The Tipping Point

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    How do our surrounding shape who we become In the book The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell and Middle School the Worst Years of my Life by james patterson. The authors bring up the question How do surrounding shape who we are? Yes they do, here's why. In The Tipping Point one of the characters Mark Granovetter dose a study on getting a job. He when around asking people what there job was and how they got it. Here's what he found. “56 percent found their job threw a personal connection.” For…

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    Malcolm Gladwell Essay

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    Making it to the Top Appearing on the Time Magazine’s one hundred most influential people, Malcolm Gladwell is a Canadian journalist who started his career in New York (Famous Authors). As well as being a bestselling author of four books, Gladwell is a speaker and still continues to work as writer for “The New Yorker” since starting in 1996. His works often deal with research and exploration in the areas of sociology, psychology, and social psychology. On September 3, 1963, Malcolm Gladwell was…

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    Law Of Few Analysis

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    they make a point of telling everyone…

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    Behavior can be defined as an individual’s response to an action. The provoked feeling that propels someone to move or strike is the behavior. Behavior is influenced by many different factors. Some examples of these factors could be one’s genetic makeup, environment or individual thoughts and feelings. What makes one person’s behavior uniquely different from another? The world is very diverse in means of different habits, cultures and sex. This diversity is what sets each individual behavior…

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    an essential. Nearly every drinking beverage in America contains caffeine such as coffee, tea, and energy drinks. As Gladwell mentions the growth of caffeine, it has become one of the most useful/common drugs. Caffeine has become addictive to the point where everyday working people rely on the usage of caffeine to continue their performance while keeping focus on what they are assigned to do. Moreover,…

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    Malcolm Gladwell's article, “Small Change: Why the Revolution Will Not Be Tweeted,” is a rhetorically successful argument that depicts why social media is not an effective tool in organizing social or political activism. Social media was just rising in popularity and worldly politics were tense at the time, so Gladwell had a wide audience of readers. In his article, Gladwell describes multiple examples of protests that had no means of social media during these events. Consequently, these…

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    Malcolm Gladwell the author of “Small Change” Why the Revolution Will Not Be Retweeted. Educates readers about Civil Rights movement events from the past, and the effects of social media in today’s time. Technology has evolved over the years, giving birth to social media. Social media is wonderful for a lot of things, but is social media an effective resource for activism? In the article, Gladwell starts off by telling the story about four friends. Their names were David Richmond, Franklin…

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    Thin-slicing is the term Gladwell utilizes to describe when you make snap decisions and to come to conclusions in a very small amount of time. Decisions made extremely quickly can be just as good as decisions made cautiously and deliberately, and our unconscious influences our intuition . Gladwell argues that “ there can be as much value in the blink of an eye as in moths of rational analysis.” One has better judgment when exposed to little information, and our decisions made quickly can be…

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    In the book Blink, Malcolm Gladwell argues that small amounts of information are just as good or better than well thought out and detailed information or decisions. Gladwell uses stories from colleagues and studies to support his claims. Gladwell uses these to appeal to one’s ethics and logic. Gladwell uses the work done by one of his colleagues at John Gottman’s lab to show that a little information can go a long way. Gottman came up with a way to analyse marriages from conversations with a…

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    Malcom Gladwell is an award winning English-Canadian, author, journalist and speaker. He is active contributor and staff writer for “The New Yorker” and a bestselling author. In his two well-known essays “Being Nice isn’t really so awful” and “Small changes: Why revolution will not be tweeted”, he argues the impact of the Internet in our social life. While both this essays have in the center the modern civilization and the age of the internet, in the first essay: “Being nice isn’t really awful”,…

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