Posted: March 12th, 2023

I need help with discussion

I just need help with the writing part.

PHI201

© 2020 Strayer University. All Rights Reserved. This document contains Strayer University Confidential and Proprietary information and may
not be copied, further distributed, or otherwise disclosed in whole or in part, without the expressed written permission of Strayer University.

Page 1 of 5

  • Creating an Outline or Script for Week 9 Assignment
  • Prepare for Recording

    For many, hitting “record” is stressful. What are you going to say? How are you going to say it?
    What happens if you mess up?

    While you cannot plan for everything, you can avoid some of the most common with strong
    preparation. As part of the Week 9 Assignment requirements, you are asked to prepare by
    developing either an outline or a script.

    The focus should be deciding, in general, what you want to say and when to say it. This simple
    act of planning makes it easier to hit that record button and, when combined with some solid
    practice, increases your chances of making a solid presentation or podcast.

    Two Options

    Different people have different preferences in how they work. Do you want to create a general
    overview to work from (an outline), or do you want to write something to help you make sure
    you get the words just right (a script)? The overall structure of either will be the same. The only
    real difference for this assignment will be how much you write.

    NOTE: Using a script can be difficult without practicing. It is important to avoid sounding like
    you are reading (or looking like it if presenting on camera or in person). Remember, the script is
    there to help make sure you collect your thoughts and deliver the presentation the way you
    want. It is not meant to be read word-for-word in front of the camera or audience.

    Structure

    OPENING INTRODUCTION OVERVIEW – FIRST POINT

    OVERVIEW – SECOND POINT

    RELATIONSHIP (FIRST POINT TO SECOND POINT) KEY EXAMPLE(S)

    CLOSING

    Example for Assignment – Outline (Based on “Podcast Example A”)

    1. Opening.

    a. Name.

    b. Background.

    PHI201

    © 2020 Strayer University. All Rights Reserved. This document contains Strayer University Confidential and Proprietary information and may
    not be copied, further distributed, or otherwise disclosed in whole or in part, without the expressed written permission of Strayer University.

    Page 2 of 5

    2. Introduction.

    a. Philosophy of Change.

    b. 10 Skills.

    3. Overview – First Point.

    a. Heraclitus quote.

    b. Change.

    i. Connect change to quote.

    c. Electronics example.

    i. Background.

    ii. Learning.

    iii. Transition to 10 Skills (agility).

    4. Overview – Second Point.

    a. Return to Heraclitus quote and connect to 10 Skills/theme.

    b. 10 Skills and different experience levels.

    5. Key Example – Agility/Innovation/Problem Solving.

    a. Focus on these.

    b. Margaret Atwood quote.

    c. Connect philosophy of change and 10 Skills through quote.

    6. Closing.

    a. Review key points on change.

    b. Leave audience with something to remember.

    i. Two options: be ready or ignore.

    PHI201

    © 2020 Strayer University. All Rights Reserved. This document contains Strayer University Confidential and Proprietary information and may
    not be copied, further distributed, or otherwise disclosed in whole or in part, without the expressed written permission of Strayer University.

    Page 3 of 5

    ii. One is good.

    Example for Assignment – Script (Based on “Podcast Example A”)

    OPENING

    My name is Ed Buchanan and I have traveled many different roads in nearly 40 years. From
    working in the professional world to working toward a degree, my experience points to one
    specific idea.

    INTRODUCTION

    Today I will share my philosophy of change and how it is reinforced through experience working
    with employable skills.

    OVERVIEW – FIRST POINT

    “The way up and the way down are one and the same. Living and dead, waking and sleeping,
    young and old, are the same.” —Heraclitus, Life Is Flux, about 500 BC

    All of these comparisons have one thing in common: change. They are the same because they
    all involve a degree of change. If you do not look deeply, you may argue that there is no change
    happening in people who sleep or are dead, but that is not correct. Sleeping people breathe,
    cells heal, the brain functions and continues to work through the day’s problems. Even in death,
    we change. Some body functions may continue well after our deaths. We are not the same
    physical beings at the time of death as we are months or years afterward. Heraclitus believed
    that “the only constant is change” and that idea still drives people forward today.

    If we settle on this idea that change is the only constant, we can use this as the motivation to
    move forward. I can remember working at a major company in my 20s. It was a good job where
    I worked on electronics equipment. Translation: I played with broken stereos, TVs, cameras,
    and camcorders, and did my best to make sure they were working when I shipped them back to
    the customers.

