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The effective communication of science through language, including
reading, writing, listening, speaking, and visual representation,
is an essential part of scientific learning, understanding, and
practice. Language is the medium by which scientific reasoning
occurs, whether be it formal language or symbolic representations
of scientific phenomena. Sustainable Language Support Practices in
Science Education: Technologies and Solutions presents cases on the
results of a study done in Australia on first-year university
students and the impact of new techniques of language acquisition
on science education. The project covered biology, chemistry, and
physics. Nearly 3,400 students were involved in the project, drawn
from the University of Canberra, the University of
Technology-Sydney, the University of Sydney, the University of
Tasmania, and the University of Newcastle in Australia. This book
serves as the latest research available on meta-cognitive
assessment and language needs for a diverse student body; it is a
vital resource for academics and practitioners designing and
implementing science education around the world today.
Available Open Access under CC-BY-NC licence. The need to stop rape
is pressing and, since it is the outcome of a wide range of
practices and institutions in society, so too must the policies be
to stop it This important book offers a comprehensive guide to the
international policies developed to stop rape , together with case
study examples on how they work. The book engages with the law and
criminal justice system, health services, specialised services for
victim-survivors, educational and cultural interventions, as well
as how they can best be coordinated. It is informed by theory and
evidence drawn from scholarship and practice from around the world.
The book will be of interest to a global readership of students,
practitioners and policy makers as well as anyone who wants to know
how rape can be stopped.
This volume presents the published Proceedings of the joint meeting
of GUM92 and the 7th International Workshop on Statistical
Modelling, held in Munich, Germany from 13 to 17 July 1992. The
meeting aimed to bring together researchers interested in the
development and applications of generalized linear modelling in GUM
and those interested in statistical modelling in its widest sense.
This joint meeting built upon the success of previous workshops and
GUM conferences. Previous GUM conferences were held in London and
Lancaster, and a joint GUM Conference/4th Modelling Workshop was
held in Trento. (The Proceedings of previous GUM
conferences/Statistical Modelling Workshops are available as
numbers 14 , 32 and 57 of the Springer Verlag series of Lecture
Notes in Statistics). Workshops have been organized in Innsbruck,
Perugia, Vienna, Toulouse and Utrecht. (Proceedings of the Toulouse
Workshop appear as numbers 3 and 4 of volume 13 of the journal
Computational Statistics and Data Analysis). Much statistical
modelling is carried out using GUM, as is apparent from many of the
papers in these Proceedings. Thus the Programme Committee were also
keen on encouraging papers which addressed problems which are not
only of practical importance but which are also relevant to GUM or
other software development. The Programme Committee requested both
theoretical and applied papers. Thus there are papers in a wide
range of practical areas, such as ecology, breast cancer remission
and diabetes mortality, banking and insurance, quality control,
social mobility, organizational behaviour.
This volume consists of the published proceedings of the GLIM 95
Conference, held at Lancaster University, UK, from 16-19 September
1995. This is the second of such proceedings, the first of which
was published as No 14 of the Springer-Verlag Lecture Notes in
Statistics (Gilchrist, ed,1992). Since the 1992 conference there
has been a modest update of the GLIM system, called GLIM 3.77. This
incorporates some minor but pleasant enhancements and these are
outlined in these proceedings by payne and Webb. With the
completion of GLIM 3.77, future developments of the GLIM system are
again under active review. Aitkin surveys possible directions for
GLIM. one sOlMlWhat different avenue for analysing generalized
linear models is provided by the GENSTAT system; Lane and payne
discuss the new interactive facilities p ided by version 5 of
GENSTAT. On the theory Side, NeIder extends the concept and use of
quasi-likelihood, giving useful forms of variance function and a
method of introducing a random element into the linear predictor.
Longford discusses one approach to the analysis of clustered
observations (subjects within groups). Green and Yandell introduce
'semi-parametric modelling', allowing a compromise between
parametriC and non-parametriC modelling. They modify the linear
predictor by the addition of a ( smooth) curve, and estimate
parameters by maximising a penalised log-likelihood. Hastie and
Tibshirani introduce generalized additive models, introducing a
linear predictor of the form 11 = (X + Efj(xj), with the fj
estimated from the data by a weighted average of neighbouring
observations.
In 1968 two boys are born into a large family, both named for their
grandfather, Peter Henry Hightower. One boy--Peter--grows up in
Africa and ends up a journalist in Granada. The
other--Petey--becomes a minor criminal, first in Cleveland and then
in Kiev. In 1995, Petey runs afoul of his associates and
disappears. But the criminals, bent on revenge, track down the
wrong cousin, and the Peter in Granada finds himself on the run. He
bounces from one family member to the next, piecing together his
cousin's involvement in international crime while learning the
truth about his family's complicated history. Along the way the
original Peter Henry Hightower's story is revealed, until it
catches up with that of his children, revealing how Peter and Petey
have been living in their grandfather's shadow all along.
