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You've no doubt heard the last thing you want to do in a bad
economy is start a business...WRONG! Some of the largest most
successful companies have had their start in past recessions and
even during the great depression. When creative people are
unemployed or underemployed, their talents must have an outlet and
starting their own business is often their way of making use of
their abilities. Expanding Your Borders is your guide to starting
and operating your own successful business without spending months
of your time and thousands of dollars on a business degree. Learn
business plan basics giving you a competitive edge when it comes to
dominating your marketplace and seeking the limited financing
available today. A sample business plan included in the appendix
can be customized to apply to your business. You will also learn
how to build business relationships that can lead to strategic
alliances and joint ventures that will help build your business
into an economic powerhouse.
Drawing on several principles of sociological theory, James S.
Coleman and his colleagues construct a new design for American
schooling. The authors present compelling evidence on the deficits
of our educational system compared to other countries, arguing that
the problems are the result of inappropriate incentives for
teachers, students, and paren
Philosophers, social scientists, and laymen have used two
perspectives in analyzing social action. One sees man's action as
the result of causal forces, and the other sees action as purposive
and goal directed. Mathematical treatment of social action has
shown this same dichotomy. Some models of behavior describe a
causal process, in which there is no place for intention or
purpose. Most stochastic models of behavior, whether individual or
group, are like this. Another body of work, however, employs
purpose, anticipation of some future state, and action designed to
maximize the proximity to some goal. Classical microeconomic
theory, statistical decision theory, and game theory exemplify this
direction.This book examines these two directions of work, and
makes original contributions to the second. An introductory chapter
outlines these two bodies of work, and casts them in a common
frame, to display their similarities and differences. Chapter 2
reviews at length recent work in stochastic processes that makes up
the first body of work, which sees social action as the resultant
of causal forces. The remaining chapters develop a mathematical
framework for the study of systems of social action using a
purposive theoretical base. These chapters are designed
particularly to contribute to the study of collective decisions, a
form of social action that has proved particularly challenging to
theoretical analysis. First published in 1973, this became a
significant work both in problem solving and in the future career
of the author. It is of continuing importance to researchers and
students interested in statistical analysis.
Philosophers, social scientists, and laymen have used two
perspectives in analyzing social action. One sees man's action as
the result of causal forces, and the other sees action as purposive
and goal directed. Mathematical treatment of social action has
shown this same dichotomy. Some models of behavior describe a
causal process, in which there is no place for intention or
purpose. Most stochastic models of behavior, whether individual or
group, are like this. Another body of work, however, employs
purpose, anticipation of some future state, and action designed to
maximize the proximity to some goal. Classical microeconomic
theory, statistical decision theory, and game theory exemplify this
direction. This book examines these two directions of work, and
makes original contributions to the second. An introductory chapter
outlines these two bodies of work, and casts them in a common
frame, to display their similarities and differences. Chapter 2
reviews at length recent work in stochastic processes that makes up
the first body of work, which sees social action as the resultant
of causal forces. The remaining chapters develop a mathematical
framework for the study of systems of social action using a
purposive theoretical base. These chapters are designed
particularly to contribute to the study of collective decisions, a
form of social action that has proved particularly challenging to
theoretical analysis. First published in 1973, this became a
significant work both in problem solving and in the future career
of the author. It is of continuing importance to researchers and
students interested in statistical analysis.
Drawing on several principles of sociological theory, James S.
Coleman and his colleagues construct a new design for American
schooling. The authors present compelling evidence on the deficits
of our educational system compared to other countries, arguing that
the problems are the result of inappropriate incentives for
teachers, students, and parents.Asserting that most American school
systems are driven by administrative needs, the authors propose
school designs that would shift the focus to student achievement
output as the driving force behind public education. The move from
an administratively driven system to an output-driven system would
require the use of external standards; a method of evaluating
school and student performance gains over time; a means of
rewarding students, teachers and parents for academic performance
gains; and the encouragement of informal norms that would support
the new educational goals. Basing their recommendations on two
national longitudinal data sets, each with a sample of over 1000
schools exhibiting variations in organizational design, the authors
identify specific variations that have been shown to promote growth
and achievement.
