Reference no: EM133722843
Case: Study the required chapter(s) of the textbook and any additional recommended resources. Some answers may require you to do additional research on the Internet or in other reference sources. Choose your sources carefully.
Consider the discussion and the any insights you gained from it.
Review the assignment rubric and the specifications below to ensure that your response aligns with all assignment expectations.
Create your assignment submission and be sure to cite your sources, use APA style as required, and check your spelling.
The following specifications are required for this assignment:
Length: 16 slides minimum; answers must thoroughly address the questions in a clear, concise manner.
Structure:
Title: 1 slide
Objective: 1 slide
Chapter 5 case study: at least 4 slides
Chapter 6 case study: at least 4 slides
Chapter 7 case study: at least 4 slides
Conclusion: 1 slide
References: 1 slide
Additionally, because a good presentation has few words on the slides include a script with the verbiage you would say when presenting; script should be a minimum of 50 words per slide.
References: Use the appropriate APA style in-text citations and references for all resources utilized to answer the questions. Include at least three (3) scholarly sources to support your claims, at least one per case study
Assignment Tips Week ThreeCreate a PowerPoint presentation based on the following three case studies from Guido, 7th edition.1. Read the case study, You be the Judge, presented at the end of Chapter 5 (Guido, p. 65-66) which begins, "The patient had an apparent cardiac event at home..." and answer the questions in the assignment. Be sure to state your decision on the case very clearly and explain your decision. This is a wrongful death case. Your decision should explain if this was a wrongful death or not and explain who, if anyone, should be responsible for the wrongful death.2. Read the case study, You be the Judge, presented at the end of Chapter 6 (Guido, p. 94) which begins, "The day after surgery the nurse removed a drainage tube..." and answer the questions in the assignment. Be sure to state your decision and why and who, if anyone, is responsible for the patient's damage.3. Read the case study, You be the Judge, presented at the end of Chapter 7 (Guido, p. 112) which begins, "The patient was in surgery to remove moles from her..." and answer the questions in the assignment. Be sure to clearly state who, if anyone, should be liable and why.General PowerPoint Tips
Number every PP slide. This is so audience members can ask questions at the end of the presentation relating to a particular slide or make comments regarding a slide and be able to refer to it by number.
Include all the information required in an APA 7th edition title page on the PP title slide. This is a course requirement designed to have you practice APA title page set up. In real life, PP title slides may vary from APA unless the conference proceedings indicate otherwise.
Frame the objectives slide in a PP in terms of learning objectives, which is what the audience will be able to do after viewing your PP. See Blooms Taxonomy of action verbs to write your objectives. Google Bloom's Taxonomy online. Learning objectives are always observable and measurable so "understand" is not one of the verbs one uses for your audience learning objectives.
Include a narrative with every slide in the Notes Page view, even the title slide. This is what you will say to the audience while the slide is on the screen. Place the narrative in the PP Notes Page view, under the slide, not on the slide. Even the title slide has a narrative - what you would say to welcome the audience and introduce yourself and explain in just two to three sentences what the presentation is about.
Introduce the important points of the case in one slide before starting to discuss the assignment questions for that case. Do not assume I know the case and thus start to discuss the case without introducing the important points. Introducing the important points of the case helps me to see that you know which facts are important.
Clearly state your decision in each case. Whether your decision is wrong or right, you will earn more points than if you waffle on the decision and take no position.
Include three important legal concepts in the conclusion slide that you want the audience to recall from the presentation (one per case) and be sure the narrative is present in the Notes Page view under the conclusion slide. The conclusion is the most important slide in the presentation. It is what you want the audience to recall from your presentation.