    I was paid well—even though I had no real background in electronics repair—but I dedicated
    myself to learning. When a piece of equipment came in that I had never seen before, I sat down
    next to our senior technicians and watched as they took it apart, identified the problems, and
    corrected them. I was smart enough to recognize what I did not know and self-aware. The only
    way to improve was to find people who could show me the way and soak up everything I could.

    I did well. In fact, I did this so well that within a few short years I worked my way to the highest
    technician level and was moved around the shop to work wherever there was a heavy

    PHI201

    © 2020 Strayer University. All Rights Reserved. This document contains Strayer University Confidential and Proprietary information and may
    not be copied, further distributed, or otherwise disclosed in whole or in part, without the expressed written permission of Strayer University.

    Page 4 of 5

    workload. My agility made me a key team member and helped me pay my increasing school
    bills. I wouldn’t be where I am today if I had not used my skills and interacted with the change
    all around me.

    Going from unskilled to top tech level in a few short years is a good way to showcase how to
    address the changing world, but it’s not the only story. Dealing with change was at the heart of
    each moment in that journey. I had to change my knowledge level. I had to change my outlook
    and recognize where I needed to learn and who could teach me. I had to change the way my

    manager viewed me (beginning as unknowledgeable and becoming the go-to guy). Change,
    change, change.

    OVERVIEW – SECOND POINT

    What we will do now is talk about how each of you interacts with change. I have shared my
    outlook, mostly leaning on what Heraclitus said a long, long time ago. What do you know about
    change? How do you deal with it? More importantly, how will you deal with change next time
    you encounter it? [4:02]

    These are the basic questions I used to help think of the role change plays in my life. They
    conveniently will help you do the same. When I think through these questions, my mind goes
    right to recent experience with the 10 skills taught in Strayer gen ed courses—skills that
    employers are looking for because people that have these skills succeed. Communication.
    Problem solving. Agility. Self and social awareness. Technology. Initiative. Productivity. Results
    driven. Relationship building. Innovation.

    Like many people, I had different experience levels with different skills. Some of these skills, I
    came in with a really strong idea of what it meant. Other skills, I didn’t have quite the same
    grasp. What I did learn is that each of these skills developed over time. Stepping back, I realize
    that these all revolve around the same thing: change.

    KEY EXAMPLE

    Agility is how well you can adapt to an ever-changing world. Innovation is looking at new ways
    to address barriers or ways of doing things. Problem solving is changing a situation to fix
    something that is going wrong.

    We started with an ancient philosopher, journeyed to the recent past and experience with the
    10 skills, and now we move to the final part of my philosophy of change.

    PHI201

    © 2020 Strayer University. All Rights Reserved. This document contains Strayer University Confidential and Proprietary information and may
    not be copied, further distributed, or otherwise disclosed in whole or in part, without the expressed written permission of Strayer University.

    Page 5 of 5

    For most of us, change is not a light switch. We don’t just flip it and something inside of
    ourselves magically changes the world around us. The last part of my philosophy of change
    comes courtesy of Margaret Atwood. Many people will know her for the Hulu series The
    Handmaid’s Tale and this quote comes from her book of the same name:

    “Nothing changes instantaneously: in a gradually heating bathtub you’d be boiled to death
    before you knew it.”

    When the world around us gets more dangerous, we often do not recognize it. When the signs
    surround us that change is coming, we may not pay enough attention. What I encourage
    everyone to do, though, is to have a plan, or at least an idea, of how they want to respond to
    change and the person they need to be when change pops up in your life.

    CLOSING

    Change surrounds each of us—at home, at work, at school, sometimes just driving home after a
    long day. If we have a philosophy about how we deal with change, it can take a little of the sting
    out of change and make change something you actually look for in your life.

    I cannot tell you what change is coming. What I can say is you have two options: be ready or
    ignore it. Only one of these options will pay off.

      Creating an Outline or Script for Week 9 Assignment

      Prepare for Recording

      Two Options

      Structure

      Example for Assignment – Script (Based on “Podcast Example A”)

      OPENING

      INTRODUCTION

      OVERVIEW – FIRST POINT

      OVERVIEW – SECOND POINT

      KEY EXAMPLE

      CLOSING

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