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Showing 1 - 25 of 38 matches in All Departments
"Managing Maintenance Resources" shows how to reduce the complexity
involved in engineering, or re-engineering, a maintenance
organization. It recognises that this is a complex problem
involving many inter-related decisions - such as whether or not
resources should be centralized, contractor alliances be entered
into or flexible working be adopted. This book provides a unique
approach to modeling maintenance-production organizations. It
enables the identification of problems and delivers guidelines to
develop effective solutions.
"Managing Systems and Documentation" addresses the main systems
necessary for the successful operation of a maintenance
organization, such as performance control, work control and
documentation. It shows how they can be modelled, their function
and operating principles, and the main problems encountered in
operation. It is the third of three stand-alone companion books
with the aim of providing better understanding of maintenance
operations, in order to identify problems and prescribe effective
solutions.
This book presents a new integrated theory of dynamic management and leadership in one comprehensive approach. It offers a new way of looking at the field, drawing on a wide body of research and practice in the fields of leadership and management, across all sectors in education and more broadly. The book focuses on management against a backdrop of leadership theory. Including examples of practice and application in schools, colleges and universities, it uses a range of historical leadership approaches to scaffold different management techniques that are known to work in effective organisations. It explores the overlap between management and leadership as dynamic theoretical and practical activities, merging the two together into a holistic model that can be applied by managers working in educational settings. Its twenty-six chapters also consider the praxis of educational leadership and management from political, economic and ethical perspectives in relation to issues such as equity and widening participation, and outline how 'managership' impacts on student achievement. Offering a unique balance of theory and practice, across school, college and university sectors, the book will be of great interest to researchers, academics, graduate students and practitioners in the field of educational leadership and management, and will be important reading for all stakeholders in the area of educational effectiveness and improvement.
Devising optimal strategy for maintaining industrial plant can be a
difficult task of daunting complexity. This book aims to provide
the plant engineer with a comprehensive and systematic approach, a
framework of guidelines, for tackling this problem, i.e. for
deciding maintenance objectives, formulating equipment life plans
and plant maintenance schedules, designing the maintenance
organisation and setting up appropriate systems of documentation
and control.
Benchmarking is a term used by the DfEE and OFSTED to describe a school's performance against a national or local average. This useful guide helps senior management teams of schools or colleges, to undertake their own benchmarking, with the aim of increasing effectiveness and improvement. Tony Kelly looks at the different types of benchmarking and what should be benchmarked and why. He discusses the possibility of forming a benchmarking partnership with another organisation which is acknowledged to be better performing. He also addresses the process of forming a benchmarking team within a school or college. Practical guidance is provided on techniques such as making an effectiveness comparison, targeting for improvement, and producing target-setting tables and benchmarking comparison charts. The content of the book has been based on extensive research from the UK and overseas. It provides step-by-step advice, photocopiable templates and suggestions for further reading.
Developing Metrics for Equity, Diversity and Competition is a groundbreaking book in the field of educational research. Equity, diversity and competition are critical to our understanding of social justice and the provision of effective education for everyone, and this book develops a new coherent scientific approach to measuring them. New theory and methodologies based on previous research by the author are introduced in school and university settings. They are mathematical in nature, but have a wide range of applications within mixed-methods approaches and include: warranted weighting systems for constructing league tables game theoretic approaches to analysing power and influence indices for measuring equity in student attainment indices for measuring competition modelling the educational awards market calculating the optimal size of research groups measuring diversity. The book is an ideal resource for educational researchers, policy-makers and high-level practitioners, and those who want to explore the possibilities of using novel approaches to address the problems faced by schools, colleges and universities in the new education landscape.
Developing Metrics for Equity, Diversity and Competition is a groundbreaking book in the field of educational research. Equity, diversity and competition are critical to our understanding of social justice and the provision of effective education for everyone, and this book develops a new coherent scientific approach to measuring them. New theory and methodologies based on previous research by the author are introduced in school and university settings. They are mathematical in nature, but have a wide range of applications within mixed-methods approaches and include: warranted weighting systems for constructing league tables game theoretic approaches to analysing power and influence indices for measuring equity in student attainment indices for measuring competition modelling the educational awards market calculating the optimal size of research groups measuring diversity. The book is an ideal resource for educational researchers, policy-makers and high-level practitioners, and those who want to explore the possibilities of using novel approaches to address the problems faced by schools, colleges and universities in the new education landscape.
This book presents a new integrated theory of dynamic management and leadership in one comprehensive approach. It offers a new way of looking at the field, drawing on a wide body of research and practice in the fields of leadership and management, across all sectors in education and more broadly. The book focuses on management against a backdrop of leadership theory. Including examples of practice and application in schools, colleges and universities, it uses a range of historical leadership approaches to scaffold different management techniques that are known to work in effective organisations. It explores the overlap between management and leadership as dynamic theoretical and practical activities, merging the two together into a holistic model that can be applied by managers working in educational settings. Its twenty-six chapters also consider the praxis of educational leadership and management from political, economic and ethical perspectives in relation to issues such as equity and widening participation, and outline how 'managership' impacts on student achievement. Offering a unique balance of theory and practice, across school, college and university sectors, the book will be of great interest to researchers, academics, graduate students and practitioners in the field of educational leadership and management, and will be important reading for all stakeholders in the area of educational effectiveness and improvement.
