...Keys to academic and personal success [Your Name] GEN200 March 4, 2014 The three keys to academic and person success is goal setting, staying organized and time management. It is very important to stay motivated and focused on one’s personal responsibilities. In my opinion, personal responsibility means taking responsibility for one’s own actions. Keeping in mind that one’s own actions always have consequence. Those consequences can directly or indirectly effect one’s self or the people around them. Everyone has their own personal responsibilities. They can be specific like picking the kids up from school every day to wide in range like a general responsibility to the community to raise those kids to respect laws and abide by rules. The relationship between personal responsibilities and college success is a strong one. It involves being accountable for your actions to both yourself and to others. While working on team assignments if you do not follow through with your personal responsibilities the team as a whole will suffer greatly. Assignments will be handed into the team last or at the very last minute. This allows for very little discussion and editing if needed. Everyone on the team will essentially pay for your lack of responsibility to the teams assignments. When one is not willing to take responsibility for their own action the idea of success becomes impossible. Being accountable it the key to long lasting growth. My preliminary plan to...
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...Maintaining Personal Responsibility to Achieve College Success Shelby Mack GEN 200 2-4-14 Abstract It is essential that personal responsibilities are maintained in a person’s life in order to reach one’s goal of having a Bachelor’s Degree in Business. Personal responsibility is being reliable for one’s own actions. Personal responsibility is important because one will be personally accountable for their failures, their accomplishments and their family’s future. It is vital that a person maintain personal responsibility. There are a few ways they can maintain personal responsibility. First, one would need to set realistic goals. It is important for a person to set realistic goals because it can be beneficial, if you stick with it. People who set goals are more likely to succeed than those who don’t set goals. (Merritt, Berger, 1998). A person can do this by setting short term goals and following through with those goals and then setting long term goals and following thru with them, as well. There are 5 steps you can take to accomplish your goals: 1.) Identify the nature of your goal. 2.) Determine how the goal may be accomplished. 3.) Set time limits 4.) Obtain feedback and 5.) Remain patient. ( Austin American Statesman, 1998) Secondly, if one is having health problems and/ or finance issues you should not let this hold you back. This can be a big stumbling block for many but we should not let this defer us from what we know we need to do. You are pretty...
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...Personal Responsibility is the Key to College Success Personal Responsibility is the Key to College Success Although there are many unexpected occurrences in life; one must take on personal responsibility in order to achieve a college degree. First, one must take the initiative by researching colleges and the courses they offer. A prospective student should make sure the college they wish to attend has good reviews and high graduation rates. After finding the right college, one must enroll and meet all requirements the course demands; participate in class discussions, turn in assignments on time, and above all, ask questions. Only you are responsible for what you do or do not understand. There is no blaming anyone else for your failures. If you want to do well in college classes, you must make sure you ask for any clarification you may need to be successful at any given task. Personal responsibility and college success go hand in hand. If you want that degree, you must hold yourself accountable for your actions. If you slack, you are setting yourself up for failure; however, if you take your life into your own hands, and make choices conducive to reaching your goals, you will receive that diploma. For instance, think positive “Generally, the higher the positive affect, the higher the GPA” (Nickerson, Diener, & Schwarz, 2011, Positive affect and college success, p. 719). Make certain you feel you are comfortable with the level of work you have to do; if it is too difficult...
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...Personal Responsibility Essay: Academic Success vs. Creating an Excellent Credit Score Charnelle Riley GEN 200 July 23, 2013 Hector Fulgencio Personal Responsibility Essay: Academic Success vs. Creating an Excellent Credit Score The definition of personal responsibility is when a person is responsible for all that concerns them. Personal responsibility is a subject that not everyone will define the same. Viewpoints are often influenced by culture, peer pressure, and others opinions. Being accountable may range from daily chores, work duties, acquiring a good credit score, taking charge of your education, to being an active member of your community. An article found by Steve Brunkhorst, labeled ‘12 Reflections on Person Responsibility’ reinforces the point made in this essay, “Personal responsibility begins from the inside and moves outward. We must begin by taking responsibility for our thoughts, choices, and reactions. Then we can be responsible for the circumstances we create in our world” (Brunkhorst, 2005, pp 1). People will often show that they are responsible when they have built a high credit score. Building a high credit score means that a person has paid his or her creditors on time. Another factor that will help credit limits rise is to make sure that the limits are not maxed out for each line of credit that may be opened. An article written by Selena Maranjian and Dan Caplinger, Six Smart Moves to Boost Your Credit Score state, “It's a good...
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...& Fagan, P. F., February 6, 2003). In the 90s many States in the United States used waivers to reform their aid to families also known as AFDC programs. AFDC programs provide cash grants to low income families also known as TANF this key element of the United States economic safety net to help families with children. There is negative and positive implication of the Welfare Reform Act on Medicaid. Throughout the rest of the paper you will learn about these negative and positive implications of the Welfare Reform Act of 1996 on the Medicaid Program. There are many positive and negative implications when it concerns “The Welfare Reform Act” that came about in 1996. Welfare has been many debates dealing with this issue since the 1960s, and continues to be a contentious issue for many years to come. In the late 1980s, some communities were calling for a reform of the Welfare because their concerns for the personal responsibility. Then Welfare and Opportunity Reconciliation Act also known as PRWORA came into effect. Bill Clinton signed a personal responsibility and work opportunity reconciliation in 1996. The Welfare Reform Act changed the United States welfare system excessively, and the Welfare Reform Act was set to provide more guidelines to which regards to the administration of Welfare benefits. The United States changed how funding is available to help families financially and how it is administered to recipients who can be eligible for Welfare benefits....
