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| 3. |
Deviance Portrayed in the Movie Clockwork Orange
(5 Pages, 59.75 USD)
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Stanley Kubrick's 1971 film A Clockwork Orange is a disturbing film that demonstrates some of the central routes of deviance and the link between deviance and social elements that determine the acceptability of certain behaviors. The film, set in a futuristic setting, demonstrates the way gang violence and deviant sexual behaviors can become normative and how indviduals can be conditioned to through "aversion therapy" to move away from these normative behaviors. This 5 page paper provides an overview of the issue presented and relates it to the current literature. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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| 4. |
Observations / Preschoolers, Adolescents, Senior Citizens
(12 Pages, 143.4 USD)
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This 12 page paper reports observations of the identified age groups. Preschoolers were observed during free play, adolescents were observed at a mall and senior citizens were observed at a party. Behaviors are reported then compared to theories about typical behaviors for each of the age groups. With a few exceptions, each group's behaviors were relatively typical for their time in life. The writer offers a beginning abstract and concluding remarks about the importance of play regardless of age. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
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| 5. |
A Comparative Assessment of Injury-related Behaviors In High School Students
(9 Pages, 107.55 USD)
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This 9 page paper is a proposed research study that creates a comparison of the most common injury-related behaviors among 25 children in a high school setting and then relates these to national levels in a statistics comparison. This paper considers injury-related behaviors like not wearing a helmet when riding a bicycle, participating in unprotected sex, and suicidal behaviors. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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| 6. |
Personal Counseling Theory Examples
(9 Pages, 107.55 USD)
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This 9 page paper discusses a number of aspects related to personality development, behaviors, individual differences and therapeutic techniques. Existential, person-centered, family systems and behavioral theories are explained in terms of an individual's personality, behaviors and mental health. An explanation of Freud's preconscious, conscious and unconscious minds are provided in terms of behavioral motivation. Scripture is also discussed as it relates to behaviors and mental health. Bibliography lists 16 sources.
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Paper Keywords -stenexi
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| 7. |
Token Economy / Designing & Implementing
(12 Pages, 143.4 USD)
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A 12 page paper that provides an overview of the major components of creating a token economy to shape the behaviors of people who are mentally unstable. In essence, a token economy is a reward system by which individuals receive compensation (tokens) for positive behaviors and compliance with outlined expectations, and lose compensation for negative behaviors or non-compliance. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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| 8. |
Freud’s Psychoanalytical Theory and Behavioral Theory
(7 Pages, 83.65 USD)
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This is a 7 page paper discussing Freud’s psychoanalytical theories of human behavior in comparison with the behavioral theories. When Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) first developed his psychoanalytical theory as treatment for those people who had mental dysfunctions, he was one of the first analysts to attempt to tackle patients head on by developing a series of therapeutic sessions directly with the patients. These sessions were largely based on talking to patients and discovering their repressed feelings which he believed were the cause of the mental disorder. His theory was based largely on the fact that he believed human behavior was developed through a series of stages in childhood that largely relied upon the satisfaction of needs in the individual, mostly sexual. If the unconscious mind was unable to control the interpretation of the needs and how to understand them in relation to the real world then behavioral problems would arise. Once these problems were unearthed, then behavior would change. Behaviorists however did not agree with his methods. Behavior theorists are more concerned with what patients do and say and are not as concerned with the theoretical mental processes which are “behind” the behaviors. Instead, they believe that using conditioning, called behavior therapy, people’s destructive and dysfunctional behaviors can be altered for the better. Those who promote the behaviorist theory believe more that the stimulus and the behavior have a direct relation regardless of the mental process while psychoanalysts believe that there are mental processes and repressive tendencies which have to be resolved before any behavior can be changed. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
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| 10. |
Consumer Behavior: Income Social Class and Economic Behavior
(8 Pages, 95.6 USD)
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This is an 8 page paper discussing income social class on economic and consumer behavior. In many of the theories of consumer behavior the level of income and social class seem to play a part in economic behavior and spending. Many theorists have historically believed that economic behavior was largely based on individual tastes which were unaffected by social interactions or economic class. Recently however, researchers have found that while some trends are consistent throughout classes regarding economic behavior such as over-spending and under saving in an attempt to gain status materials similar to that of the higher class, other spending behaviors differ depending on economic class, such as food consumption behavior and percentage of dispensable income spent on leisure activities. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
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