Organizational Behavior
Project Guidelines
You must watch any ONE of the below mentioned movies. Both these movies are available to you on You Tube.
- Remember the Titans
OR
- The Kings Speech
After watching the movie, with the help of all the theories we have learnt so far. Please incorporate minimum TWO theories that proved to be worthy of making a decision and solving the issues presented in the movie.
The Submission Date for the Project is 2nd December 2019
You must write minimum of 600 – 800 words.
It should be written in Microsoft Word, Times New Roman, 12pt.
2.
For this assignment, you are asked to send your Open Learning Faculty Member reading notes for four of the
articles you have read in Units One and Two.
For each reading note, be sure to provide a correct citation, a statement of the author’s argument, a summary
of the main points of analysis, the typical sources of evidence used by the author, and your assessment of
how well the author developed his or her argument.
Each reading note should be about 200-250 words, excluding the citation. You may be penalized if your
reading notes are excessively short or long.
Submit reading notes for four of the following articles:
Allan Greer, “National, Transnational, and Hypernational Historiographies: New France Meets Early American
History,” Canadian Historical Review 91, no. 4 (December 2010): 695-724. doi: 10.3138/chr.91.4.695.
Alan Gordon, “The Many Meanings of Jacques Cartier,” chap. 6 in The Hero and the Historians: Historiography
and the Uses of Jacques Cartier (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2010) (TRU library e-book, search: The Hero and the
Historians
A.B. McKillop, “Who Killed Canadian History? A View from the Trenches,” Canadian Historical Review, 99, no.2
(June 1999): 269-300.
Charles C. Mann, “1 491,” The Atlantic (March 2002), http://www.theatlantic.com/
1491/302445/.
Susan Neylan, “Unsettling British Columbia: Canadian Aboriginal Historiography,1992-2012,” History Compass
11, no. 10 (October 2013): 845-858, doi:10.1111/hic3/12085.
Harald E. L. Prins, “Children of Gluskap: Wabanaki Indians on the Eve of the European Invasion,” chap. 4 in
American Beginnings: Exploration, Culture, and Cartography in the Land of Norumbega, eds. Emerson W.
Baker, Edwin A. Churchill, Richard D’Abate, Kristine L. Jones, Victor A. Conrad, and Harald E. L. Prins. (Lincoln:
University of Nebraska Press, 1994), 95-117.