The novel takes a look at capitalism and organized crime in the
20th century, the legend of the self-made man, and what money can
do to people. Like Jeffrey Eugenides' "Middlesex, The Family
Hightower" stretches across both generations and continents,
bearing the weight of family secrets and the inevitable personal
toll they take on loved ones despite our best intentions.
The study of criminal careers is of increasing interest in
criminology. It is now generally recognised that it is important to
try to understand criminal behaviour across the life-course rather
than focusing on fragmented incidents which provide only a partial
picture. This is an accessible text which clarifies the crucial
theoretical and methodological debates surrounding the study of
criminal careers.
It focuses on some major longitudinal studies discussing the
onset, persistence, desistance and the duration of a criminal
career. The important topics of prediction, risk and specialisation
are addressed. The challenging question of 'When do ex-offenders
become like non-offenders?' points a way forward. The book
concludes by proposing an even more ambitious approach to the topic
of criminal careers.
R is now the most widely used statistical package/language in
university statistics departments and many research organisations.
Its great advantages are that for many years it has been the
leading-edge statistical package/language and that it can be freely
downloaded from the R web site. Its cooperative development and
open code also attracts many contributors meaning that the
modelling and data analysis possibilities in R are much richer than
in GLIM4, and so the R edition can be substantially more
comprehensive than the GLIM4 edition. This text provides a
comprehensive treatment of the theory of statistical modelling in R
with an emphasis on applications to practical problems and an
expanded discussion of statistical theory. A wide range of case
studies is provided, using the normal, binomial, Poisson,
multinomial, gamma, exponential and Weibull distributions, making
this book ideal for graduates and research students in applied
statistics and a wide range of quantitative disciplines.
Available Open Access under CC-BY-NC licence. The extent of
violence against women is currently hidden. How should violence be
measured? How should research and new ways of thinking about
violence improve its measurement? Could improved measurement change
policy? The book is a guide to how the measurement of violence can
be best achieved. It shows how to make femicide, rape, domestic
violence, and FGM visible in official statistics. It offers
practical guidance on definitions, indicators and coordination
mechanisms. It reflects on theoretical debates on 'what is gender',
'what is violence', and 'the concept of coercive control'. and
introduces the concept of 'gender saturated context'. Analysing the
socially constructed nature of statistics and the links between
knowledge and power, it sets new standards and guidelines to
influence the measurement of violence in the coming decades.
The election of Donald Trump was a shattering moment to the
political sensibilities of America; immediately sending the country
into a frenzy of commentary, critique, and a never-ending media
coverage that has bordered on the absurd. But the question still
remains: what does it all mean? The Meaning of Trump is an
ideological critique that sees the election of Donald Trump as a
completely natural progression to the general trajectory of
digitized technologies, neoliberalism, and a new breed of
financialized capitalism; destructive global forces that know no
party affiliation or national boundary. Although Donald Trump is
undoubtedly the symptom that has exploded to the surface after
nearly four decades of failed policies and broken promises by both
Republicans and Democrats alike, his election can also be seen as
an existential fork in the road for both the United States and even
humanity itself. What path is taken still remains to be seen.
R is now the most widely used statistical package/language in
university statistics departments and many research organisations.
Its great advantages are that for many years it has been the
leading-edge statistical package/language and that it can be freely
downloaded from the R web site. Its cooperative development and
open code also attracts many contributors meaning that the
modelling and data analysis possibilities in R are much richer than
in GLIM4, and so the R edition can be substantially more
comprehensive than the GLIM4 edition of Statistical Modelling. This
text provides a comprehensive treatment of the theory of
statistical modelling in R with an emphasis on applications to
practical problems and an expanded discussion of statistical
theory. A wide range of case studies is provided, using the normal,
binomial, Poisson, multinomial, gamma, exponential and Weibull
distributions, making this book ideal for graduates and research
students in applied statistics and a wide range of quantitative
disciplines.
This new edition of the successful multi-disciplinary text
Statistical Modelling in GLIM takes into account new developments
in both statistical software and statistical modelling. Including
three new chapters on mixture and random effects models, it
provides a comprehensive treatment of the theory of statistical
modelling with generalised linear models with an emphasis on
applications to practical problems and an expanded discussion of
statistical theory. A wide range of case studies is also provided,
using the normal, binomial, Poisson, multinomial, gamma,
exponential and Weibull distributions. This book is ideal for
graduates and research students in applied statistics and a wide
range of quantitative disciplines, including biology, medicine and
the social sciences. Professional statisticians at all levels will
also find it an invaluable desktop companion.
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Bread (Paperback)
Brian Francis Culkin
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R337
Discovery Miles 3 370
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