AMERICA." Fortune 129.3 (1994): 114-126. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 13 Apr. 2010. This article gives an overview on the class structure in America and explains how individuals are confused as to where they fit in. I could use this information to explain how social statuses quickly change and how people try to identify themselves in society. I am looking to find a more current article on the same topic.
Milgram, Stanley. "Behavorial Study of Obedience." The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 4th ser. 67.Oct (1963): 371-78. Print. This is a laboratory learning study of negative obedience; I thought it would be useful to describe initial actions produced from orders given. This information could also help to explain the thought process that individuals go through when they are given an order to conduct. Will use observations as a primary source.
Moten, Matthew. The Army Officers' Professional Ethic: Past, Present, and Future. Carlisle, PA: Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College, 2010. Print. Current material with subject matters of military ethics and leadership; explaining how they have developed throughout time. I would use this information to compare past and present changes.
The Three R's - and Character." Christian Science Monitor 20 Oct. 2000: 10. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 13 Apr. 2010. The article focuses on the need to teach ethics to students in the United States. The article includes results from a survey conducted called ‘Report Card of the Ethics of American Youth,’ that I plan to use as a primary source.
Wringe, Colin. Moral Education Beyond the Teaching of Right and Wrong. Dordrecht: Springer, 2006. Print. Discusses the teaching of morality in terms of religion, family life, and sex. This information can be used to explain how people morals are formed and developed.
www.wikipedia.org. Web. 13 Apr. 2010. . This website will help to explain the Milgram experiment. The site also provides other experimental variations and replications that have also been conducted.
What is the relationship of memory and communication with respect to psychology?
Welzer, Harald, and Sara B. Young. "Communicative Memory." Cultural Memory Studies: An International and Interdisciplinary Handbook. 285-298. Berlin, Germany: de Gruyter, 2008. MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 31 Mar. 2010.
This source is interesting because it talks about the relationship of communication and memory in terms of culture and society. I probably connect the idea of society and culture later on my research paper.
Cavanaugh, John C. Aging in America. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Praeger/ABC-CLIO, 2010. Print.
I like this source as well because it talks about how changes impact language comprehension and memory and language production in both spoken and written communication. This source also discusses the implications of the age effects on comprehension, memory, and production for communication in the context of everyday life.
Javier, Rafael Art. The Bilingual Mind: Thinking, Feeling, and Speaking in Two Languages. New York: Springer, 2007. Print.
This book source is also good one to use in research paper because it talks about the relationship of mind communication. This idea is very interesting to use in research paper because this source gives me the connection of mind with emotions, then emotions or feeling pushes us to express or say what we feel.
Svoboda, William B. Childhood Epilepsy: Language, Learning, and Emotional Complications. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge UP, 2004. Print.
This source is also connected with emotions with respect to communication with our mind. This tells me something about how emotional complications of good and bad feelings.
This magazine source is also part of memory. This one might help me out through me research paper.
Davis, Lennard J. "Where Did I Put My 'Foucault'?." Chronicle of Higher Education 06 June 2008: B22+. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 2 Apr. 2010.
This magazine source is related to education and this is connected communication and memory relationship.
"Paid Notice: Deaths JAFFE, ANDREW." New York Times 02 Mar. 2010: 13. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 2 Apr. 2010.
This article is kind of related to memory loss and how people lost their life with memory loss disease.
Petya, Maggie. Personal Interview. 1 April. 2010.
This oral history source is telling me about the two twin kids who are lost her ways and disappeared. This is interesting as well because it is related to haunted mind.
"How Stress Affects Your Memory: The Relationship Between Short-term Anxiety & Brain Functioning." Cognitive Psychology. 02 Apr. 2010 .
This website source tells me about how stress affects our memory. This might interesting to talk about in research paper because it talks about brain functions and anxiety of mind
"Social Communication Deficits in Disruptive Primary-school Children -- Donno Et Al. 196 (4): 282 --." The British Journal of Psychiatry. Web. 02 Apr. 2010. .
This website source talks about the mental disorder of the children. This is related to psychology of mind. It is also good source to use in research paper as well.
How do controversial, unpopular, and radical ideas and people gain mass acceptance?
Anderson, Scott. “Polygamy in America.” National Geographic Feb. 2010: Print. This article explores a sub-culture of America that is accepted, to some extent, though illegal. It also touches on some tactics used within the polygamist culture that motivate successive generations to maintain the lifestyle.
Bennett, Stephen Earl, Staci L. Rhine, and Richard S. Flickinger. “Reading’s Impact on Democratic Citizenship in America.” Political Behavior 22.3 (2000): 167-195. Academic Search Premier. Web. 1 Apr 2010. This article argues that reading promotes people’s tolerance of unpopular groups of people. This ties into my argument from the bridge essay that giving the history or telling the story of an idea or group of people, by writing about it or speaking about it, promotes empathy for that idea or group.
