Order Number |
5567890633 |
Type of Project |
ESSAY |
Writer Level |
PHD VERIFIED |
Format |
APA |
Academic Sources |
10 |
Page Count |
3-12 PAGES |
This week you will be asked to identify a personal boundary spanning challenge. For this post you are asked to consider the practices of buffering and reflecting. From Chapter 4 in your text, choose one of the five buffering tactics: separate groups, reduce threat from external influences, make boundaries visible for others, create a unifying team identity, or build team cohesion. Choose one tactic that you would apply to your boundary spanning challenge, share your understanding of how this would be applied, and provide your desired outcome. Provide the same analysis for reflecting tactics from Chapter 5 to the same boundary spanning challenge. Describe a reflection tactic that you would apply to your challenge. Why have you chosen this tactic? Describe who you would involve in this exercise and how that would look. Utilize two scholarly sources to anchor your analysis in the research
Hydrogen Bonding Shared Between Nucleic Acids In DNA
Given what you have learned about the hydrogen bonding shared between nucleic acids in DNA, which pair is more stable under increasing heat: adenine and thymine, or cytosine and guanine? Explain why.
Under increasing heat, the more stable pairs are; Guanine (G) and Cytosine. This is because their composition consists of 3 hydrogen bonds while Thymine (T) and Adenine (A) consists of 2 hydrogen bonds. The more the hydrogen bonds, the more stable the nucleotides therefore, more heat is required in breaking down the bonds.
Which of the following is not an organic molecule; Methane (CH4), Fructose (C6H12O6), Rosane (C20H36), or Ammonia (NH3)? How do you know?
An organic molecule consists of carbon and hydrogen atoms in its structure. Out of the four molecules, ammonia is made up of only Nitrogen and Hydrogen. Hence, ammonia is not an organic molecule.
Most Beloved President in America Research
Chose one of the three essay topics and respond to it
“FDR wasn’t always the most beloved president in America” (Brinkley, p.17).
(Author, pg. #).