TALAT Lecture 1201: Introduction to Aluminium as an Engineering Material
This lecture provides an introduction to metallurgical concepts necessary to understand how structural features of aluminium alloys are influenced by alloy composition, processing and heat treatment, and the basic affects of these parameters on the mechanical properties, and hence engineering applications, of the alloys. It is assumed that the reader has some elementary knowledge of physics, chemistry and mathematics.
14.662 Labor Economics II (MIT)
This is a graduate course in labor economics. The course will focus on covering theory and evidence on inequality, wage structure, skill demands, employment, job loss, and early-life determinants of long-run outcomes. Particular areas of focus are: (1) wage determination, including the Roy model, equalizing wage differentials, and models of discrimination; (2) the roles played by supply, demand, institutions, technology and trade in the evolving distribution of income.
Acknowledgements This free course is an adapted extract from the course DD303 Cognitive psychology, which is currently out of presentation The content acknowledged below is Proprietary (see terms and conditions) and is used under aCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 Licencel
21F.102 Chinese II (Regular) (MIT)
This subject is the second semester of two that form an introduction to modern standard Chinese, commonly called Mandarin. Though not everyone taking this course will be an absolute beginner, the course presupposes only 21F.101/151, the beginning course in the sequence. The purpose of this course is to develop: (a) basic conversational abilities (pronunciation, fundamental grammatical patterns, common vocabulary, and standard usage); (b) basic reading skills (in both the traditional character se
References How to Create Professional PowerPoint Presentations Checklist - Work Placement Piling The following resources are part of the module Civil Engineering Technology from the 2009/10 BSc (Hons) degree programme Commercial Management and Quantity Surveying. This was a lecture given by Mr Derek Taylor - Commercial Director for Keller Ground Engineering. It covers an introduction the Keller group of companies. Displacement and Replacement piling. Groun Optimizing IT and Re-educating Leadership Geological Continental Drift 18.319 Geometric Combinatorics (MIT) Our Future Food Demand Fat test Introduction This course looks at the work of William Beveridge in reforming the field of social welfare after World War II. Particular attention is paid to the attitude towards women and immigrants to the United Kingdom. This OpenLearn course provides a sample of Level 1 study in Health and Social Care. What are Molecules? UT News - March 16, 2015 1.10 Negative number notation It is worth mentioning notation at this point. You may have noticed that the minus sign used to denote a negative number is shorter, closer to the number and raised, compared with the minus sign used to denote subtraction. It is important to distinguish between the two, and it can help to think of −3, say, as ‘negative 3’ rather than ‘minus 3’. In the calculation 8 − 3 (8 subtract 3), the minus sign is an operator, an instruction to subtract; in −3, The John Smith Well Making sense of statistics 4.2 Bureaucracy Bureaucracy as a concept has had an interesting career: it begins in France in the eighteenth century. By the nineteenth century, the German state constructed by its first Chancellor, Bismarck, was a model bureaucracy in both its armed forces and civil administration. Weber (1978) realised that the creation of the modern state of Germany had only been possible because of the development of a disciplined state bureaucracy and a bureaucratised standing army – innovations pioneered in Prussia
Create Professional PowerPoint Presentations - In this tech video learn how to create an effective PowerPoint presentation, which can be much quicker and easier that you may think. This demonstrates creating presentations using 2000-20003. (8:14)
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This is a resource released as part of the E-Portfolio Toolkit based on experience of developing the “Year Abroad E-Portfolio”, undertaken by the School of Languages at Leeds Metropolitan University.
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Covers the continental drift of Earth from hundreds of millions of years ago to hundreds of millions of years into the future. Shows the globe as the Earth's continents move. Images are set to music. No narration. (01:19)
This course offers an introduction to discrete and computational geometry. Emphasis is placed on teaching methods in combinatorial geometry. Many results presented are recent, and include open (as yet unsolved) problems.
Lead Producer: Madison Bernier; First Colonial High School, Virginia Beach, VA Created for the 2014-2015 World of 7 Billion student video contest, sponsored by Population Education. (01:12)
Nutrients include fats, protein, minerals, water, and carbohydrates. Brown paper can be used as an indicator of how much fat is in a food. The food that makes the largest grease spot has the most fat.
Molecules are made up of two or more atoms, such as hydrogen and oxygen to make water, or sodium and chloride to make salt. Discover how molecules are formed with important facts from a science teacher
In today's UT News - Dr. Sharon Gaber is named UT's 17th President, Dr. Clinton Longenecker has received recognition.
Discovery continues at Virginia's James Fort, site of America's first permanent English settlement. Archaeologist Bill Kelso gets to the bottom of a 1609 well.
"Making Sense of Statistics" is a guide for the general public aimed at enabling them to evaluate claims that are made using statistics. The guide considers types of questions which statistics answer, common pitfalls in using statistics, statistical significance, and absolute and relative changes. Links to related websites and books about statistics are listed. A separate short guide entitled "Making Sense of Statistics in an Election" is also available. The guides are published by Sense About S