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...Name Tutor Course Date Response paper 5 PRWORA (Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation) Act of 1996 had three primary legislative goals: to reduce child poverty, dependency, illegitimacy and support marriage. The reform was effective in meeting the goals. Upon implementation of the welfare reform, the AFDC/TANF caseloads dropped by half. Though some believe that the decline was as a result of a sound economy, but without a previous economic boom; however, the majority believe that the decline in dependency was attributed to the welfare reform. Welfare reform's reliance on deterrence and punishment to reduce the rolls tipped the financial and emotional balance of already vulnerable families. Request for more aid went up, and the women whose motherhood and fertility targeted by public debates, policy mandates and reproductive legislation were the same women who were accused of being a burden to the economy and punished by means of programs funded by the government, thus becoming subjected to violence, and crime related activities. Most of the methods used to employ welfare reform worked or semi-worked for about a decade, but with the growing economy, it was no longer able to keep up with the demands of the future. A serious update is required to go along with the growing economical times. Ethically, one has to wonder if it is even possible to fix something that is clearly outdated or do we just start from scratch. If the intention is to decrease the deficit...
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...would set guidelines as too who would qualify and how much benefits they should receive. AFDC was what people would turn to too live. Being an ex AFDC recipient I always thought I knew the INS and the outs of the program. AFDC helped me raise my children from 1993 through 2004. That is 11 years and before that AFDC helped my significant other raise my child for two years from 1991 through 1993. My oldest child now is 16 years old. A total of 13 years of his life was fully or partially supported by AFDC. Personally I never thought that I would be off of AFDC. This was how I was going to support my children forever and I know many people who thought the same way. TANF was formulated in 1996 as “a block grant created by the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996” (Coven, 2005). TANF replaced AFDC and there were numerous changes and outcomes for people who were on AFDC. I was on AFDC when the...
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...The Welfare Reform Act The Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) enacted in 1996 came up with three basic legislative goals, to reduce dependency, child poverty, illegitimacy, and strengthen marriage. The reform has been effective in meeting each of these goals. After implementing the welfare reform, the AFDC/TANF caseloads have dropped by nearly 50%. Some argue that this decline in welfare dependency is do to a stronger economy; but with no previous economic boom, this decline has never resulted in a decline in the AFDC caseloads, let alone a 50 percent drop. It is welfare reform, not economic conditions that has produced the drastic decline in dependency in the 1990s. The fifty states vary dramatically in their states rate of caseloads that have declined, but these rates of decline are uncorrelated to differences in underlying state economic factors such as job growth rates or unemployment. States with better economies have not had greater drops in caseload. By contrast, declines in dependence are directly and strongly linked to the austerity of state workfare policies (TANF, 1936-1999). The persons against the reformation of the welfare have said that the reform will throw millions of children into poverty but in all reality child poverty has decreased because the reform was enacted, from approximately 20.8% in 1996 to 16.9% in 1999. The Black children and the families with single mother’s poverty levels have decreased as well. States...
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...What do you consider the most important historical event in the history of the human services profession? Why? I believe the most important history event in the history of the human services profession is the Welfare Reform Act. These living benefits could involve general and special payments for certain circumstances (e.g. young mothers and pregnant women), food stamps, and Medicaid health care and housing benefits. I would also go out on a limb and say that Welfare Assistance reduces the crime rate. If the person’s needs are being met (food, clothing, shelter), there is no need to shoplift, rob, committing additional crimes. However, this is where the reform comes in. The way our welfare programs are currently run there is a huge and lack of accountability of where the money is being allocated, and it doesn’t seem be flowing smoothly. It’s ruining the chance for the very people it’s supposed to help, and providing short-comings in the process. We need to tighten up the process if there is an individual that is able to work and received government assistance, either work, prepare for work or at least be looking for a job. I believe our Welfare Receipts are becoming too dependent on their government paychecks. This assistance is used as a temporary measurement, but you will find people who have been receiving government assistance for 20 plus years. When you are out of the workforce for a number of years, your skills sets start to diminish, any valuable training...
