For the duration of this course you will be working on the Project Assignment. Each week you will learn new things that you can relate and apply to this project. Each week you should have updates to add to the project assignment. By the end of the course your project will be completed and will apply what you have learned from each module.
Background
You work for a local hospital in the Process Improvement office as a business analyst. You have been asked to work on a new process improvement initiative. Healthcare practitioners are reporting that when seeking information, they have unmet needs. They are also reporting that the information they do find is not of great quality. Lastly the healthcare practitioners are unsure how to present the found information in a way that is easy to understand.
Strategies for Information Seekers Tasks
Tasks
1. Include your notes from the weekly material as it applies to this assignment.
2. Think about how this applies to your organization and the recommendations you might have on this topic, put that into your notes.
3. The instructor will check your one note for progress and add comments as needed.
So the definition of personal space is a norm which differs from culture to culture. People who stand too close to us may seem to us pushy; people who stand too far away may seem cold. And while we may shrug off such social oddities, psychological professionals do not. (In a marriage counselor’s office, how close a couple sit to one another will be a potentially importand observation.) In other words, norm violation within one’s culture tends to be viewed, in varying degrees, as abnormal.
Norms, however, are not the only standard for defining abnormal behavior. Other criteria are statistical rarity, personal discomfort, maladaptive behavior, and deviation from an ideal state.
From a statistical point of view, abnormality is any substantial deviation from a statistically calculated average. Those who fall within the “golden mean”-those, in short, who do what most other people do-are normal, while those whose behavior differs from that of the majority are abnormal.
Another criterion for defining abnormality is personal discomfort. If people are content with their lives, then their lives are of no concern to the mental health establishment. If, on the other hand, they are distressed over their thoughts or behavior-then they require treatment.
A fourth criterion for defining a behavior as abnormal is whether it is maladaptive. Here the question is whether the person, given that behavior pattern, is able to meet the demands of his or her life-hold down a job, deal with friends and family, pay the bills on time, and the like. If not, the apttern is abnormal. This standard overlaps somewhat wit that of norm violation. After all, many norms are rules for adapting our behavior to ur own and our society’s requirements. (To arrive for work drunk is to violate a norm; it is also maladaptive, in that it may get you fired.) At the same time, the maladaptiveness standard is unique in that it concentrate