...Realistically The Perfect Life In America According to The Times, “only 33% of Americans surveyed said they were happy. In 2016, just 31% of Americans reported the same” (Sifferlin). One big aspect of the American Dream is happiness, and yet so many Americans are unhappy. Happiness can correlate with the other parts of the American Dream on whether or not the dream is achievable. Since a large percentage of Americans are unhappy, the American Dream must not be attainable. The American Dream of education, class, and happiness is not attainable. The American Dream of getting an affordable college education is not attainable. For some students it is difficult to pay for college. According to The Washington Post, “For students, tuition is only...
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...My Perfect Partner in Married Life Choosing my perfect partner in life takes a lot of prayers and considerations.I dont like to rush or feel desperately alone and marry the wrong kind of person for the wrong reasons --only to regret it later.Nothing should be more important to me and the person I marry than my spiritual well-being.Foremost that I will consider is she should be a believer and a follower of Christ.She's a worshipper and with a heart after God.I believe that spiritual compatibility is important in marriage. How Can I Know Who To Marry She was young and beautiful, and had grown up in a small town. He was wealthy, an only child, 40 years old, and worked his father's livestock business. Their homes were separated by more than 400 miles, and their eyes had never met before the day they became man and wife. An old man, a long-time employee of the groom's father, acted as a matchmaker. On the day he arrived in the young woman's town, he walked up to her, asked her a few questions, talked to her relatives, and then knew that she was the one to marry his employer's son. This old man "popped the question" to her father and then made arrangements to take her back for the marriage--and she willingly went! The bride and groom were Rebekah and Isaac. The Genesis 24 account of what led up to their marriage offers an unusual example of how God can lead two people together. Although it would probably be inappropriate to try to follow every detail of their example today...
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...PERFECTIVE ASPECT We use the present perfect to show that something has continued up to the present They’ve been married for nearly fifty years. She has lived in Liverpool all her life. … or is important in the present: I’ve lost my keys. I can’t get into the house. Teresa isn’t at home. I think she has gone shopping. We use the present perfect continuous to show that something has been continuing up to the present: It’s been raining for hours. We’ve been waiting here since six o’clock this morning. We use the past perfect to show that something continued up to a time in the past: When George died he and Anne had been married for nearly fifty years. ... or was important at that time in the past: I couldn’t get into the house. I had lost my keys. Teresa wasn’t at home. She had gone shopping. We use the past perfect continuous to show that something had been continuing up to a time in the past or was important at that time in the past: Everything was wet. It had been raining for hours. He was a wonderful guitarist. He had been playing ever since he was a teenager. We use will with the perfect to show that something will be complete at some time in the future: In a few years they will have discovered a cure for the common cold. I can come out tonight. I'll have finished my homework by then. We use would with the perfect to refer to something that did not happen in the past but would have happened if the conditions had been right: If you had asked me I would...
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...Verb tense | Verbs from text | | Simple present | She thought | | Present progressive | Sit here mending | | Present perfect | have not looked | | Simple present, passive voice | is called | | Simple past | She heard | | Past progressive | was looking | | Past perfect | Wishing Had not been enough | | Past perfect progressive | Had been living | | Simple future | will look, will help, will continue | | Future progressive | will be waiting | | Future, passive voice | will be finished | | Modal, possibility | Could see | | The portion of text I chose for this assignment is from Magadalena Looking by Susan Vreeland. This story is part of the tenth grade Literature book used by Columbus City Schoools from the Prentice Hall series. This book is a supplemental text given to teachers to encourage differentiated instruction. It is described as a “Reader’s Notebook” and is designed to be used in a grade ten classroom. Part ll: Vocabulary The text contains vocabulary exercises with highlighted vocabulary words. I found the definitions to be rather lengthy and I have shortened them to make them more appropriate for tenth grade ELL students. * Auction-sold in public for the highest price * Chronology-in order of time * Defiance-against authority or what you are told * Entailed-involved or required * Erode- to wear away, to decrease * Locales-location * Whim-sudden impulse, without much...