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...Welfare working for or against Single Mothers When I think of the word Welfare system, nothing but bad memories comes to mind. I remember when I had to wait in line for free government cheese, butter and peanut butter. Being on Welfare goes hand and hand with poverty in my mind. Living in the projects in Brooklyn, New York and the environment that surrounded me still has an effect on me today. This type of violent environment made my outlook on life dim and I had total disregard for life in my earlier years. I desired to have my dad present, but he went his own way in the 80’s about the same time when crack hit the streets of New York; my dad became a statistic to the crack game. My mother had to move us out of the city and away from our father. My mother thought moving us upstate would help us see a different life. Well yes it did, it showed me how a single mother has to work two jobs to get off of welfare. She was still driving about two hours one way to get to work and never was home to help her kids with their homework; or even to attend any of the sports games. I guess the worst part of it is when I was writing this I would use words like “is” instead of “was” for past tense like I still have very strong feelings today about poverty, welfare and single mothers because I know how it affected my family and me. In the United States there is a very big social problem with the Welfare System. First I will be going over the major legislation reform in the Welfare System...
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...Work Activation Programs to Reform Welfare Tammy Wooten ITT Technical Institute Work Activation Programs to Reform Welfare In August of 1996, President Bill Clinton signed into law the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) (Welfare Reform section, 2010). Before that, federal welfare was an open-ended entitlement that encouraged long-term dependency (See Chart 2). It neither reduced poverty nor helped the poor become self-sufficient. It did however, encourage out-of-wedlock births and weaken the work ethic. The pathologies it engendered were passed from generation to generation. This reform was a step in the right direction, however, much more needs to be done. The next step should be to transfer full responsibility for funding and administering welfare programs to the states. Each state would then have the freedom to innovate their own low-income programs and would cause them to have stronger incentives to reduce taxpayer costs and maximize work requirements (Replacing Welfare with Private Charity section, 2010). The federal government funds an array of subsidy programs for low-income Americans. The two programs that are of the greatest concern to me are food stamps and Medicaid. When most people think of “welfare”, they are usually thinking of the joint federal-state cash assistance program, better known by its most recent name, as TANF or Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (Overview section, 2010). According to...
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...Recognizing a Faulty Welfare System by Educating the People of Our Society As a society we are lacking the education needed to fully understand the welfare system. This naivety about the welfare system has caused it to become the least effective assistance program designed for the people of our society. Instead we have found it easier to generalize that the system is only for people who are lazy and choose not to work and therefore causing us to neglect the system. According to an article written by Elizabeth Anderson, “Survey research shows that most welfare recipients endorse the work ethic.” (2004) I know what you are thinking, how does a valued work ethic play a role if a person chooses not to work? The response is that everyone has to have a starting point. If we can believe that the majority of welfare recipients are willing to work then together we can review the current welfare system and make the changes that will benefit all the parties involved. If we can sift through the flaws and support the need for assistance we can effectively create a system that will produce results and potentially lessen dependency. So where do we begin? It all starts with an education. To support a need you first have to understand it. The goal of the welfare system is to provide cash assistance for low-income families with dependent children. The benefits a family can receive were outlined in 1996 when a law was created to design a new welfare program called Temporary Assistance...
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...In August of 1992, former President Bill Clinton signed the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) into law, which replaced the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) Program with what is now the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program. The new legislation rolled back much of what the National Welfare Rights Organization and welfare rights activists fought to reform; it deepened the stigma women on welfare face by actively but subtly targeting poor women of color. A reactionary response to the growing number of “undeserving” women of color and immigrants on the welfare role, PRWORA calls for stricter eligibility requirements and ultimately aims to reduce TANF’s total recipient pool...
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...substance addiction, Vitter (2011). After I analyzing the reliability, credibility, and validity of the data used by the author, some information were withheld from Vitter’s writings of the “Robert Wood Johnson Foundation” also added that the use of drugs is not as widespread among TANF recipients as studies feared (Vitter, 2011). Vitter, also base parts of his argument on stats from the “Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act saying it cut welfare money by 2.5 million dollars in 2002. Those numbers is the result of putting more people to work and found that more people are taking advantage of job training programs (Vitter, 2011). Vitter put this information in hoping that the reader will make the assumption that less money, so recipients have to go to work and the act is pushing people off welfare. Vitter use a form of logical fallacy called “confusing association with causation”. The WOA open up doors for working people to strategize, get back to work or find a better job. The WOA also are supporting families that is evolving back to work with health coverage, childcare, and personal employability plans to evolve back into the workforce...
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...who are receiving public assistance funds are using this money to support their alcohol and or drug addictions. Is drug testing to receive public assistance an answer to this problem? Would making this a condition of eligibility actually push people with serious substance abuse and or dependency problems farther away from the help and treatment they need? Federal Welfare Reform The Federal Welfare reform act which, was passed in the mid 1990’s has changed the way our system addresses these issues. PRWORA (Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act) provided some distinctive features to address the issues, and changed the idea that there was universal entitlement for all, and helped to reinforce the notion that there is a class of the deserving poor. In 2001 California implemented the policies required and created our version of the TANF (Temporary Aid to Needy Families) called Cal-WORKS (California’s Work Opportunity and Responsibility to Kids program.) This program has allowed for rules to be implemented such as time limits, work requirements and the availability of substance abuse treatment. (Newell, 2011) The population and the substances. According to the National Poverty Center (2004) the numbers have been overstated and the number of people that are on welfare and are abusing substances are lower than originally estimated. The studies have varied widely in their findings due to the different types of measurements used and the fact that...
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