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Exam board: SQA Level: Advanced Higher Subject: Physics First
teaching: August 2019 First exam: Summer 2021 Trust Scotland's most
popular revision guides to deliver the results you want. The How to
Pass series is chosen by students, parents and teachers again and
again. This is the only study book that addresses the skills for
Advanced Higher Physics, as well as the knowledge. > Recap and
remember course content. Concise summaries and diagrams cover the
important points for each topic in the latest specification. >
Test your skills and knowledge. Regular examples with worked
solutions help you to see if a topic is secure before you move on.
This style of active revision is much more effective than simply
reading. > Practise exam-style questions. Formal questions with
mark allocations are provided at the end of each topic, reflecting
the types of questions you will face in the exam. > Get expert
tips for exam success. Hints on how to achieve top marks and avoid
mistakes are based on feedback in the examiners' Course Reports,
giving you insight into the marking process. > Teach yourself
with confidence. Independent study has never been easier with clear
explanations, definitions of technical terms and answers to all
questions at the back of the book. > Plan and manage your
revision. Checklists for each topic enable you to benchmark your
progress against the assessment standards and make sure you're on
track to get the grades you need
Chambers, Nuangjamnong, and their contributors look at how the
development of the beer industry in East Asia presents a unique
opportunity for understanding the region's political economy. Asia
is both the world's largest beer-consuming and beer-producing
region, and the fastest growing beer market. Per-capita consumption
is lower than Europe, but catching up fast. Beer consumption is
also widely understood to correlate closely with economic growth
and urbanization, much more so than other alcoholic beverages like
spirits. With ten country case studies from both Northeast and
Southeast Asia, the contributors to this volume look at the history
of beer production and consumption across East Asia through a lens
of historical institutionalism and political economy. In doing so
they not only examine the development of the beer industry in the
region but also what it tells us about the countries themselves.
They ask questions such as: To what extent have state versus
societal actors influenced the path of beer production? How has
beer production changed? Was there a critical juncture at which
beer production abruptly changed course? A valuable resource for
students and scholars of modern East Asian History, and
particularly those with a focus on colonial history, industrial
history, and state-society relations.
Exam Board: SQA Level: National 5 Subject: Physics First Teaching:
September 2017 First Exam: Summer 2018 Fully updated to account for
the removal of Unit Assessments and the changes to the National 5
exam, this book contains all the advice and support you need to
revise successfully. It combines an overview of the course syllabus
with advice from top experts on how to improve exam performance, so
you have the best chance of success. - Refresh your knowledge with
complete course notes - Prepare for the exam with top tips and
hints on revision technique - Get your best grade with advice on
how to gain those vital extra marks
The four countries represented in this volume are East Asian middle
powers with strategic constraints upon their traditional security
policymaking. These middle powers have pursued diplomatic
activities raising their international profile or footprint, and
advancing their national interest, through normative foreign policy
and humanitarian channels, including peacebuilding, development,
and human security. In each case, therefore, there is a happy
coincidence of the national interest of the middle power expressed
though certain diplomatic "niches," and benefit to regional
partners in peace and development. The Niche Diplomacy of Asian
Middle Powers seeks to uncover the unique contributions of Asian
middle powers to the furtherance of humanitarian and human-related
policymaking, including the promotion of peace, development and
democracy long associated with middle-powerism, with particular
emphasis on their involvement in the Southeast Asian subregion.
Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan have made Southeast Asia a focus for
their attempts to get more "bang for their foreign policy buck" (or
Yen or Won) and have adopted similar normatively justified
variations on the theme of "new Southern policies." Meanwhile,
Thailand looks to play a variety of middle power roles within a
region where it is a major actor.
Exam board: SQA Level: Higher Subject: Physics First teaching:
September 2018 First exam: Summer 2019 Practice makes permanent.
Feel confident and prepared for the SQA Higher Physics exam with
this two-in-one book, containing practice questions for every
question type and topic, plus two full practice papers - all
written by experienced examiners. - Choose to revise by question
type or topic: A simple grid enables you to pick particular
question styles or course areas that you want to focus on, with
answers provided at the back of the book - Understand what the
examiner is looking for: Clear guidance on how to answer each
question type is followed by plenty of questions so you can put the
advice into practice, building essential exam skills - Remember
more in your exam: Repeated and extended practice will give you a
secure knowledge of the key areas of the course (our dynamic
universe; particles and waves; electricity) - Familiarise yourself
with the exam paper: Both practice papers mirror the language and
layout of the real SQA papers; complete them in timed, exam-style
conditions to increase your confidence before the exams - Find out
how to achieve a better grade: Answers to the practice papers have
commentaries for each question, with tips on writing successful
answers and avoiding common mistakes Fully up to date with SQA's
requirements The questions, mark schemes and guidance in this
practice book match the requirements of the revised SQA Higher
Physics specification for examination from 2019 onwards.
