Logic and Reasoning

 

https://rise.articulate.com/share/o0XaxAoT-e6J__fgFBKRB_iWFZeCqETl#/

This week, we considered the fact that although underlying rational structures are the same regardless of gender or culture, there may be strong age, gender, or culture factors that affect how we employ reason and what we privilege in our reasoning process.
In your initial post, complete the following:
Give an example of how age, gender, or culture might affect work place problem solving focusing on potentially different forms of reasoning. You can create an example, give a personal experience, or find a credible example in the media.
Explain how the skills you have gained in this course could help you solve this problem and display your competence in different forms of reasoning

Sample Solution

It is much easier to get into a community college than a university. They have different, less strict administrative requirements, giving the impression that only people who can’t get into a university go there. However, that is not always true. Tuition plays a major role on where high school graduates can further their education. Universities tuition grows 19x faster than the median family income (Lipson and Stern). Community college offers much cheaper tuition and the option to transfer to a university afterwards. When transfering, universities often don’t look at GPA, SAT, or ACT from high school, giving you a chance to start over. Students who transfer statistically have a higher GPA than students who have attended a university since freshman year (Mathur).
Community colleges are typically a two year school where the workload is considered lighter (Scholarships). To some, this aspect seems like the easy way out. For others, this could be the best opportunity. While students are enrolled in community college, they can do most things and sometimes even more than they could while in high school. Students can work and even provide for their family while attending because of the flexibility of their schedule (Lipson and Stern).
To make an assumption that someone is not smart because they attend a community college is wrong. Numerous statistics can prove that some transfer students even exceed university students GPA. The conventional wisdom that university students are smarter is something that many believe to be true. The underlying reason for people’s college choices sometimes does not have to do with their academic ability. Community college students can be just as intelligent as a university student.

This question has been answered.

Get Answer
WeCreativez WhatsApp Support
Our customer support team is here to answer your questions. Ask us anything!
👋 Hi, Welcome to Compliant Papers.