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...8/28/2012 Why Advertising Research? Introduction to Advertising Research Ying Xie MKT 6335: Advertising Research Fall 2012 Naveen Jindal School of Management University of Texas at Dallas What is advertising? What is good advertising, in your opinion? 1 2 Why Advertising Research? How do we create an advertising campaign? 1. creative strategy: a statement or concept of what a particular message or campaign will say – a big idea Absolute Vodka MasterCard “there are some things in life money can’t buy” 2. advertising appeal and selling proposition 3. creative execution: art direction and copy Why Advertising Research? Advertising research contributes throughout entire advertising planning process Short history of advertising research 1960’s vs. today 3 4 Process of Research Contribution The Market Successful advertising planning builds on research-driven analysis of the marketplace Current and potential future trends Forces shaping the marketplace How market forces affect own and competitive brands and advertising 5 6 1 8/28/2012 The Consumer Effective advertising based on thorough understanding of Forrester Segmentation: Involvement With Social Technologies target audience Three dimensions of target audience analysis: Consumer trends How consumers interact with brand/product/service Relationship between consumers and brand/product/service 7 8 Creative: development...
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...1 Differentiating Between Market Structures Kimberly Adcock ECO/365 December 7, 2015 J. Carl Bowman Differentiating Between Market Structures 2 The Kroger Company has started in 1883, by the founder Barney Kroger, he had taken all of his life savings to open the first Kroger grocery store in Cincinnati, Ohio. “Over the next 130 years as the supermarket business evolved into a variety of formats aimed at satisfying the ever-changing needs of the shoppers” (thekrogercompany.com). There are more than 2,600 stores within 34 states and more than a dozen banners and their annual sales is in the billions. Kroger is one of the biggest grocery stores in the world. There are two departments that Kroger supermarkets, the bakeries and meat and seafood. History of Kroger “In the 1900s grocery stores bought their bread from an independent individual, but Barney Kroger has, come up with the idea to put the all of the main ingredients together to be able to make a profit” (thekrogerco.com). He decided that if he was to bake his own bread he would be able to decrease the price...
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...2013 will be the perfect storm of necessity and opportunity: some economies will do OK(-ish), others will be shaky, but whatever market or industry you're in, those who understand & cater to changing consumer needs, desires and expectations will forever have plenty of opportunity to profit. A remapped global economy, new technologies (or 'old' technologies applied in new ways), new business models... hey, what's not to like? Hence this overview of 10 crucial consumer trends (in random order) for you to run with in the next 12 months. Onwards and upwards: 1. PRESUMERS & CUSTOWNERS As consumers will embrace even more ways to participate in the funding, launch and growth of (new) products and brands that they love, expect pre-ordering, crowdfunding and consumer equity to compete with traditional consumption in 2013... 2. EMERGING² While the last two decades were about developed markets catering to emerging ones, and emerging markets increasingly catering to developed ones, it's now time to get ready for an explosion in products and services from emerging markets for emerging markets... 3. MOBILE MOMENTS For those wondering where ‘mobile’ will head next, one behavioral insight should give you plenty to run with: in 2013, consumers will look to their mobile devices to maximize absolutely every moment, multi-if-not-hypertasking their experiences, purchases and communications... 4. NEW LIFE INSIDE One sign-of-the-times eco-trend for 2013: the phenomenon...