Exam Board: SQA Level: Higher Subject: Physics First Teaching:
August 2018 First Exam: May 2019 Get your best grade with
comprehensive course notes and advice from Scotland's top experts,
fully updated for the latest changes to SQA Higher assessment. How
to Pass Higher Physics Second Edition contains all the advice and
support you need to revise successfully for your Higher exam. It
combines an overview of the course syllabus with advice from top
experts on how to improve exam performance, so you have the best
chance of success. - Revise confidently with up-to-date guidance
tailored to the latest SQA assessment changes - Refresh your
knowledge with comprehensive, tailored subject notes - Prepare for
the exam with top tips and hints on revision techniques - Get your
best grade with advice on how to gain those vital extra marks
Exam Board: SQA Level: Higher Subject: Physics First Teaching:
August 2018 First Exam: June 2019 Ensure that students are prepared
for every aspect of their Higher Physics assessment with the only
textbook that offers comprehensive coverage of the updated SQA
syllabus requirements. - Provides clear and comprehensive coverage
of the specification with each section of the book matching a unit
of the new syllabus and each chapter corresponding to a content
area - Supports the 'researching physics' section in an appendix,
covering key skills required by physics students and deals with
data analysis, what can reasonably be inferred and what cannot, how
we arrive at conclusions and what those conclusions mean - Helps
students to prepare for exams: each chapter contains examples of
numerical, open ended and discursive type questions and combines
strong coverage of essential Physics for Higher with new material
and innovative teaching approaches
Historically, the Golden Triangle on the Mekong River has been a
strategic yet largely impoverished crossroads between Thailand,
Myanmar, Laos, and southern China. In the latter half of the 20th
century, it was known as one of the world's key opium-producing
regions. The new transnational "economic corridors" connecting
northern Thailand and southwestern China via key border towns in
Myanmar and Laos have greatly increased the volume of trade and
transshipment in the region. Logistical improvements via the
highways and ports have transformed entire towns and districts in
Laos, Myanmar, and Thailand, bringing with them an influx of
Chinese investment and tourism, and other population movements. The
transformation of the economy of the Golden Triangle is ongoing and
relatively uncharted. There is evidence of unequal benefits to the
countries involved. Combining official data, observations, and
interviews with a wide range of participants in this new border
economy, this book provides an important and unique perspective on
the impact of the new economic linkages in the region.
Bethlem Hospital is the oldest mental institution in the world, to
many famously known as 'Bedlam': a chaotic madhouse that brutalised
its patients. Paul Chambers explores the 800-year history of
Bethlem and reveals fascinating details of its ambivalent
relationship with London and its inhabitants, the life and times of
the hospital's more famous patients, and the rise of a powerful
reform movement to tackle the institution's notorious policies.
Here the whole story of Bethlem Hospital is laid bare to a new
audience, charting its well-intended beginnings to its final
disgrace and reform.
This fully updated third edition looks at the fundamentals of
mathematics teaching, how to plan lessons and assess learning, and
how to promote an inclusive approach in the classroom. Key new
features include: Updated content reflecting: the 2014 National
Curriculum in England, the Teachers' Standards and revised
requirements for GCSE and A level mathematics Updated 'Evidence
from research' features, highlighting developments in the field An
expanded section on mathematical misconceptions New coverage on
teaching for mastery.
For millennia the mighty giant tortoises lived in isolation on
remote oceanic islands such as the Galapagos, Seychelles and
Mauritius. Then in the sixteenth century sailors discovered that
they were good to eat, and their strategic location led to a
wholesale plunder of their population by passing ships.
Later, many Victorian scientists became fascinated with these
creatures, directly inspiring the first understanding of ecology
and biogeography and Darwin's theory of natural selection. The
giant tortoise was also the subject of the world's first
conservation fight in the 1870s. Indeed many people's lives have
been touched by these gentle giants. The French were happy to
surrender the island of Mauritius in 1810, but baulked at handing
over their mascot tortoise, and the British and American
governments were forced to concede the tortoises in a major Cold
War incident. The twentieth century saw the establishment of
wildlife reserves in the Galapagos and elsewhere, but it has been
too late for many species. However, modern genetics has been able
to track down members of what were once believed to be extinct
populations.
A Sheltered Life is a fascinating look at one of the world's
strangest and most wondrous animals--whose significance in modern
science and culture cannot be underestimated.
This book addresses the marked decline of religious practice and
subsequent eclipse of the social significance of religious
institutions in contemporary Wales from a sociological perspective.
Throughout, the text is lively, lucid, well paced and is written to
be accessible to non-specialists and church leaders as well as
sociologists of religion. It breaks new ground in its combination
of fieldwork and theory, redressing the tendency within British
sociology of religion towards either over-generalized abstraction
or under-theorized empirical description. Beginning with a
wide-ranging and critical exploration of the main theoretical
currents informing the idea of secularization, it then focuses on
an account of social and religious change in Wales that
incorporates a range of sociological factors relating to class,
economy, community, social mobility, demography and cultural
identity. Fieldwork interviews provide a compelling account of
contemporary religious practice while offering a strong sense of
the historical dimension of patterns of social and cultural change
within Wales. Apart from its contribution to the sociology of
religion, this book makes a significant contribution to the
relatively new discipline of congregational studies. It is
particularly useful in bringing a more nuanced understanding to
notions such as 'evangelical' and questioning the myth of the
comparative success of evangelical-charismatic religion in
late-modern society. Questions of social class are dealt with
directly and usefully as is the impact of social change on
difference of outlook between the generations.
This fully updated third edition looks at the fundamentals of
mathematics teaching, how to plan lessons and assess learning, and
how to promote an inclusive approach in the classroom. Key new
features include: Updated content reflecting: the 2014 National
Curriculum in England, the Teachers' Standards and revised
requirements for GCSE and A level mathematics Updated 'Evidence
from research' features, highlighting developments in the field An
expanded section on mathematical misconceptions New coverage on
teaching for mastery.
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