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Clinical Case Vignettes tin Psychiatric Assessments

Clinical Case Vignettes tin Psychiatric Assessments

Students will be assigned one of six clinical case vignettes to write up a psychiatric assessment,
arrive at a provisional diagnosis, and develop a course of treatment. The aim is for students to
demonstrate an ability to use relevant resources to identify child and adolescent mental health
concerns, as well as work with appropriate individuals/systems for an appropriate course of
action.
The 7-9 page paper is to be formatted according to the Roman numeral headings provided
below. The page limit does NOT include title page or references/bibliography.

Writing Micromorphology Report

Micromorphology Report 

Micromorphology Report –

Summative Assessment (30%)

  • Part of the coursework assessment for this module will be a micromorphology lab report, which is worth 30% of your overall module mark.
  • The report will be focussed around work carried out during practical sessions in which the fundamentals of micromorphology (thin section sedimentary analysis) will be introduced – it is therefore compulsory that you attend these practical sessions in order to complete the report. You should use sub-headings to structure your report, and clearly differentiate between your observations and interpretations.
  • The report should refer to a range of sources of material, is likely to contain clearly-labelled illustrative material (e.g. figures and tables etc.), and should contain a full reference list at the end.
  • Credit will be given for concise, readable prose; response to the task; knowledge and understanding; structure; application; critique and evaluation; clear, relevant and accurate citation and referencing; and appropriate figures and tables that are located in appropriate places in the text and correctly numbered.
  • Whenever you use examples from books or articles you must cite the source by author and year in the text of the essay/report and include the full reference of the source in a reference list at the end of essay/report (see the Skills Handbook for guidance).
  • Your essay should be word-processed using 12 point font size, double-spaced lines of text and with a 2.5 cm margin around the edge of the text.
  • The word count does not include references and words in figures/tables (including the figure/table captions) – please adhere to the word count otherwise your work will be penalised.
  • The University of Brighton implement a policy of anonymously marking coursework. Your work will remain anonymous to the assessors as well as moderators of this task until the marks are released to you via ‘My Grades’ within StudentCentral. In order to maintain anonymity, please ensure that you do not write your name or student number on any parts of the submission. Please note that the marks will remain provisional until ratified by the examination board.
  • Submit your report electronically on StudentCentral by: check the Module Brief.

Practical sessions:

Aim: To examine one thin section (high resolution scan) of unconsolidated sediment from a cold environment, and determine sedimentary, deformational and post-depositional processes in order to inform (palaeo)environmental reconstruction by:

  1. Describing textural features (e.g. grain size, grain shape, grain orientation, matrix texture, matrix density etc.)
  2. Describing structural features (e.g. voids, rotation/compression/slump, planar, abrasion, sediment mixing, porewater, plasmic fabric, post-depositional etc.)
  3. Relating the above textural/structural features to processes (e.g. sedimentation, ductile/brittle deformation, porewater expulsion etc.) and then relating these specific processes to environments of deposition (e.g. glaciofluvial, glaciolacustrine, glaciomarine, subglacial, iceberg scour, periglacial etc.)
  4. Considering advantages and limitations of micromorphology as a technique
  • Unfortunately we do not have access to original sedimentary thin sections for analysis under the microscope. Instead you will be working from a blown-up, laminated, high-resolution scan of a thin section, which will be made available to you on StudentCentral (please do not take away the laminated, master copies of these thin section scans). You are expected to take, and annotate, images from this scan and include these annotated images in your report (use either a drawing programme to annotate images [e.g. paint, adobe illustrator, powerpoint], or print the scan, neatly draw on the printed version of the scan by hand, and then re-scan the annotated, printed version into your report).
  • Use the Micromorphology Description Sheet to record your observations in detail (available on StudentCentral). You can of course supplement this sheet with your own version of notes should you wish to. Include all, full descriptions i.e. the Micromorphology Description Sheet (electronically) in the Appendices of your report (remembering to also include a summarised description in the main body of the report too – words in appendices won’t count but words in the main body of the report do count).
  • While some thin sections you are examining are from glacial environments, many are from other cold environments. Please only assume that what you are looking at is from a cold environment.
  • Note: your scans appear in Plane Polarised Light under a microscope – therefore you will not be able to see/describe any birefringent features e.g. plasmic fabrics (which require Cross Polarised Light under a microscope). However, you are expected to briefly comment on plasmic fabrics in your written report (e.g. what it is, different types, how it forms etc.).
  • It is also useful to annotate the thin section scan while you are describing it in the lab session so that you know where on the thin section you have identified a specific feature. This is useful when you come back to thin sections in the second lab session or outside of lab sessions (print the scan in black and white so you can draw on them).
  • Note: some of you may be working from the same thin section (in pairs). If so, you must EACH record your own, separate data and produce your own separately-written report. Duplication of each other’s work will result in a mark of ZERO.

