Examine professional behavior that is congruent with the values and ethics of

 
Examine professional behavior that is congruent with the values and ethics of

 
Examine professional behavior that is congruent with the values and ethics of the human services profession.
In this assignment, you will apply the information you have learned regarding boundaries and dual relationships to the analysis of a real-life scenario.
Assignment Scenario
Ms. Cheney was a case manager at an outpatient clinic providing various services. One of her clients was Ms. Rosalind, who received services due to a recent divorce. Ms. Cheney had also experienced a divorce in her past and thought she had effectively dealt with that experience but found herself identifying with many comments made by Ms. Rosalind.
The two women realized they shared many common interests through their work together. They often found themselves discussing these shared interests in their time together and eventually began meeting for coffee after their sessions. Ms. Rosalind soon suggested they begin spending additional time together socially, and Ms. Cheney agreed. Before long, they became fast friends, spending significant social time together on evenings and weekends, visiting clubs, going to movies, or visiting local restaurants.
After several months, the two had a falling out about a gentleman both women favored. Ms. Rosalind filed a complaint with the regulatory agency in her state about the relationship.
Please be sure to address all of the following in your assignment:
Introduce the case study and analyze the implications of the events in the scenario.
Investigate the harmful effects of such a relationship on all parties involved: Ms. Rosalind, the helping relationship, and Ms. Cheney.
Discuss both the social and emotional impacts of such a relationship as well as their effects on the treatment relationship. Use specific examples.
Discuss the likely outcome of Ms. Rosalind’s complaint if it was filed in your state.
Analyze strategies to minimize the likelihood of such a relationship arising in your practice.
Please review and follow the assignment requirements in the next tab titled Assignment Details

 Psychological abuse is often broken down into two categories: psychological/emo

 Psychological abuse is often broken down into two categories: psychological/emo

 Psychological abuse is often broken down into two categories: psychological/emotional abuse and psychological/emotional neglect. In your own words, explain the differences in these forms of maltreatment and provide examples of each 

For this discussion, review the resources above, then compose two Introductions

For this discussion, review the resources above, then compose two Introductions

For this discussion, review the resources above, then compose two Introductions for your Researched Argumentative . The introductions should demonstrate different approaches, using different words and phrasing. Only the thesis statement will remain similar. Then, in a third paragraph, share your thoughts about which introduction you are most likely to use and why.
A few reminders:

N/B: Compose response in 12 pt Times New Roman font, double-spaced, with a 1-inc

N/B: Compose response in 12 pt Times New Roman font, double-spaced, with a 1-inc

N/B: Compose response in 12 pt Times New Roman font, double-spaced, with a 1-inch margin on all sides.  Cite at least two sources, approximately 1 to 2 pages to answer the questions.  
Case: Production manager Rick Boothe stood at the boatyard gate and watched his 200 colleagues, some tearful, leave behind the work that had sustained many of their families for generations.  On that day, in November 2000, Gellerup Boat’s absentee owner had faxed a message to the staff: the yard would close.  Twenty minutes later, at the shift’s end, the yard was shut down.  Gellerup’s owner had stopped paying employees’ health insurance premiums and had run up $12 million in debt.  Still, Boothe’s coworkers “went out like gentlemen,” he says.  “there was no foul language, no threats.  That’s just the way people are here.”  Or maybe they just knew they’d be back.
Luddington’s boatyards were famous for building first-class schooners and for constructing submarines and other military vessels.  Gellerup Boat, founded in 1869 and family run until 1996, had constructed boats for three wars when, in the early 1960s, the company re-positioned itself as a builder of luxury aluminum motor yachts.  The yachts quickly became known for quality craftsmanship.
By 1970, though, all the other shipbuilders in Luddington had moved or shut down, and Gellerup had been sold to its second out-of-towner, an ailing ship-building company based in Tacoma, Washington, that used Gellerup as a cash cow.  When the yard closed, says Mayor Kevin Crawford, “everyone felt a ripple go through the community.”
Luckily for Gellerup and Luddington, the ripple was felt as far away as Chicago, where Daniel Rossington, an entrepreneur who had sold his $55 million commercial-photo-labs company in 1999, heard of Gellerup’s plight.  Rossington had always admired Gellerup boats – coveted them, even.  Now there appeared to be an opportunity to buy the company itself.
As Rossington gathered information about Gellerup , what impressed him even more than the boats were the people who made them.  Shortly after the yard closed, 18 Gellerup employees crawled through a hole in the fence to get the tools and materials they needed to finish a boat they’d been working on.  Later a customer with an unfinished boat in the yard would help Rick Boothe and 70 other employees set up a shell corporation to try to revive the company.  There was not only boat-building to be done but also a retirement plan to rescue, and employee stock ownership plan to develop, and a blatant violation of state plant-closing laws to redress.
Gellerup’s yard had been filled with men whose fathers and grandfathers had practiced the same craftsmanship before them, who had fashioned gracefully curved bows from sheets of aluminum.  The instinct to preserve that tradition was overpowering.  “When I met Rick Boothe, I determined that this company was zero without the people who made it famous,” says Rossington.  For more than a year, Gellerup’s employees had struggled unsuccessfully to save the company.
Rossington, along with his partner, offered the wary craftspeople a second chance.  “They weren’t ready to put their trust in just anyone,” Rossington recalls.  “I told them I was going to move here and that I could offer them something they didn’t have – a hands-on owner who could speak directly to clients, who could bring strong advertising, marketing, and sales skills.”
Rossington flew Boothe to Chicago to speak with employees of Rossington’s former company and to examine its financial statements.  “We didn’t want another silver spoon coming into the yard,” says Boothe.  Rossington, he discovered, was genuinely respected by his old employees.  By 2002, Gellerup’s former workers decided to throw their lot in with Rossington.  Most, like Gellerup designer Dan Fogler, had landed good jobs elsewhere.  But, says Fogler, “I wanted to finish off my working years at the company where I had spent my life.  I wanted to build boats.”
In January 2003, after more than a year of negotiations, a dramatic appearance before a U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge, and more than $250,000 in legal fees, Rossington and his partner were permitted to buy Gellerup.  They promised to keep the company in Luddington for at least 20 years.  “We never would have done the deal if Daniel were staying in Chicago,” says Boothe.  But Rossington never had any intention of staying there.  What he saw at Gellerup – a company bonded to its community, and workers impassioned by the craft – had drawn him in.
Today Gellerup has a three-year backlog of orders, steady revenue growth, and four years of profits on the books.  Half of the company’s 200 employees are people who returned to Gellerup when the gates reopened in 2003.  Rossington keeps them and the company focused around their skills and passions.  “In May we launched hull number 491, and it’s an 85-foot flush-deck motor-yacht cruiser,” says Rossington.  “In 1901 we launched our first motor yacht, and do you know what it was?  It was an 85-foot flush-deck motor-yacht cruiser.”
The launch of hull number 491 – like most of Gellerup’s launches – was a public event.  Twelve hundred admirers crowded the yard to watch the maiden voyage.  “It’s just a beautiful ceremony,” says Boothe.  “This company was started when Lincoln was president, and today we’re building boats on the same shoreline.  I know a lot of people here who take great pride in that.”
Discussion Questions:
Visit the following website http://andrewmckay.yolasite.com/resources/14%20Principles%20of%20Management.pdf.(Henri Fayol 14 principle of management). And determine which of Fayol’s 14 universal principles of management are evident in this case? Explain your reasoning for each principle selected.
Which of the different management perspectives (the Classical, or the Humanistic), do you feel Daniel Rossington most followed.  and Why?
Is Daniel Rossington a Theory X or a Theory Y manager? Why do you feel that way?

1.  The legal and ethical concerns can lead to exposed of personal information

1.  The legal and ethical concerns can lead to exposed of personal information

1.  The legal and ethical concerns can lead to exposed of personal information and leaked or lost. An article stated that recorded documents have a high risk of leakage and loss because storage is only in the cupboard (Yunus, et. all., 2023). Concerns can be the fear of confidentiality and anxiety of getting ttheir things leaked. As a counselor my concerns would be how to write them and keep them safe. If i were to use a secure notebook, there are still concerns about leaving it somewhere or someone taking ir from my possession. If I were a client i would be really questionable about what I share and what I would want my counselor to advise how he/she would keep the confidentiality safe.
Which would you prefer? Electronic or writtent documentation?
2.  When I think of electronic medical records, the first thing that comes to mind is risk. This means the risk of being hacked and sold or stolen. When handling electronic files, you must consider all the things that can go wrong, along with the benefits. Most, if not all, files are electronic mainly because of laws and rules. Some have to be so certain people have access to them. However, legally, all files being on record could help you if something ever comes up. While handwritten notes could be just for personal use if there was ever something in there about a patient that needed to be known, someone who needs that information may not be able to know that. I believe that as a patient, the biggest worry would be others seeing the confidential things you’ve told your doctor.  

