Welcome to Essay Galaxy!
Home Essay Topics Join Now! Support
Essay Topics
• American History
• Arts and Movies
• Biographies
• Book Reports
• Computers
• Creative Writing
• Economics
• Education
• English
• Geography
• Health and Medicine
• Legal Issues
• Miscellaneous
• Music and Musicians
• Poetry and Poets
• Politics and Politicians
• Religion
• Science and Nature
• Social Issues
• World History
Members
Username: 
Password: 
Support
• Contact Us
• Got Questions?
• Forgot Password
• Terms of Service
• Cancel Membership



Enter your query below to search our database containing over 50,000+ essays and term papers

Search For:
Match Type: Any All

Search results 2641 - 2650 of 22819 matching essays
< Previous Pages: 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 Next >

2641: Effective Ways Of Coaching And
... we have two mature (sometimes educated) and experienced people dealing on a face-to-face basis. We have to assume at least in the military there is still some honor and integrity left in the world, so we take the subordinate at face value and assume that what is expected to happen will somehow magical occur. Too often we discover as managers, one month down the road, things are just as ... sustain the change; and you will have wasted your time and energy. Maynard states only when you have achieved a sustained change, have you completed the coaching process. Two-thirds of the people of the world go to bed starving every night and that s a crying shame, but 99.9 percent of the population goes to bed every night starving for recognition, it s such a simple thing to give ... the shape of formal employee suggestion programs or may be extended through the informal and ongoing conversations that managers have with individuals or groups. Kinlaw states that innovation is the process of developing and implementing new ideas. Managers involve subordinates and co-workers in the process of innovation through the following: Inputting encouraging them to present new ideas. Decision making permitting them to help decide which ideas will be tested ...
2642: Psychology Comparison
Psychology comparison The world, today, is exposed to a plethora of information, substantiated or not. Since newspapers and other secondary source material is responsible for relaying information to much of the population it is important to understand and realize ... By comparing these two the limitations of the secondary source can be exposed and used as an example for other such circumstances. The secondary-source article comes from the August 30, 1998 edition of the New York Times. Written by Amy Harmon, the report is titled าResearchers Find Sad Lonely World in Cyberspace.ำ The article goes on to explain that researchers at Carnegie Mellon University completed a study (later identified as the าHomenetำ study) that examines the social and psychological effects of Internet use ...
2643: Lord of the Flies
... and speeches. "Ralph was puzzled by the shutter that flickered in his brain. There was something he wanted to say; then the shutter had come down." (p. 156) He started to feel lost in their new environment as the boys, with the exception of Piggy began to change and adapt to their freedom. As he did not lose his sense of responsibility, his viewpoints and priorities began to differ from the ... for my glasses back, not as a favour. I don't ask you to be a sport, I'll say, not because you're strong, but because what's right's right." (p. 189) This new standard of harshness brought tears out of him as the suffering became intolerable. For a brief moment, Piggy's anger at the unfairness and his helplessness robbed him of his usual logical reasoning, which returned ... Piggy was an intelligent boy with a good understanding of their situation on the island. He was able to think clearly and plan ahead with caution so that even in the freedom of their unregulated world, his wisdom and his isolation from the savage boys kept him from giving into the evil that had so easily consumed Jack and his followers. The resulting cruelty Jack inflicted upon him taught Piggy ...
2644: Milton's Presentation of the Fallen Angels
Milton's Presentation of the Fallen Angels Write about Milton's presentation of the fallen angels, showing both how he attempts to individualise them, and how he uses them to present his view of the world The fallen angels are Satan's minions and the voices by which Milton may express a variety of opinions and views, showing the diversity and intricacies of Hell, and the immorality of their actions and ... infernal dungeon, to take a flight throughout history, giving his own point of view. It is thus that Books I and II of "Paradise Lost" are so unique, as the alternative, and less-frequently explored world of the devils, is probed in such a fascinating manner. Milton uses the story of the fallen angels to open out on numerous eras, civilisations, myths and stories, allowing him to convey his own perception of the world's history, as the reader is guided through various points in time. Before we are introduced to the individuals, Milton depicts an enormous army of different species, each of changeable size and form. The ...
2645: Experiencing Cyberspace
... cover visual distance. Just as many people do, I refer to the places that I visit as virtual worlds. I like calling them this because I never actually get to see the reality of the "world". I only get to see it electronically and digitally. The feeling that I experience while in cyberspace is knowing that I possess the power to visit any where I want. When I click one of the buttons on the mouse, or what I refer to as a transporter, I feel as though all the power in the world rests at the end of my fingertips. I am in my own sort of fantasy land. Once I land in a desired location, or website, I have the opportunity to click on pictures and words that take me to new worlds. These pictures and words have the power to make my virtual tour even more pleasing by introducing me to new and exciting things. People have referred to experiences in cyberspace, experiences such as ...