As Ofsted introduces a new framework with higher expectations
regarding subject knowledge across the primary curriculum, there
has never been a more important time for trainees to secure subject
their subject knowledge and improve confidence. This book aims to
help early career teachers in teaching primary foundation subjects.
This is another text for the Essential Guides for Early Career
teachers series and it provides ECT's and their mentors with the
right tools for teaching primary foundation subjects, improving
their subject knowledge and building understanding. It ensures that
relevant theory and research are woven together with real classroom
experience. It links to key readings, resources and online sources
which will allow trainees to continue their own learning and
encourage independent study through the use of reflective exercises
and practical tasks to ensure the delivery of the best possible
teaching. A text like this is needed more than ever as the Ofsted
framework for ITT is explicit in highlighting subject knowledge as
being a key component to successful teaching. This book, therefore,
covers the kind of topics that ECT's might at first struggle with
from art and design, to computing and IT to languages like French
and German. This book breaks down each subject and points trainees
in the direction of resources, support and best practice.
Substantially revised and updated, this is the third edition of a
highly popular book which has been helping students for decades. It
provides a sound base of linguistic competence upon which students
can build with confidence. Comprises twelve thematic modules each
including a relevant and contemporary text based on an aspect of
French life and culture, associated exercises, and a section on
grammar.
Substantially revised and updated, this is the third edition of a
highly popular book which has been helping students for decades. It
provides a sound base of linguistic competence upon which students
can build with confidence. Comprises twelve thematic modules each
including a relevant and contemporary text based on an aspect of
French life and culture, associated exercises, and a section on
grammar.
Appendices By Andre Weil And Robert R. Bush. Prentice Hall Series
In Mathematical Analysis Of Social Behavior.
Appendices By Andre Weil And Robert R. Bush. Prentice Hall Series
In Mathematical Analysis Of Social Behavior.
Everyone lost something during the decade of 2000-2009. Too many
lost everything. Not for nothing is George W. Bush considered the
worst modern American president. Inequality increased, even median
income fell, union membership declined, jobs were lost, and in the
world at large unnecessary wars destroyed, wracked, or threatened
millions. Each of our Senators and Representatives became ten years
older without learning or changing anything. We Americans continue
to bowl alone, awash in commodities, while our children entertain
themselves and communicate electronically. Something was askew.
Much of the passion directed to Barack Obama---as Ralph Nader
called him, "the first liberal evangelist in a long time"---played
out against a backdrop of Bush and Bill Clinton, a man of extreme
reaction and a misbehaving man of the right center. Racism under
lays much of the passionate opposition to Obama. That and
extraordinarily high, unmet expectations. My "Nightingale at Large"
web log posts selected for this book may offer a way to put that
past decade behind, to get over it, or at least to look again at
what we went through. In the web log posts you can see indications
of the book I wish I had written. Never mind that. As it stands,
the book is a quilt. As with the lost decade itself, there is
repetition and some flaying around. However, the point of it all is
to sum up, move on, and come to make a difference for the future.
Combining principles of individual rational choice with a
sociological conception of collective action, James Coleman recasts
social theory in a bold new way. The result is a landmark in
sociological theory, capable of describing both stability and
change in social systems. This book provides for the first time a
sound theoretical foundation for linking the behavior of
individuals to organizational behavior and then to society as a
whole. The power of the theory is especially apparent when Coleman
analyzes corporate actors, such as large corporations and trade
unions. He examines the creation of these institutions, collective
decision making, and the processes through which authority is
revoked in revolts and revolutions. Coleman discusses the problems
of holding institutions responsible for their actions as well as
their incompatibility with the family. He also provides a simple
mathematical analysis corresponding to and carrying further the
verbal formulations of the theory. Finally, he generates research
techniques that will permit quantitative testing of the theory.
From a simple, unified conceptual structure Coleman derives,
through elegant chains of reasoning, an encompassing theory of
society. It promises to be the most important contribution to
social theory since the publication of Talcott Parsons' Structure
of Social Action in 1936.
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