Burleigh, Michael. The Third Reich: A New History. New York: Farrar, Strauss, and Giroux, 2001. Print. This book explores the theory of political religion as a means of gaining mass appeal, specifically in the context of Nazi Germany.
Currell, Susan and Christina Cogdell, ed. Popular Eugenics: National Efficiency and American Mass Culture in the 1930s. Athens: Ohio University Press, 2006. Print. This book is an anthology of how eugenics came into effect and became popular in the United States.
Ferguson, Niall. The War of the World. New York: Penguin, 2007. Print. This book contains information about how National Socialism became such a mass movement in Germany in the WWII era.
Jessop, Carolyn and Laura Palmer. Escape. New York: Broadway Books, 2007. Print. This primary source is an autobiography of Carolyn Jessop, a woman who escaped from her polygamous lifestyle. It sheds light on the inter-workings of a controversial culture and its methods of maintaining a mass following.
Kinzer, Stephen. “The Neo-Nazis: How Quickly They Remember.” The New York Times. The New York Times Company, 17 Nov. 1991. Web. 1 Apr. 2010. This article talks about Neo-Nazis in Germany and their ideologies in the context of modern society.
Smith, Steven. “Personalities in the Crowd: The Idea of ‘Masses’ in American Popular Culture.” Prospects 19 (1994): 225-287. America: History & Life. Web. 1 Apr 2010. This article gives three examples of men with radical ideas who were able to gain mass popularity, and describes each of their tactics of doing so.
White, Ralph K. “Empathizing with the Rulers of the USSR.” Political Psychology. 4.1 (1983): 121-137. JStor. Web. 2 Apr 2010. This article defines empathy as understanding and argues that empathizing with the rulers of the USSR will help the Western world avoid nuclear war.
Research Question: What is the relationship between authority, conformism, and the individual?
Search Terms: Social classes Conformism Social change Individuality Behaviorism in society Conformity and Obedience Authoritarianism
Svallfors, Stefan. "CLASS AND CONFORMISM: A COMPARISON OF FOUR WESTERN COUNTRIES." European Societies 7.2 (2005): 255-86. Academic Search Premier. Web. I think this is a good article to that shows how societies differ but are still the same in the way people think based on economic, social, and politic, conditions of the country.
Edwards, Monica. "Men Women and Social Change." Northeastern Illinois University, Chicago. Fall 2009. Lecture. This lecture is a great primary source to show how men and women have come to live up to the way society expects them to be. The way women and men behave is the most simple example of how people have become societal zombies Didion, Joan. "On Keeping a Notebook." Slouching Towards Bethlehem (1969).
Woolf, Virginia. "Middlebrow." 1942. Print. This RN reading uses the example of class based on income to show how even the smallest thing such as which book you read can show how you are conforming to ways of your class and abandoning your choice of interest.
Harris, Barb. "Express Your Style." Natural Health 2003: 10. Academic Search Premier. Web. I want to use this magazine article to show how magazines and the media use celebrities to turn the rest of society into “upper class” people. This article focuses primarily on style and clothing. This can answer the questions: Do I buy clothes from a certain place just because of its popularity?
King Jr., Martin L. "Letter from a Birmingham Jail." Letter. 16 Apr. 1963. AFRICAN STUDIES CENTER - UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA. Ali B. Ali-Dinar. Web. I think King’s letter is a prime example of someone who stood up to the people who were conforming to ways of the wrong doers. He makes multiple references to how society wants entertainment and if they keep going on with this black and white war, both sides will lose. Stirrett, Kathleen. "Authoritarianism and Recall of Evidence about Criminal Behavior." Journal of Research in Personality 9.2 (1979): 147-57. Science Direct. Web. This is a journal article I want to use to show how authoritarianism affects human personality and can have long term negative effects on the person because they adhere to the ways of the authoritative life.
Flacks, Richard. Conformity, Resistance, and Self-Determination: The Individual and Authority. Little Brown &mpany, 1973. National Library of Australia. Web. I want to use this book because it connects the individual human mind and how in conforms and also attempts to resistant conforming. It will give me a good insight into how the mind thinks in terms of societal impressions.
WADE, NICHOLAS. "Researcher Condemns Conformity Among His Peers." New York Times 23 July 2009. New York Times. Web. This is article that gives a good example of why someone would want people to conform to their ways. It gives a unbiased example from the other side of the story.
Passini, Stefano. "Authority Relationships between Obedience and Disobedience." New Ideas in Psychology 27.1 (2009): 96-106. ScienceDirect. Web. This article talks about the psychological processes triggered in obeying and disobeying the authority. This would help me give a reason from the psychological perspective to why people conform to the ways of authority or the rest of society.