2646: Cold War 4
... or later the United States would clash with Soviet Russia. As a matter of fact, the distrust between the two powers has its early origins in the Russian Civil War, where the Western Allies of World War One sent in supplies and men to help the anti-Bolshevik "Whites" defeat the Red Army. This was seen as an attempt to destroy communism in its early years and deeply resented by the Bolsheviks. The Second World War changed the situation. When Hitler launched "Operation Barbarossa", it was estimated that Russia would be defeated within weeks, months at latest. Churchill, the British prime minister, immediately provided help to Stalin. The United States ... the US to Russia. It seems rather far-reaching to propose that circumstances were all that well until Yalta, and that the agreements reached there actually led to the Cold War. Already during the Second World War there was a growth of distrust between the USSR and the two western powers, Britain and the USA. Since late 1941 Stalin urged Churchill to "open" a second front and thus relieve the ...
2647: Battle of the Bytes: Macintosh vs. Windows 95
... also call up information on a local area network server or Internet site. Windows 95's plug and play system allows the operating system to read what's on your machine and automatically configure your new software that you need to install, however, this only works if the added hardware is designed to support it, and it will for a majority of hardware. All these things are major improvements, but hardware and CONFIG.SYS settings left over from earlier programs can conflict with the new system, causing your hard drive to crash. This is something all users of Windows 95 will dread. Even though Microsoft has made many wonderful changes to Windows, Apple is working on developing a new operation system, called Copland. It may beat many of the Windows 95 improvements. Apple is still deciding on what new things to add when the system will start shipping later in the year. Some ...
2648: Frederick Douglass
... name he bore until his flight to freedom in 1838. His father may or may not have been a white man named Anthony, but Douglass never firmly validated or rejected this possibility. During transit to New York (where he became a freedman) his name became Stanley, and upon arrival he changed it again to Johnson. In New Bedford, where there were too many Johnson's, he found it necessary to change it once more, and his final choice was Douglass, taken, as suggested to him by a white friend and benefactor, from ... single 's' in his name). All throughout, he clung to Frederick, to 'preserve a sense of my identity' (Norton, 1988). This succession of names is illustrative of the transformation undergone by one returning from the world of the dead, which in a sense is what the move from oppression to liberty is. Frederick Douglass not only underwent a transformation but, being intelligent and endowed with the gift of Voice, he ...
2649: Claude Monet and His Painting
... Before long, the limitations of L e Havre on a burgeoning young artist became all to apparent and, in 1859, Monet left for Paris. However, having displaced himself to the heart of Europe's art-world, Monet soon found himself disillusioned by the confines of long-since established princip les. He rejected the formal art training that was available in Paris. Bored and frustrated, Monet was to do more painting at ... for a year with a prestigious regiment: les Chaussures d'Afrique . This experience was to have a profound effect on Monet. The landscapes and colours of Alg eria presented an entirely different perspective of the world, one which was to inspire him for many years to come. Theoretically, Monet should have remained in Algeria for seven years, but his time there was curtailed by the contraction of typhoid. The artist's ... social backgrounds. Noticeably, Renoir was considerably less well-off then his fellow artists. The unifying force th at was to bind the group for so long, however, was the commitment and intense dedication to their new approach to art. One which was eventually to be labelled ~impressionism. Gleyre was a very talented instructor and all his students benefitted from his persistent teaching methods. Monet remained at his studio for approximately ...
2650: The Lost World: Private Interview with Dr. Ian Malcolm
The Lost World: Private Interview with Dr. Ian Malcolm 1. Dr. Malcolm, what is it about dinosaurs that interests you? Well, for me it's the primitive nature. The way they hunt, seek and kill. We have learned ... escape and therefore no chance of any danger to mankind. However if they somehow find means of escaping the island we'll have made precautions into ensuring they will never reach land. 6. With this new breakthrough in science, do you believe there will be a need to continue researching dinosaur bones? To be honest, no. With the actual animals living and breathing under 24 hour observations, I believe it would ... that were not recreated such as the Pterodactyl. We will still be studying the bones of those such animals. 7. Are you and the others planning to let the public know about your secret "Lost World?" No. If the public knew about this island they would surely gain interest. There would be those certain few who would decide to take a trip out there to see for themselves these actual ...


Search results 2641 - 2650 of 22819 matching essays
< Previous Pages: 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 Next >

 Copyright © 2003 Essay Galaxy.com. All rights reserved