Game theory is a key element in most decision-making processes involving two or more people or organisations. This book explains how game theory can predict the outcome of complex decision-making processes, and how it can help you to improve your own negotiation and decision-making skills. It is grounded in well-established theory, yet the wide-ranging international examples used to illustrate its application offer a fresh approach to an essential weapon in the armoury of the informed manager. The book is accessibly written, explaining in simple terms the underlying mathematics behind games of skill, before moving on to more sophisticated topics such as zero-sum games, mixed-motive games, and multi-person games, coalitions and power. Clear examples and helpful diagrams are used throughout, and the mathematics is kept to a minimum. It is written for managers, students and decision makers in any field.
A teacher may get good, even astounding, results from his pupils while he is teaching them and yet not be a good teacher; because it may be that, while his pupils are directly under his influence, he raises them to a height which is not natural to them, without fostering their own capacities for work at this level, so that they immediately decline again as soon as the teacher leaves the classroom. Ludwig Wittgenstein, 1889 - 1951. It is difficult to measure effectiveness in not-for-profit organisations like schools, colleges and universities. There is no 'bottom-line' against which to gauge performance, they have limited technical development and managers struggle to make meaningful comparisons between outcomes and targets. In education, well-publicised attempts have been made to establish - some would say impose - a set of criteria by which organisations judge success or failure. These have been largely subjective - the percentage of inspected classes regarded as good, the extent to which staff is involved in decision making, the appropriateness of the leadership shown by senior managers, and so on - if occasionally peppered with quantitative measures, like the percentage of students achieving certain grades in public examinations, to sustain the illusion of objectivity. This is not to fault the aspiration necessarily, though initially at least it created a surveillance culture in schools that did justice to neither the inspected nor the argument for inspection. Happily, this is changing.
A teacher may get good, even astounding, results from his pupils while he is teaching them and yet not be a good teacher; because it may be that, while his pupils are directly under his influence, he raises them to a height which is not natural to them, without fostering their own capacities for work at this level, so that they immediately decline again as soon as the teacher leaves the classroom. Ludwig Wittgenstein, 1889 - 1951. It is difficult to measure effectiveness in not-for-profit organisations like schools, colleges and universities. There is no 'bottom-line' against which to gauge performance, they have limited technical development and managers struggle to make meaningful comparisons between outcomes and targets. In education, well-publicised attempts have been made to establish - some would say impose - a set of criteria by which organisations judge success or failure. These have been largely subjective - the percentage of inspected classes regarded as good, the extent to which staff is involved in decision making, the appropriateness of the leadership shown by senior managers, and so on - if occasionally peppered with quantitative measures, like the percentage of students achieving certain grades in public examinations, to sustain the illusion of objectivity. This is not to fault the aspiration necessarily, though initially at least it created a surveillance culture in schools that did justice to neither the inspected nor the argument for inspection. Happily, this is changing.
Data metrics in schools are becoming increasingly complex, but despite their best efforts, teachers and academics generally find them something of a 'black-box'. This book lifts the lid on that box, exploring the provenance and problematization of existing techniques and developing new algorithms for measuring the more oblique aspects of in-school performance. Using contextual value-added measures in England as a foundation - they have become the template of choice for policy-makers around the world and a basis for some excellent school effectiveness research - the book explores the potential of performance and progress data to guide student and teacher self-evaluation, to set targets and allocate resources, to evaluate initiatives and identify good practice, to assess and reward staff responsibility, and to inform policy in relation to emerging issues like school choice, equality of opportunity and post-compulsory progression. Chapters are sectioned in three parts - 'Past', 'Present' and 'Future' - and cover: the historical journey from raw-threshold to refined-contextual measures of school effectiveness research and policy on pupil attainment and value-added data the leading UK government and Fischer Family Trust models issues relating to differential effectiveness and the interpretation of data how best to blend data from different sources new non-cognitive metrics for assessing social and emotional aspects of learning (SEAL) and staff responsibility managing data for school improvement and understanding professional attitudes to it. Using Effectiveness Data for School Improvement brings together for the first time in one place the various metrics and models, and their basis in research. A full technical specification is included so that both 'data experts' and 'data novices', academics and practitioners, can use the book to understand and maximize what is potentially a hugely transforming, but under-utilized, resource and an increasingly important aspect to school and curriculum management.