  Assignment overview—What Is a Fact Sheet? Fact sheets are short reports that p

 
Assignment overview—What Is a Fact Sheet?
Fact sheets are short reports that p

 
Assignment overview—What Is a Fact Sheet?
Fact sheets are short reports that present information in a readable and interesting format. They enable scientists and researchers to concisely summarize the results of research, so it is shareable with the public or other professionals. However, be aware that Fact Sheets are more than just random lists of words or numbers. A useful Fact Sheet has a clear organization and structure. It names the issue at hand, discusses relevance, gives data (usually numerical or statistical), describes interventions and makes recommendations. Because Fact Sheets summarize data in a report format, they must provide accurate citations and references for the sources. An example of a Fact Sheets is provided by the Child Welfare Information Gateway on Child Abuse and Neglect FatalitiesLinks to an external site. (you will need Adobe Acrobat ReaderLinks to an external site. to access this file) and the Fact Sheet provided on Suicide PreventionLinks to an external site. from SAMHSA. If those links don’t work for you:

Research one privacy law in another country, and discuss what organizations are

Research one privacy law in another country, and discuss what organizations are

Research one privacy law in another country, and discuss what organizations are doing internationally with regard to protection of employee data.
2 paragraphs

Read the SHRM case study Integrating a Human Resource Information System PDF and

Read the SHRM case study Integrating a Human Resource Information System PDF and

Read the SHRM case study Integrating a Human Resource Information System PDF and answer the questions below based on the case study and information provided for context. You may use information from the lectures and readings to supplement your answers if necessary.
What cultural issues are interwoven in this project that affected HR?
Who should be involved in future global integration projects?
What skills should team members have and how should they be selected
2-4 pages 

Select a topic:  Porter’s Competitive Strategies  Miles and Snow’s Strategy Ty

Select a topic:
 Porter’s Competitive Strategies
 Miles and Snow’s Strategy Ty

Select a topic:
 Porter’s Competitive Strategies
 Miles and Snow’s Strategy Typology
 Bureaucratic Organizations
 Chaos Theory
 Hawthorne Studies
 Supply Chain Structures and Relationships
 Collaborative Networks
 Impact of Technology on Job Design
 Organizational Decision Making Systems
 Shaping Cultures and Ethics of the Organization
Make sure that you focus on the organizational design and structure of these items.
Use at least 10 scholarly articles within the last five years
INSTRUCTIONS
In your Literature Review: Outline and Title Page Assignment, include a title page that meets
the APA requirements. The outline must be per the APA format (Alphanumeric, Full sentence,
or decimal). It must be well developed and includes headings and subheadings. The framework
of the Literature Review is apparent and well established as follows:
 Title page.
 Abstract.
 Introduction
 Findings
 Conclusions, recommendations, and suggestions for further study
 References.
In the findings section, there must be main headings and subheadings of the material that will be
discussed.

Overview It is now important to consider how to manage project obstacles and ris

Overview
It is now important to consider how to manage project obstacles and ris

Overview
It is now important to consider how to manage project obstacles and risks. Being able to continue the progression of a project is important in the face of unpredictable conditions in the internal and external environment of an organization.
Instructions
Outline the process you would use to move to a centralized structure.

Go back to the Week 3 assignment, Organizing HR Projects, and consider the goal of the project.
Conduct research on centralized and decentralized organizations and come up with three tasks that you would need to move to a centralized structure.
Consider methods for assigning costs to tasks and come up with the process (not the actual budget) that you would use to determine a budget.
outlining the process you would use.

Create a WBS for the project and analyze each task using the Project Budget WBS Template [XLSX].

Review, as needed, the following sites regarding cost estimation:

The Ultimate Guide to Project Cost Estimating.
Cost Estimation for Projects: How to Estimate Accurately.