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...Monopolistically Competitive industries have the following characteristics: 1. Many small to medium sized firms 2. Similar product, but not identical 3. Less than perfect information, firm has some control over price 4. Easy, but not free, entry. Monopolistic Competition works much like monopoly, but in equilibrium, it has some features of perfect competition. As seen in the graph a monopolistically competitive firm faces a downward sloping demand curve for its output. But, since products in this industry are similar, though differentiated, the curve is relatively flat, reflecting the availability of substitutes. In long-run equilibrium, after entry occurs, we find the firm producing at point F in the next diagram. Here, we see: 1. P > MC 2. P > min AC 3. Max Profit = 0 We have two of the inefficiencies of monopoly, and one of the efficiencies of perfect competition. This firm structure is intermediate between the two. These types of firms will use advertising to shift the demand curve for their product out to the right, and to make it steeper, i.e., to convince consumers that their product has no "good substitutes". This is an attempt to lower the price elasticity of demand. Monopolistic Competition will lead to different versions of the product, but higher prices than perfect comeptition. We will get variety, but must pay for to get it. Besides advertising, we should expect give-aways, coupons, warranties, etc. Oligopoly 1. Few sellers 2...
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...having had a lunch accompanied by two bottles of Chrystal. Lulu is trying on some very high, very kinky boots and is really excited about them. She ends up buying them, though kind of regretting it several months later and not wearing them until later in the winter when she, one evening, goes out with Spencer and some of his pals. They go to a bar and here she meets a guy called Charlie. He is the perfect man; handsome, British, rich and very charming. They start going out and Lulu is very fond of him. Though her friend Spencer finds him boring and not fun enough for his best friend, Lulu still accept Charlie’s offer to be his girlfriend and go meet his parents. One evening Lulu wears the boots she wore the day they met and Charlie tells her how hideous and slutty he finds them. Then Lulu’s mind is made up: Charlie is a boring, pompous ass and so wrong for her, so she ends up leaving him. 2. Lulu is the main character. She is a typical modern woman. Full of ambitions, fashion-minded and longing for her “soul mate”. She thinks she wants a rich, well educated and seemingly perfect man, but finds herself wrong when she dumps Charlie. Although the story doesn’t exactly say she leaves Charlie, that is what I get from the last line in the story: “Are you ready boots?” I said to them. “Start walking.” She has a sense of humour (told on p. 4, first line) and likes to go out and have drinks with her (probably gay) friend, Spencer. Her looks are not described in detail, but I figure...
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...which a firm faces no competition because it is the only firm in its industry. At the other extreme lies what economists call perfect competition, a situation in which a firm competes against many other firms in an industry in which they all produce an identical good. Between the extremes lie two situations: oligopoly, where there are two or more firms in an industry; and imperfect (monopolistic) competition, in which there are many competitors, but each produces a slightly unique good. Market Simulation Market structure is not a concept that is stable. In fact, it is not uncommon for a firm to have more than one market structure over time. It is interesting to examine how the dynamics of market structure evolve by adding competition. The market simulation showed a great example of market structure evolution. In the simulation Quasar entered the computer market with cutting edge technology making it a monopoly. Team B then recognized that investing in advertising was profitable for Quasar only if it reduced the price of its computers. In this market there are no changes in the suppliers and we saw an increase in consumers after investing in advertising. The dynamics of the market changed when Orion technologies entered the market, making it an Oligopoly taking over 50% of the market. As a result of the entering competition Quasar had to find a perfect price to offset the competition from Orion technologies....
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...In The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, by David Wroblewski, and The Perfect Storm, by Sebastian Junger, the authors concentrate on contrasting themes. The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, follows the story of mute a boy’s quest to avenge his father’s death. The Perfect Storm, explores the events that occurred on the Andrea Gail, a commercial swordfishing boat during a devastating storm in 1991. Accordingly, Wroblewski uses the literary features of foreshadowing, allusion, and character development to express his theme of revenge; while Junger employs the literary features of non-fiction as well as those of fiction, such as interview, description, and anecdotes, to communicate his theme of man against the sea. Foreshadowing, allusion and character development...
