Spark by John J. Ratey, MD with Eric Hagerman

write a short paragraph that introduces your paper to the reader. This usually includes mention of all the content/topics that will be written about within the body of the paper. For example, "first I will explain why I chose…" Part I: Book - State which book you chose, and discuss why you chose it. Include specific references to book title, description, authors, or particular experiences of yours that prompted you to select the book. Part II: two topics of interest - write two separate paragraphs describing topics or pieces of information from the book itself that made the greatest impression on you. Discuss why the topic impacted you giving an example of student impact for each of the topics. part III: corroboration/contradiction - provide at least two examples from an external source that either corroborates or contradicts the information your stance taken by the author of the book on your topics of interest. Be specific and relate the information from the external source to the book itself. Part IV: practice application - explain why or how the information you gained from the reading of this book will or will not affect your personal actions or your professional practice. The additional source should be from a recent, (within last five years), professional journal or website – (NIH, CDC, etc.). Logs, magazines, and newspapers are not considered professional resources.