1 2.6 Bar charts
Tables and charts are a great way to present numerical information in a clear and concise form. This unit explains how to use the Windows calculator to carry out basic operations and calculate percentages. You will then learn how to use charts and tables to represent and interpret information.
India's new global strength Play hard, work hard The Trial of Jesus | University of St. Thomas Digging Into Community IDS350 Session 13 Spring 2011 Libya After the No-Fly Zone Space Shelter Creating Capabilities Do Materials Get Tired? Fatigue Using Nature to Grow Batteries English for studying in the Netherlands A day in the life of a student in the Netherlands Kerpoof Scholastics Make drawings, pictures, greeting cards, animated movies or stories. You also find lesson plans. Teacher accounts are free and teachers can add a class as users for free. 2 Identifying potential consultants Once you have decided on the sort of consultancy needed, the first problem, mentioned by Clark (1995), is identifying potential consultants. I asked an associate with considerable experience in this how she went about identifying potential consultants. Her initial, and unhelpful, response was ‘you just know’. Tacit knowledge is clearly important here. Probing elicited the following: Firstly my organisation Survive That Tsunami! Partners in success! 3.6 Different paradigms and different methods These different methods alert us to the fact that psychology is not just one enterprise, but a series of interlocking enterprises in which psychologists have different views about the best ways to try to understand or explain people and their behaviour and experience. These are arguments about epistemology; that is, what questions to ask, what sort of evidence to look for, what sort of criteria to use to evaluate explanations, and what sort of methods to use. All knowledge and al 3.3 Psychological tests The most commonly used psychological tests, such as intelligence tests and personality tests, are highly structured forms of self-report where participants have to solve problems or choose from fixed alternatives on a questionnaire. Researchers then work out a score for each participant that gives information about their intelligence or personality. These tests are different from ordinary questionnaires in the way they are constructed and pre-tested. They are tried out on large numbers Myotonic Muscular Dystrophy - Station and Gait Exam - Station Sub-exam - Patient 2
Nirmalya Kumar, Professor of Marketing, discusses his new book 'India's Global Powerhouses', on the globalisation of Indian firms
Julian Birkinshaw, Professor of Strategic and International Management, examines innovation in the way we socialise...and work
On April 14, The University of St. Thomas School of Law hosted "The Trial of Jesus," featuring Professor Mark Osler of the University of St. Thomas and Jeanne Bishop, assistant public defender in the Office of the Cook County Public Defender in Illinois and adjunct professor at Northwestern School of Law in the trial advocacy program. The event was an enactment of the sentencing of Christ, in which Osler played the prosecutor arguing that Jesus should be killed and Bishop played the defense att
"Dirt made my lunch," sings sophomore Amy Mellor. She's sitting in a circle of 4-year-olds who have just made kale soup from vegetables grown in their garden. Mellor, a UA geography student, interns at the Ochoa School five mornings a week. "This has far surpassed any expectations that I had for my college experience," she says. "This is exactly how I want to be learning." There's a lot more to geography than mapping and GPS. The holistic discipline traces back to the ancient Greeks, exploring b
IDS350 Gardens of California Session Thirteen 05/01/11 Jerry Turney
A conversation with H. E. Ali Suleiman Aujali, Libyan Ambassador to the United States (Jan. 2009-Feb. 2011) Chief, Libyan Interests Section (2004-2009) Dirk Vandewalle, Associate Professor of Government, Dartmouth College, Stephen Walt Robert and Renee Belfer Professor of International Affairs The Hon. R. Nicholas Burns (Moderator) Professor of the Practice of Diplomacy and International Politics
The invasion has taken place and we need to find a new home. To ensure your survival beyond earth's occupation you must design a shelter that can be built on another planet. Students will research the characteristics of a planet of their choice. They will design a shelter that will allow them to survive on a new planet, and explain it in words.
If a country's Gross Domestic Product increases each year, but so does the percentage of its people deprived of basic education, health care, and other opportunities, is that country really making progress? If we rely on conventional economic indicators, can we ever grasp how the world's billions of individuals are really managing?
In this video and in her new book, CREATING CAPABILITIES, Martha Nussbaum argues that our dominant theories of development have given us policies that ignore our mos
This video explains how the strength of a material can be measured in the laboratory and used to design structures, like bikes, airplanes, and even chairs. We see a controlled lab experiment that applies precise force to a paper clip until it breaks.
Inspired by an abalone shell, Angela Belcher programs viruses to make elegant nanoscale structures that humans can use. Selecting for high-performing genes through directed evolution, she's produced viruses that can construct powerful new batteries, clean hydrogen fuels and record-breaking solar cells. At TEDxCaltech, she shows us how it's done. (10:26)
Taaltraining Engels (Wimba)
A video made by a Dutch student of the Hague University of Applied Sciences giving a nimpression of a typical day in this student's life.

Students use a table-top-sized tsunami generator to observe the formation and devastation of a tsunami. They see how a tsunami moves across the ocean and what happens when it reaches the continental shelf. Students make villages of model houses and buildings to test how different material types are impacted by the huge waves. They further discuss how engineers design buildings to survive tsunamis. Much of this activity setup is the same as for the Mini-Landscape activity in Lesson 4 of the Natur
Dr Denis Coleman, Founder of Symantec Corporation, the fourth largest software company in the world, gives us lessons from his 14 Silicon Valley start-ups.
Patient is a 52-year-old African-American male with a known diagnosis of myotonic muscular dystrophy. His neuromuscular symptoms began in the early 1990s with poor dexterity in the hands, dropping objects, and clumsiness with fine motor weakness. He is very slow buttoning clothes, putting on his shoes, brushing his teeth, shaving, and other similar activities. He has trouble in ambulation and falls frequently. He has trouble getting up from a chair or sofa and climbing stairs. He also reports co













