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Digital and social technologies are changing the education field.
Interactive whiteboards and blackboards, e-books, and
computer-mediated communication are accelerating the processes of
the evolving classroom. These technologies continue to support
problem solving, critical thinking, and collaboration skills among
students. Transforming K-12 Classrooms with Digital Technology
brings together research and practices regarding digital and social
technology integration in the K-12 classroom. By sharing practical
and conceptual aspects of using digital and social technologies as
tools for transforming K-12 learning environments, this reference
source is essential for teachers, support staff, school and
district administrators, college students, and researchers working
teaching and learning in the digital era.
This book introduces recent development of technologies for mine
waste management in China. For hard rock mines, the main mine
wastes are tailings, and the tailings can be disposed above-ground
and/or underground. The technology of consolidated tailings
stockpile (CTS) that disposes tailings above-ground is introduced,
and the application of this technology is also demonstrated.
Besides, the technology of cemented tailings (or paste) backfill
(CTB or CPB) which deals with tailings underground is also
discussed. The properties of CTB materials and the utilization of
CTB technology are described and analyzed. For coal mines, the main
mine wastes are coal gangue and fly ash. The technology of cemented
coal gangue-fly ash backfill (CGFB) that manages coal mine waste
underground is presented. The THMC coupling properties of CGFB
materials are investigated, which can contribute to a better design
of stable, durable and environmentally friendly CGFB mixtures. The
application of CGFB technology in a coal mine is also presented.
This book, which systematically reviews and discusses the
development of mine waste management technologies in China, is
expected to provide readers comprehensive information about mine
waste management.
This book aims to understand public diplomacy by examining its
practice. In particular, it focuses on the implementation of
educational and exchange programs by the US Departments of State
and Defense toward China. Implementation is the focal point of this
study and is utilized both as a practical process and a
methodology. It refers to the process of translating a public
diplomacy policy goal-the specific order given to a governmental
institution in order to achieve a general foreign policy
objective-into public diplomacy practices and impact. In addition,
it refers to a research method that centers implementation and
accepts the prerequisite of discretion from studies of policy
implementation. This book maps out where and by whom implementation
discretion is exercised in public diplomacy. It argues that public
diplomacy is in the eye of the beholder, and that its meanings can
vary significantly according to different actors.
Against the background of China's rapidly growing, and sometimes
highly controversial, activities in Africa, this book is among the
first of its kind to systematically document Sino-African
interactions at the everyday level. Based on sixteen months of
ethnographic fieldwork at two contrasting sites in Lusaka, Zambia-a
Chinese state-sponsored educational farm and a private Chinese
family farm-Di Wu focuses on daily interactions among Chinese
migrants and their Zambian hosts. Daily communicative events, e.g.
banquets, market negotiations, work-place disputes, and various
social encounters across a range of settings are used to trace the
essential role that emotion/affect plays in forming and reproducing
social relations and group identities among Chinese migrants. Wu
suggests that affective encounters in everyday situations-as well
as failed attempts to generate affect-should not be overlooked in
order to fully appreciate Sino-African interactions. Deeply
researched and with rich ethnographic detail, this book will be
relevant to scholars of anthropology, international development,
and others interested in Sino-African relations.
This book aims to understand public diplomacy by examining its
practice. In particular, it focuses on the implementation of
educational and exchange programs by the US Departments of State
and Defense toward China. Implementation is the focal point of this
study and is utilized both as a practical process and a
methodology. It refers to the process of translating a public
diplomacy policy goal—the specific order given to a governmental
institution in order to achieve a general foreign policy
objective—into public diplomacy practices and impact. In
addition, it refers to a research method that centers
implementation and accepts the prerequisite of discretion from
studies of policy implementation. This book maps out where and by
whom implementation discretion is exercised in public diplomacy. It
argues that public diplomacy is in the eye of the beholder, and
that its meanings can vary significantly according to different
actors.
Against the background of China's rapidly growing, and sometimes
highly controversial, activities in Africa, this book is among the
first of its kind to systematically document Sino-African
interactions at the everyday level. Based on sixteen months of
ethnographic fieldwork at two contrasting sites in Lusaka, Zambia-a
Chinese state-sponsored educational farm and a private Chinese
family farm-Di Wu focuses on daily interactions among Chinese
migrants and their Zambian hosts. Daily communicative events, e.g.
banquets, market negotiations, work-place disputes, and various
social encounters across a range of settings are used to trace the
essential role that emotion/affect plays in forming and reproducing
social relations and group identities among Chinese migrants. Wu
suggests that affective encounters in everyday situations-as well
as failed attempts to generate affect-should not be overlooked in
order to fully appreciate Sino-African interactions. Deeply
researched and with rich ethnographic detail, this book will be
relevant to scholars of anthropology, international development,
and others interested in Sino-African relations.
Incomplete big data are frequently encountered in many industrial
applications, such as recommender systems, the Internet of Things,
intelligent transportation, cloud computing, and so on. It is of
great significance to analyze them for mining rich and valuable
knowledge and patterns. Latent feature analysis (LFA) is one of the
most popular representation learning methods tailored for
incomplete big data due to its high accuracy, computational
efficiency, and ease of scalability. The crux of analyzing
incomplete big data lies in addressing the uncertainty problem
caused by their incomplete characteristics. However, existing LFA
methods do not fully consider such uncertainty. In this book, the
author introduces several robust latent feature learning methods to
address such uncertainty for effectively and efficiently analyzing
incomplete big data, including robust latent feature learning based
on smooth L1-norm, improving robustness of latent feature learning
using L1-norm, improving robustness of latent feature learning
using double-space, data-characteristic-aware latent feature
learning, posterior-neighborhood-regularized latent feature
learning, and generalized deep latent feature learning. Readers can
obtain an overview of the challenges of analyzing incomplete big
data and how to employ latent feature learning to build a robust
model to analyze incomplete big data. In addition, this book
provides several algorithms and real application cases, which can
help students, researchers, and professionals easily build their
models to analyze incomplete big data.
This book introduces recent development of technologies for mine
waste management in China. For hard rock mines, the main mine
wastes are tailings, and the tailings can be disposed above-ground
and/or underground. The technology of consolidated tailings
stockpile (CTS) that disposes tailings above-ground is introduced,
and the application of this technology is also demonstrated.
Besides, the technology of cemented tailings (or paste) backfill
(CTB or CPB) which deals with tailings underground is also
discussed. The properties of CTB materials and the utilization of
CTB technology are described and analyzed. For coal mines, the main
mine wastes are coal gangue and fly ash. The technology of cemented
coal gangue-fly ash backfill (CGFB) that manages coal mine waste
underground is presented. The THMC coupling properties of CGFB
materials are investigated, which can contribute to a better design
of stable, durable and environmentally friendly CGFB mixtures. The
application of CGFB technology in a coal mine is also presented.
This book, which systematically reviews and discusses the
development of mine waste management technologies in China, is
expected to provide readers comprehensive information about mine
waste management.
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