Structure of the report:

Recommended structure of your report as follows (note: whichever way you decide to structure your report, please make sure that the description and interpretation sections are clearly separate from each other – if you combine these two sections together, you will lose marks):

  • Introduction
  • Thin section description
  • Interpretation (processes and environment)
  • Evaluation of micromorphology as a technique (advantages/limitations)
  • Conclusions
  • References
  • Figures/Tables (please make sure these are formatted and labelled, with captions, accordingly)
  • Appendices (you can include full thin section descriptions/worksheets here – quality of appendices will count towards your final grade)
  • Please keep to the 1000 words word count (note that references, appendices, figure/table captions and words in tables do not count towards word count)

Economic Models: International Business and Economics

Economic Models: International Business and Economics

a) Current Event Research Paper:
One of the best things about studying international trade and finance is that the topic is in the
news every day. Make a habit of reading the international business and economics news.
How to choose your current event:
The current event must have been in the news within the last six months. To find a topic of
interest, start reading the financial and business news now. Once you find a news story, you will
research it more deeply, including the relevant economic facts and/or model.
What to include in your paper:

· a detailed description of the current event
· a detailed discussion of the relevant economic models – explain from the very beginning, as if
your reader knows nothing about the topic; this is how you demonstrate your understanding of
the theory.
· an analysis of the current event – Why is it important to the industry? What companies will care
about this news story? What will its impact be? Who will win? Why? You can choose to answer
any or all of these questions (or any other question). The goal is to demonstrate meaningful
application of economic theory to facts, and deep thinking about the issues presented by the
news story
Logistics:
· 8-10 pages, single spaced
· Citation required anytime what you just wrote down did not originate in your own brain.
· The paper should be prepared using the APA writing style and guideline for reference format.
You must provide a bibliography, and all quotations and sources must be properly cited.
· The Department uses the APA style to facilitate reading the paper and understanding
references without being as cumbersome as some other styles (such as Chicago or MLA).
· Students can download the student style guide from the American Psychological Association
(http://www.apastyle.org/elecref.html) web site or you can purchase the APA style guide from the
book store. There is even a help disk that can be purchased for about $ 40
(http://www.apa.org/software/) that will walk you through the process as you write the paper if
you desire a more “personal assistance”.

· Papers are to be RESEARCH PAPERS. Remember that work that you use from other authors
MUST be referenced. Since it is assumed that you are not an authority on the topic that you are
writing, it is expected that this paper is an overview of many different sources of information.
Each of these must be attributed to the author using the APA format.
· This is your paper and not the cut and paste of someone else’s work. The internet has led to a
false sense of what research is all about. Those new to research tend to think that it means
spending an afternoon surfing the internet and then an afternoon cutting from material available.
· Keep in mind that the Internet: (1) is not quality oriented as it has good materials and not so
good materials, and does not know the difference; (2) is NOT a sole source location. In
particular, sources such as Wikipedia are the works of individual submitters which are not
reviewed. Thus while many entries provide excellent information, some are fundamentally flawed
or just plain wrong.
· Keep in mind that the Boston University Library as well as your local, state and the national US
Library of Congress have extensive online services. USE THEM.