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Reflection

 

Answer the questions below in your own words & in paragraph form. Read the Course Information (file uploaded) and STATDISK Manual (file uploaded). You can add additional sentences/paragraphs. QUESTIONS: 1. Reflect upon what you hoped to get of this course (Statistical Methods and Applications). Did you achieve your goals? 2. Appraise the specific skills you learned that will help you in your major (Computer Information Systems – Healthcare Informatics) and career choice and which skills you feel you still need more practice with. 3. Explain how you are now able to apply and evaluate statistical knowledge in your everyday life.


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reflection

Paper details:kindly, find my draft:

the order instructions is my friends paper use the title “content” for your references. also, if you can after finishing the paper make the whole words count like “1000 to 1300” would appreciate it, but for the part you will write it has to be 275 words “1 page”
1- correct the English in it
2- Write the part where it says articles and 7 sources “the source should be from the below reading list” mentions “how you organized the readings and how the readings were used to answer the seminar questions.” “Our seminar focused on the needs wants which we though are a major key to debts and the questions above.

Reading list:
Lazzarato, M. The Making of the Indebted Man, Essay on the Neoliberal Condition (2012) Semiotext).

Graeber, D. (2013) Debt: The First 5,000 Years (Melville House).

Soederberg, S. (2014) Debtfare States and the Poverty Industry. Money, discipline and the surplus
population. New York: Routledge.

Soederberg, S. (2013) The Politics of Debt and Development in the New Millennium: an introduction. Third World Quarterly 34(4): 535-46.

Gloukoviezoff, G. (2006) From Financial Exclusion to Overindebtedness: The Paradox of Difficulties
for People on Low Income? In Anderloni, L., Braga, M.D., and E. Carluccio (eds) New frontiers in
banking services. Emerging needs and tailored products for untapped markets. Berlin: Springer
Verlag: 213-45.

Froud, J., Leaver, A. and Williams, K. (2007) New Actors in a Financialised Economy and the
Remaking of Capitalism. New Political Economy 12(3): 339–47.

Montgomerie, J. (2009) The Pursuit of (Past) Happiness? Middle- class Indebtedness and American
Financialisation. New Political Economy 14(1): 1-24.

Montgomerie, J. and Williams, K. (2009) Financialised Capitalism: After the Crisis and Beyond
Neoliberalism. Competition & Change 13(2): 99–107

Brodie, J. (2003) ‘Globalization, In/Security and the Paradoxes of the Social’ in Isabella Bakker and Stephen Gill Power, Production and Social Reproduction (Palgrave), pp. 47 – 65.
Wacquant, L. (2009) Punishing the Poor: The Neoliberal Government of Social Insecurity (Duke University Press).
Gathergood, J. (2012) Self-control, financial literacy and consumer overindebtedness. Journal of Economic
Psychology 33: 590-602.
Jones, O. (2011) Chavs: The Demonization of the Working Class (Verso).
Jones, D. (2008) Understanding Criminal Behaviour: Psychosocial Approaches to Criminality (Willan publishing).
Berardi, B. (2009) The Soul at Work: From Alienation to Autonomy (Semiotext).
Clarke, J. and J. Newman (2012) ‘The Alchemy of austerity’, Critical Social Policy 32 (3), pp. 299-319

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