Totally 3 questions:
This is the link about the article of question2.
ECON 317 SPRING 2010 – INDIVIDUAL ASSIGNMENT 1
TO BE SUBMITTED VIA COURSESPACES BY 11:59 PM ON JANUARY 21st, 2020
Name (First, Family) | |
Last 3 digits of SID |
TO SPEED UP MARKING, PLEASE ANSWER THE QUESTIONS IN THE FORMS AND SPACES PROVIDED. THE T.A. RESERVES THE RIGHT TO NOT MARK ANY QUESTIONS THAT ARE NOT ANSWERED IN THE EXPECTED LOCATIONS.
By submitting this assignment you agree to the following honor code, and understand that any violation of the honor code may lead to penalties including but not limited to a non-negotiable mark of zero on the assignment:
Honor Code: I guarantee that all the answers in this assignment are my own work. I have cited any outside sources that I used to create these answers in correct APA style.
Marking scheme – Make sure you answer all the questions before handing this in!
Question | Marks | |
1 | a | 12 |
2 | a | 3 |
b | 3 | |
3 | a | 3 |
Total | 21 |
Marchildon, G. P. & Allin, S. (2016). The Public-Private Mix in the Delivery of Health-Care Services: Its Relevance for Lower-Income Canadians. Global Social Welfare, 3, pp. 161-170. Retrieved from https://link-springer-com.ezproxy.library.uvic.ca/article/10.1007%2Fs40609-016-0070-4
(The above link allows you to access the article for free whether you are on campus or not. If off-campus, log in to UVic when prompted.)
A note about 3-2-1 reports in this course:
For the ‘2’ part (2 things you didn’t understand and what you did to fix it), we need to see both what you found out, and the source you used to find that out, properly cited in APA format.
The paper you are asked to read for the assignment CANNOT be used as the source: it’s understood that you will make sure to understand everything within the article you are asked to read, by consulting the article itself. This part of the 3-2-1 report is meant to encourage you to consult outside sources to find things out that you CANNOT find out from the article itself.
While I would prefer that you use sources that, unlike Wikipedia, aren’t subject to constant editing and change, it’s fine to use Wikipedia or other such sources as long as you also include the date and time of access, so that readers can look up the state of the page as it was when you looked at it. (So, you’d add to the standard ‘Retrieved from’ part, ‘on January 3, 2020 at 11:59 AM’.)
Also, remember to include a summary, in your own words, of what you found. It’s not enough to say, ‘I didn’t know what a raccoon was, so I looked it up on Wikipedia.’ You need to tell us what you discovered about raccoons, in your own words, and you need to cite the source you looked the information up on.
Pillar(s) Violated: ___________________________________________________
Reasoning: _________________________________________________________
Pillar(s) Violated: ___________________________________________________
Reasoning: _________________________________________________________
Start by accessing the following article:
Wiradhany, W. & Koerts, J. (2019). Everyday functioning-related cognitive correlates of media multitasking: a mini meta-analysis. Media Psychology. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1080/15213269.2019.1685393
(The article is open-access, so you should have no trouble accessing it, whether on or off campus.)
In the space below, cite, in APA format, the first study in your search results that fits the criteria specified in the mini meta analysis. (Hint: This question can be answered VERY quickly. The method described in the very first paragraph of the ‘study selection’ section, on pages 4 and 5, should be enough for this assignment question – just make sure your top result is a study, and not a summary of studies, such as a review article, systematic summary or meta-analysis, and that it studies media multitasking, rather than just media OR multitasking.)
[1]Meili, R. (2016, April 4). It’s Time For The Federal Government To Enforce The Canada Health Act. The Huffington Post. Retrieved from http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/ryan-meili/canada-health-act_b_9610424.html