Data metrics in schools are becoming increasingly complex, but despite their best efforts, teachers and academics generally find them something of a 'black-box'. This book lifts the lid on that box, exploring the provenance and problematization of existing techniques and developing new algorithms for measuring the more oblique aspects of in-school performance. Using contextual value-added measures in England as a foundation - they have become the template of choice for policy-makers around the world and a basis for some excellent school effectiveness research - the book explores the potential of performance and progress data to guide student and teacher self-evaluation, to set targets and allocate resources, to evaluate initiatives and identify good practice, to assess and reward staff responsibility, and to inform policy in relation to emerging issues like school choice, equality of opportunity and post-compulsory progression. Chapters are sectioned in three parts - 'Past', 'Present' and 'Future' - and cover: the historical journey from raw-threshold to refined-contextual measures of school effectiveness research and policy on pupil attainment and value-added data the leading UK government and Fischer Family Trust models issues relating to differential effectiveness and the interpretation of data how best to blend data from different sources new non-cognitive metrics for assessing social and emotional aspects of learning (SEAL) and staff responsibility managing data for school improvement and understanding professional attitudes to it. Using Effectiveness Data for School Improvement brings together for the first time in one place the various metrics and models, and their basis in research. A full technical specification is included so that both 'data experts' and 'data novices', academics and practitioners, can use the book to understand and maximize what is potentially a hugely transforming, but under-utilized, resource and an increasingly important aspect to school and curriculum management.
The profitability of any industry, in any technological sector -
power, process, manufacturing, mineral extraction, transport,
communication, etc - will be profoundly influenced by the
reliability and performance of the plant which it uses. It is
therefore vital that all possible measures are taken to maximise
the productivity in use, and to minimise the maintenance costs and
the downtime, of that plant. This book explains, in a clear and
concise manner, the various organization structures that are needed
for doing just that, the information systems with which those
structures will need to be resourced, and the steps that will have
to be taken in order to bring those structures and systems into
being.
Pope Francis' Laudato Si is a game-changing document for the life of the Church and the ecological health of this planet. A Catholic vision is deficient if it does not include the earth and its life-forms. Loving one's neighbour must include loving the planetary neighbourhood in which all live. For its part, the 'integral ecology' on which the Pope insists must include the dimensions of mind and heart, science and art, faith and the whole spiritual life of culture. Here, the great theological themes animating the Catholic vision, play their part as ever-renewable resources: the Creator and the gift of creation,, the incarnation of the Word amongst us, the inexhaustible life of the Trinity itself, the Eucharist as communion with Christ in the here and now of earthly life, just as 'Sister Death' must be given her place for the sake of ecological and eschatological realism. Integral ecology and Catholic vision are two sides of the conversion of mind and heart necessary to promote the communion of life now, and in the world to come.
"Strategic Maintenance Planning" deals with the concepts,
principles and techniques of preventive maintenance, and shows how
the complexity of maintenance strategic planning can be resolved by
a systematic 'Top-Down-Bottom-Up' approach. It explains how to
establish objectives for physical assets and maintenance resources,
and how to formulate an appropriate life plan for plant. It then
shows how to use the life plans to formulate a preventive
maintenance schedule for the plant as a whole, along with a
maintenance organization and a budget to ensure that maintenance
work can be resourced.
1. Die theoretische Festigkeit 4 1. 1. Theoretische Reifbfestigkeit 4 1. 2. Genauere Berechnungen 8 Theoretische Schubspannung 1. 3. 12 1. 4. Temperaturabhiingigkeit der theoretischen Festigkeit 20 1. 5. Experimentelle Ergebnisse 23 1. 6. Hochfeste Stoffe 25 Zusammenhang zwischen Flie1\spannung und Eindruckhlirte 1. 7. 29 2. Risse und Kerben 31 2. 1. Das elliptische Loch 31 2. 2. Kerben 35 2. 3. Die Theorie von Griffith 37 2. 4. Die Rifbspitze 39 2. 5. Die Festigkeit von Glas 43 2. 6. Das Beschadigen von Fasern 47 3. Versetzungen 50 3. 1. Die Peierls-Nabarro-Spannung 50 3. 2. Versetzungen in hochfesten Stoffen 54 3. 3. Unabhangige Gleitsysteme und Flexibilitat der Gleitung 61 3. 4. Der Verformungsbruch 67 4. Hochfeste Metalle 70 4. 1. Korngro1\e 73 4. 2. Aushlirtung und Mischkristallhartung 73 4. 3. Hochfeste Stahle 79 4. 4. Hochfeste Drahte 83 4. 5. Metalle bei hohen Temperaturen 86 Verfestigung 4. 6. 89 5. Verstlirkung durch Fasern 94 5. 1. tlbertragung von Spannungen auf eine Faser 95 5. 2. Die metallische Matrix 100 5. 3. Spannung-Dehnung-Kurven 102 Plastisch verformbare Matrix 5. 3. 1. 102 5. 3. 2. Kunststoffmatrix 104 5. 4. Die Festigkeit von Verbundwerkstoffen 108 5. 4. 1. Kontinuierliche Fasern 108 Diskontinuierliche Fasern 5. 4. 2. 111 5. 5. Bestimmung des kritischen Schlankheitsgrades 114 5. 6. Orientierungsabhiingigkeit 115 5. 6. 1. Versagen unter Druckbelastung 115 5. 6. 2. Faserorientierung 117 5. 7. Schwankungen in der Festigkeit der Fasern 121 5. 8. Kerbempfindlichkeit 124 5. 9. |
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