ADDIE model: Training program Discussion

Business Finance

more than 6 pages long, more than 6 sources total

use the Smarthinking Online Writing tutor and post your receipt from them on the Discussion tab

explaining ADDIE model parts detailed

APA format

application (explain it in an actual employer)

elaboration and opinion about your favorite part of ADDIE model

Business Writing pointers with a well organized, paginated report

using HR Resources (off the list of links) or much more than six sources total

HR 501 Lesson 11 Assignment Employment Law Issues Paper

Business Finance

Briefly analyze whether any of the conduct described below violates any laws that we have studied in this class thus far. In addition, note that Paragraph 10 below requires some outside research. Your analysis should identify the specific legal issues and related laws implicated by the fact pattern. Please address each paragraph in the order in which it appears, inserting the number of the paragraph as a heading or in the first line of the discussion related to that paragraph.

Well Again Services (WAS) is a nonunion employer that provides inpatient and outpatient rehabilitation services at various facilities in Iowa, most of them in the greater Des Moines area, where it employs 125 employees in total.

  1. Debra and Dolores, Certified Nursing Assistants (CNA) at the largest Des Moines facility, complained to their supervisor, Letitia, about CNA patient loads. Letitia dismissed their concerns and instructed them not to discuss their complaints with any other employees. She also told them that if they didn’t like their jobs or her directives, they were free to look for work elsewhere.
  2. That night, Debra and Dolores aired their work load complaints on their Facebook pages, which are viewable only by their “Facebook Friends.” They also criticized Letitia’s unwillingness to take the issue seriously, which they said was unfair to staff as well as patients, and would inevitably result in lower-quality care. About 20 of their Facebook friends, all coworkers, “Liked” the posts. Ten coworkers posted comments in support of Debra and Dolores, some of them using vulgar language. Letitia didn’t see any of the material until an hourly employee, a Facebook Friend of both Debra and Dolores, showed it to her. Letitia then called Debra and Dolores into her office and fired them for violating her instructions and for posting material that was both offensive and damaging to WAS.
  3. Other WAS employees then contacted the Nursing Employees of America (NEOA) to find out how to organize a union. When Letitia overheard employees talking about the NEOA in the employee locker room, she made it clear that unionization was not to be discussed anywhere in the facility and ordered the employees to remove the NEOA literature that was sitting on a table inside the employee locker room.
  4. Pursuant to Letitia’s request, the HR department scheduled a meeting of all hourly employees, who were ordered to attend on pain of discharge. At the meeting, Letitia told the employees that unionizing was a really bad idea, one that would be counterproductive to everyone’s interests. When an employee asked why that was so, Letitia said that WAS had planned to announce across the board pay raises, but if the union campaign continued, that plan would be cancelled and employees would just have to hope that a union would be able to bargain something worthwhile – assuming that it won an election.
  5. As it happened, several weeks later, WAS purchased a company that operated a nursing facility in Cedar Rapids, one that had been organized by the NEOA some years ago and had a collective bargaining agreement set to expire in 60 days. WAS hired management consultant William (Bill) Jones to handle the Cedar Rapids negotiations. At the first bargaining session, Bill told the union that because he had to be in Detroit for an important project, they only had 2 months to negotiate a new contract. In that meeting, Bill gave the NEOA the company’s proposals to trim back wages and said that he would send the union the rest of the company proposals within the week. Two days later, Bill told the NEOA that WAS had terminated the existing pension plan and replaced it with a 401(k) plan.
  6. The next day, the NEOA representative sent Bill an email, protesting the pension plan termination, demanding bargaining over pension and 401(k) issues, requesting a copy of the 401(k) plan that WAS had created, and attaching a copy of an unfair labor practice (ULP) charge that the NEOA had filed with the National Labor Relations Board.
  7. Upon receipt of that email, WAS cancelled the remaining bargaining sessions, and implemented its new wage plan, as well as all of the other changes that it had intended to propose for the new contract. In its view, the filing of the ULP charge showed that the parties were at an impasse.
  8. Meanwhile, there was a walk out at the WAS central kitchen facility that prepares the food for the Des Moines area rehab and nursing homes. After a series of malfunctions, several appliances shorted out that morning, filling the kitchen with smoke and a burning odor. Stanley, the supervisor, immediately called an electrician, who promised to swing by the next day. But the employees, three of whom had suffered burns during the chaos, refused to continue working in the circumstances. While they were milling around the parking lot, a rumor started that Stan was going to fire them. In fact, Stan, who was new to his position, was unsure how to proceed. He was also trying to recall what he was supposed to do if someone was injured on the job.
  9. When an OSHA inspector showed up with a search warrant the following week, Stan refused to let her in and told her that she should call the WAS main office and make an appointment for a day and time convenient for WAS corporate counsel.
  10. Last, but not least, Elena, one of the employees who had suffered burns during the kitchen appliance incident, developed a serious infection that left her unable to work for 2 weeks. When Elena asked for FMLA leave, she was told it was not available for work-related injuries and that she would be permanently replaced if she didn’t report for work as scheduled. She then tried to file for workers’ compensation benefits but found out that WAS’s workers’ compensation insurance policy had lapsed the previous year, and the company had not made any arrangements for self-insurance under state law. What, she wondered, did that mean for her, and what consequences might it have for WAS?

Technology Project Management Plan Assignment

Business Finance

Briefly describe the components that go into a technology project management plan.

The paper must following the formatting guidelines in The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (2010), (6th ed., 7th printing), and contain a title page, five scholarly references, three to five pages of content, and a reference page.

Media-and-Public-Policy

Media-and-Public-Policy

On the eve of the official launch date of the Obama vs. Romney presidential campaign, regular television programming was interrupted by a “Breaking News” bulletin from CNN. CNN correspondent Anderson Cooper announced that President Obama was about to make an important statement to the American public. Shortly thereafter, the President walked to the presidential podium and announced that Osama bin Laden [the mastermind behind the 9/11 bombings of the Twin Towers in New York City and the Pentagon in Washington, D.C.] had been killed by Navy Seal Team Six [a Special Forces unit]. My first reaction was of awe, given the timing of the announcement. Then however, my reaction turned to skepticism as CNN began to broadcast images of the Twin Towers, the Pentagon, the terrorists, and the victims of 9/11; in what has come to be known in the neoinstitutional literature as ‘framing’ an issue by the news media. Out of curiosity, I switched to Fox News and was struck by the difference in the coverage and the message they projected. —G. M. Telleria (personal communication, June 1, 2014)

For this Discussion, reflect on your own experiences with the media. Have you had similar experiences? Or have you experienced something completely different? Review this week’s Learning Resources, and think about how the media can influence the development of public policy.

For this Discussion, address:

1: Compare network television news coverage (e.g., NBC, CBS, ABC) with 24-hour cable news coverage (e.g., CNN, FOX).

Explain the differences and similarities you observe in how these news outlets cover the White House. How might 24-hour coverage influence the development of public policy?

2: The U.S. government allowed reporters to be “embedded” with military forces during the recent conflict with Iraq. Assess the degree to which this experiment influenced the American public’s view on the use of force and the soundness of presidential decision making regarding policy.

3: The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has considered rules in the past making it easier for different news companies to be bought by large conglomerates. Critics charge that this will lessen the independence of reporting, while supporters argue that consumers will ultimately punish companies that censor or tilt their news broadcasts to portray themselves in a favorable light.

Explain your perspective on news consolidation and how this might influence the public and what impact it might have on public policy.

4: Compare a network television news station in the United States with one in Nigeria. How does the media in Nigeria frame political issues and influence public policy?