YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Sports Journalism and Ethical Theory
Essays 721 - 750
In eight pages this research paper discusses the responsibility of the media in the reporting of sporting events. Four sources ar...
has even made college athletes suffer from the negative effects of bad or unfair press. Coaches are known to mildly bribe the pres...
Yosemite Sam getting his head blown off at least once a week and of course, the memorable Wyle E. Coyote who never, in all his fo...
In eleven pages this paper discusses college sports gambling issues as it affects the NCAA, teams, and athletes. Ten sources are ...
In six pages a model proposal detailing ways in which sporting events' game fixing and gambling by college students can be curtail...
In five pages this paper discusses the changes in physical education and sports and also includes competition's psychological impa...
In seven pages this paper examines Olympic training and the significance of high school sports and high school athletic programs. ...
In eight pages this study considers imports of sports drinks and the market potential of Norway. Four sources are cited in the bi...
negative impact on the outcomes of youth sports programs. Children develop their sense of fair play and their perceptions of ethi...
The writer describes the differences between boys and girls with respect to their abilities to play competitive sports, and sugges...
lives. This is unnecessary, since there are effective medications on the market, along with other training guidelines that can he...
in which to hike and walk, a need that was filled by establishing hundreds of town parks which were paid for and maintained by the...
The aspects of hooliganism as encouraged by soccer is discussed in a paper consisting of 7 pages which also speculates on how Brit...
In six pages this paper examines fan injuries at sporting events in a consideration of issues of liability and the law. There are...
eliminated. (Neish, 1996) In legal jargon, this is termed the "doctrine of foreseeability." (p. 4) The law asks four basic quest...
and ice creams sold in the summer, this looks at the trends rather than just the past performance. Regression analysis takes th...
3) the observer must determine if the person was forced or coerced into doing that behavior or not (Kearsley, 2008). If coercion w...
and how he or she is perceived by others" (Muller, 2005) that inevitably allows managers and staff alike to align perceived impres...
language processing and categorization which were integrated into elements of Classical Theory. Classical Theory, though, was cha...
The metaparadigms of nursing represent common concepts that are accepted throughout the profession and across international bounda...
over a great deal with social exchange theory and the study of politics in the workplace (Huczyniski and Buchanan, 2003). The use ...
of this theory this intelligent entity, of course, would be God. In some ways research that has attempted to prove that...
employed skilled craftsmen, and if an employee left a replacement would be easy to train (Taylor, 1998). The development of Sci...
a conscious level. In fact Sullivan thought that tensions were most often a distortion of reality (Feist & Feist, 2009). This sugg...
is satisfied, the need no longer exists until the next time. An interpersonal need such as the need for tenderness and nurturance ...
who value money may be motivated towards a goal that will increase the amount of money they receive, however an individual who val...
relationship with expectancy theory; people will generally perform a task in the expectation that a reward will be offered at the ...
communication, problem solving and decision making. While Knight borrows aspects of leadership from a few theoretical approaches ...
values (Hoenisch, 2005). Durkheim believed that "society can survive only if there exists among its members a sufficient degree of...
sphere (Remco, 2003). Theorist Henri Fayol (1841-1925) developed the concept of security management in his 1916 book entitled Adm...