George, Tony. "The Loss of Individualism in Modern Society." (2010): 1-2. Helium. Web. . This article will help me support my argument by giving me real life situations and topics such as sports in society and how individualism is restricted. This may help me answer the questions: Why does society or those in a authoritative position want me to lose my sense of individuality?
Research Question: Are the examples of writing being used as therapy?
Search Terms: art healing healing art therapeutics journal writing therapy
Works Cited
Brand, Alice Glarden. Therapy in Writing: a Psycho-educational Enterprise. Lexington, Mass.: Lexington, 1980. Print. (The author writes about the connection between writing and emotion)
DeSalvo, Louise A. Writing as a Way of Healing: How Telling Our Stories Transforms Our Lives. San Francisco]: HarperSanFrancisco, 1999. Print. (This book is about a professor that helps people overcome trauma by writing)
Edmands, Margaret Sutton, and Denise Marcellino-Boisvert. "REFLECTIONS ON A ROSE: A STORY OF LOSS AND LONGING." Issues in Mental Health Nursing 23.2 (2002): 107-119. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 2 Apr. 201 (How a writer reflected on his loss and turned it into writing therapy)
Khanna, Ritu. "An Article on the Act of Writing as a Therapy." Life Positive. Sept. 1996. Web. 02 Apr. 2010. . (The writer defends and give good reasons as to why writing is a healing art)
Metzger, Deena. Writing for Your Life: a Guide and Companion to the Inner Worlds. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1992. Print. (Writing your past life events helps you better understand your life and meaning of it)
MICHAEL, KIMMELMAN. "A Gifted Man Who Put His Pain on Paper." New York Times 04 Oct. 1996: 1. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 2 Apr. 2010. (The case of a man who started writing as a form of dealing with pain)
Synder, Beverly A. "Expressive art therapy techniques: Healing the soul through creativity." Journal of Humanistic Education & Development 36.2 (1997): 74. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 2 Apr. 2010. (Different types of healing arts)
Woolston, Chris. "CNN.com - Writing for Therapy Helps Erase Effects of Trauma - March 16, 2000." CNN.com - Breaking News, U.S., World, Weather, Entertainment & Video News. 16 Mar. 2000. Web. 02 Apr. 2010. . (How writing helps you overcome cases of trauma)
Wright, Jeannie K. "Autoethnography and Therapy: Writing on the Move." Qualitative Inquiry 15.4 (2009): 623-640. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 2 Apr. 2010. (People are writing more and more and are being healed by it)
WRIGHT, JEANNIE K. "Dialogical journal writing as 'self-therapy': 'I matter'." Counselling & Psychotherapy Research 9.4 (2009): 234-240. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 2 Apr. 2010. (ARTICLE) (Researcher used three cases to help her answer her questions regarding the healing art)
Susan Ruffino Eng.102 Reading List Research question: What is the relationship between class, socio-economic background and status? 1.) Bielski, Ursula. Chicago Haunts 3: My Own True Ghost Story. Holt, Mich.: Thunder Bay, 2009. Print. This source will be used like it is used in the bridge essay. 2.) The Effects of Academic Environment and Background Characteristics on Student Satisfaction and Performance: the Case of South Carolina State University's School of Business College Student Journal Find Articles at BNET." Find Articles at BNET News Articles, Magazine Back Issues & Reference Articles on All Topics. Web. 02 Apr. 2010. . This could be used as evidence. 3.) Floud, J. E., A. H. Halsey, and F. M. Martin. Social Class and Educational Opportunity,. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 1973. Print. This will be used to expand on my thesis. 4.) Lipps, Garth, and Jeffrey Frank. "The social context of school for young children." Canadian Social Trends 47 (1997): 22. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 2 Apr. 2010. This will be used to bring in another subject if needed. 5.) LYUBOMIRSKY, SONJA. "Why We're Still Happy." New York Times 27 Dec. 2008: 25. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 2 Apr. 2010. This will be used to be in the topic of emotion and combine it with my question. 6.) Riley, Jason L. "Black, Successful--and Typical." Wall Street Journal - Eastern Edition 13 May 2002: A16. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 2 Apr. 2010. This can be used as a way to play devil’s advocate. 7.) “Socioeconomic Status and Psychiatric Disorders: the Causation-selection Issue -- Dohrenwend Et Al. 255 (5047): 946 -- Science." Science/AAAS Scientific Research, News and Career Information. Web. 02 Apr. 2010. . This can be used to further explain my topic. 8.) Terkel, Studs, ed. Division Street: America. 1967. Print. This source will be used like it is used in the bridge essay. 9.) Tomsho, Robert. "More Schools Likely to Spur Diversity via Income." Wall Street Journal - Eastern Edition 29 June 2007: B1+. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 2 Apr. 2010. This will be used to back up my question. 10.) Woolf, Virginia. "Middlebrow." 1942. Print. This source will be used like it is used in the bridge essay.