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...performed text and the narrator might be played by multiple actors . Examples: * David Edgar's The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby, in which Charles Dickens' characters narrate themselves in third person. Set pieces are carried in and taken away during the performance, rather than between scenes, and objects may be represented in a mimetic manner. * Matthew Spangler's stage adaptation of Khaled Hosseini's novel The Kite Runner. Readers Theatre or Reader's Theater is a style of theater in which the actors do or do not memorize their lines. Actors use only vocal expression to help the audience understand the story rather than visual storytelling such as sets, costumes, intricate blocking, and movement. Examples: * A Little Excitement by Marc Harshman * Chicken Big by Michelle Mayo 2. Make sample lesson plan using 2C2IA, four pronged approached and K to 12 approach. Lesson Plan in English IV (2C2IA) I. Objectives: 1. Infer the mood of certain events through the speaker’s action, intentions and utterances 2. Use the present perfect tense with for and since 3. Identify the heading and details for an outline 4. Write an outline and summary of the story read II. Subject Matter: Selection: ‘ A Volcano Erupts’ Strategies: Asking /Answering questions, inferring C. Developing English Language Competencies: Using the present perfect tense with for and since Developing Vocabulary & Comprehension Skills & Strategies: Identifying...
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...help the local mayor understand the structures of the many businesses in the city. In order to do this the following market structures will be addressed: perfect competition, monopolistic competition, oligopoly and monopoly. For each of these topic structures two market characteristics will be discussed. A real-life market structure within the local city will be identified with relation to the characteristics of that market. Next the paper will discuss how high entry barriers into a market structure will influence long-run profitability of the firms. Competitive pressures that are present in markets with high barriers to entry will be explained. Then the paper will discuss the price elasticity of demand in each market structure and its effect on pricing of its products in each market. After that a description of how the role of government affects each market structure’s ability to price its products will be provided. Finally, the effect of international trade on each market structure will be discussed. In order to understand the different market structures of the city, each structure needs to be defined and discussed. The first structure to be discusses is perfect competition. This is an ideal structure that does not really exist in the real market, but; is used as a theoretical model to compare other structures to. In a perfect competition market there is free entry and exit into the market. Without the constraints of exiting and entering the market new businesses will not affect...
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...Perfect Competition Perfect competition is a problem that is emerging in a market in which buyers and sellers are informed about all elements of monopoly that are absent and the market price of a commodity is not control by individual buyers and sellers. Perfect competition is simply looked as a market structure where competition is at its greatest possible level. According to Kirzner (2000), “Perfect competition therefore came to mean the situation in markets where each and every participant lacks any power whatever directly to influence product price or product quality”. Perfect competition is used to compare other and real-life market structures. A real life market structure such as agriculture is the industry that closely resembles a perfect competition. The four key characteristics of perfect competition are a large number of small firms, identical products sold by all firms, perfect resource mobility or the freedom of entry into and exit out of the industry, and perfect knowledge of prices and technology. These four characteristics basically describes that a perfectly competitive firm does not have any control over the market. A large number of small firms that produce identical products have a large number of perfect substitutes that exist for the output produced by any given firm. This means the demand curve for a perfectly competitive firm's output is perfectly elastic. Freedom of entry into and exit out of the industry means that capital and other resources are perfectly...
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...market structure can be differentiated from others because it has distinct features such as competition among a few firms, high concentration ratio and barriers to entry, non price competition, differentiated products and high level of interdependence between firms. The report also outlines and describes why the UK detergent industry which is dominated by a few firms reflects the model of an oligopoly. Several real life examples have been used to confirm the theory of oligopoly. Moreover, the price rigidity observed in an oligopolistic industry has been explained by the kind demand curve theory. The second section of the report examines the case of price fixing by Procter & Gamble, Unilever and Henkel, who are major players in the detergent industry in Europe. It relates the concept of collusion and how it has led the firms to price fixing arrangements in the detergent industry. Finally the economic rationale why Henkel was not fined by the European Competition Commission has been discussed. Market structures may be generally categorised as the following: perfect competition, monopoly, oligopoly or monopolistic competition. These different types of market structures can be differentiated mainly by the number of competitors in a market and their market share. An oligopoly is a form of market structure that has few sellers that dominate the industry and they tend to sell differentiated products. It is also one of the most predominant market structures in the business world. ...
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