Your project is a position paper; therefore you must define the issue, include a

Your project is a position paper; therefore you must define the issue, include a reaction statement, and defend your position in the paper. The paper should fall between 1750 and 3000 words in length (with a typical font and spacing, 7 to 10 pages) excluding title page, TOC, and references.
Take a stand on the issue. After you have settled on an issue, think about the issue and take a stand. Formulate your thoughts. Know why you feel the way you do about the issue.
Evaluate the pros and cons of both sides of the issue. Display objectivity! You are not merely expressing your opinion. You are taking a point of view supported by professional literature. Do not merely conduct a superficial review of the issue. Roll up your sleeves and dig deep into the issue. Immerse yourself with the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats of both sides of the issue. You must support all of your statements with citations from professional literature.
While you are analyzing your issue and using your multiple professional sources, it will be important to analyze how the sources relate. If you are using only one source in a section of your paper, remember to connect the source to overarching concepts and themes you have discussed in your paper. All parts of your paper, including your sources, must be related.
Attached is the initial outline/proposal paper with five different sources