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The purpose of this assignment is examine appropriate ethical and legal standard

ID: 3874526 • Letter: T

Question

The purpose of this assignment is examine appropriate ethical and legal standards regarding the use and reporting of data.

Use content from the Topic Materials and your own research to write a 750-1,000 word paper that examines how ethical and legal standards can be applied in the use and reporting of data.

In the paper, discuss how ethics, law, and the application of ethical and legal standards align with data mining and reporting best practices. Additionally, consider Colossians 1:10 (ESV), "So as to walk in a manner worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing to him, bearing fruit in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God," and the Christian worldview when formulating your ideas. Think about and include discussion of how this scripture and the principles associated with the Christian worldview support and encourage the legal and ethical use and presentation of data.

Provide specific examples of two ethical dilemmas you might encounter as a data analyst, and explain how you would address each dilemma. In your discussion, address the needs of the customer and the business and specific ways to reconcile the needs of each group when the two conflict. Integrate the Christian worldview perspective into your discussion and resolutions.

Explanation / Answer

Ans-

For a Christian, effective worldview education includes gaining knowledge (of what a worldview is and what some worldviews are) plus developing skill in evaluation (using logical reasoning built on a foundation of faith) that is based on evidence from scripture and experience. But "head knowledge" is not enough. Effective worldview education must be a whole-life experience, because "the worldview you think you have" is not the way you really view the world unless it is the dominant influence shaping your decisions and actions during your everyday life, so you are living your worldview.

Basically, a worldview is a view of the world — a mental model of reality, a set of theories (believed by a person or a community) about what exists, how and why things happen, and what it means — that is used for living in the world, that serves as a foundation for our thoughts, decisions, and actions.

Christian Education

Home Education: For all Christian parents (whether their children are being formally educated in a home school, private school, or public school), education for a Christian worldview — based on the Bible and including spiritual disciplines (prayer,...) — should begin in the home.  

Christian Schools continue the worldview education that begins in the home and culture. A private school with a Christian foundation can provide an environment that is spiritually edifying, with curriculum and instruction designed to achieve the explicit goal of helping its students develop a Christian worldview and apply this worldview in all of life, inside and outside the classroom.  

Christian Teachers can openly share their faith and teach their worldviews in Christian schools (and in home schools, of course!) and they can live Christianly, in their teaching quality and their relationships with students and colleagues, in public schools.

General Principles for Living

Some principles for effective living are general, spanning a wide range of worldviews. For example:

The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People (by Stephen Covey) summarizes and illustrates valuable principles for living.

A classic from John Wooden, whose UCLA teams won 10 basketball championships in 12 years (1964-1975), is The Pyramid of Success for athletics and life. Wooden began with his definition of success — "success is peace of mind, which is a direct result of self-satisfaction in knowing you made the effort to do your best to become the best that you are capable of becoming" — and built a Pyramid of Success that is useful in all areas of life;

Ethical Principles

Christian Ethics

Ethical principles similar to Golden Rules — doing for others what you want done for yourself, or (in a Golden Rule with Empathy) doing for others what they want done for themselves — occur in a wide range of religions and philosophies, e.g. in Judaism and Christianity.

A basic principle of character education is the existence of "widely shared... core ethical values... that transcend religious and cultural differences and express our common humanity."

Christian Living

The essence of living a Christian worldview is letting God transform your mind and thus your attitudes, relationships, and actions. Paul says, "Offer yourselves as a living sacrifice to God, dedicated to his service and pleasing to him. This is the true worship that you should offer. Do not conform yourselves to the standards of this world, but let God transform you inwardly by a complete change of your mind. Then you will be able to know the will of God – what is good and is pleasing to him and is perfect."

Thank you :)

Ethical principles similar to Golden Rules — doing for others what you want done for yourself, or (in a Golden Rule with Empathy) doing for others what they want done for themselves — occur in a wide range of religions and philosophies, e.g. in Judaism and Christianity.

A basic principle of character education is the existence of "widely shared... core ethical values... that transcend religious and cultural differences and express our common humanity."

For a Christian, effective worldview education includes gaining knowledge (of what a worldview is and what some worldviews are) plus developing skill in evaluation (using logical reasoning built on a foundation of faith) that is based on evidence from scripture and experience. But "head knowledge" is not enough. Effective worldview education must be a whole-life experience, because "the worldview you think you have" is not the way you really view the world unless it is the dominant influence shaping your decisions and actions during your everyday life, so you are living your worldview.

Basically, a worldview is a view of the world — a mental model of reality, a set of theories (believed by a person or a community) about what exists, how and why things happen, and what it means — that is used for living in the world, that serves as a foundation for our thoughts, decisions, and actions.

Christian Education

Home Education: For all Christian parents (whether their children are being formally educated in a home school, private school, or public school), education for a Christian worldview — based on the Bible and including spiritual disciplines (prayer,...) — should begin in the home.  

Christian Schools continue the worldview education that begins in the home and culture. A private school with a Christian foundation can provide an environment that is spiritually edifying, with curriculum and instruction designed to achieve the explicit goal of helping its students develop a Christian worldview and apply this worldview in all of life, inside and outside the classroom.  

Christian Teachers can openly share their faith and teach their worldviews in Christian schools (and in home schools, of course!) and they can live Christianly, in their teaching quality and their relationships with students and colleagues, in public schools.

General Principles for Living

Some principles for effective living are general, spanning a wide range of worldviews. For example:

The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People (by Stephen Covey) summarizes and illustrates valuable principles for living.

A classic from John Wooden, whose UCLA teams won 10 basketball championships in 12 years (1964-1975), is The Pyramid of Success for athletics and life. Wooden began with his definition of success — "success is peace of mind, which is a direct result of self-satisfaction in knowing you made the effort to do your best to become the best that you are capable of becoming" — and built a Pyramid of Success that is useful in all areas of life;

Ethical Principles

Christian Ethics

Ethical principles similar to Golden Rules — doing for others what you want done for yourself, or (in a Golden Rule with Empathy) doing for others what they want done for themselves — occur in a wide range of religions and philosophies, e.g. in Judaism and Christianity.

A basic principle of character education is the existence of "widely shared... core ethical values... that transcend religious and cultural differences and express our common humanity."

Christian Living

The essence of living a Christian worldview is letting God transform your mind and thus your attitudes, relationships, and actions. Paul says, "Offer yourselves as a living sacrifice to God, dedicated to his service and pleasing to him. This is the true worship that you should offer. Do not conform yourselves to the standards of this world, but let God transform you inwardly by a complete change of your mind. Then you will be able to know the will of God – what is good and is pleasing to him and is perfect."

Thank you :)