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We are glad to have the opportunity to work together again in the
planning and preparation of this edited volume on the evaluation of
corporate training. Our respective professional careers have
provided us with experience in this area, both as practitioners and
as academicians. It is from both of these perspectives that we
approached the preparation of this volume. Our purpose is to
provide training professionals in business and industry, and
students of human resources development with an overview of current
models and issues in educational evaluation. The book is organized
around three themes: context, models, and issues. The chapters in
the context section are intended to provide the reader with an
understanding of the social, organizational, and interpersonal
factors that provide background and give meaning to evaluation
practice. The models section brings together contributions from
some of the most influential thinkers and practitioners in the
field. The chapters in this section provide perspective on the
dominant themes and emergent trends from individuals who have been,
and continue to be, the drivers of those trends. Contributions to
the issues section highlight some pervasive themes as well as
illuminate new areas of concern and interest that will affect how
we assess learning interventions in the organizations of today and
tomorrow.
The Center for Theoretical Studies of the University of Miami has
been the host of annual winter conferences whose content has
expanded from the particular topic of symmetry principles in high
energy physics to encompass the bases and relationships of many
branches of know ledge. The scope of the Tenth Coral Gables
Conference on Fundamental Interactions included astrophysics,
atomic and molecular physics, fundamental theories of gravi tation,
of electromagnetism, and of hadrons, gauge theories of weak and
electromagnetic interactions, high energy physics, liquid helium
physics, and theoretical biology. The range of topics is partially
represented by the scientific talks which form this book. The
tangible fruits of the conference are these papers; the intangible
ones are the changes of outlook which the participants experienced
and the new appreciation they gained of the basic unity of all
knowledge. Historically, the early Coral Gables Conferences
witnessed the introduction of the concept of the quark and the
attempts to formulate a unification of the in ternal and space-time
symmetries of the elementary particles, while later ones were the
initial forums for new unified theories of interactions and for the
ideas of scaling, light-cone dominance, and partons."
We are glad to have the opportunity to work together again in the
planning and preparation of this edited volume on the evaluation of
corporate training. Our respective professional careers have
provided us with experience in this area, both as practitioners and
as academicians. It is from both of these perspectives that we
approached the preparation of this volume. Our purpose is to
provide training professionals in business and industry, and
students of human resources development with an overview of current
models and issues in educational evaluation. The book is organized
around three themes: context, models, and issues. The chapters in
the context section are intended to provide the reader with an
understanding of the social, organizational, and interpersonal
factors that provide background and give meaning to evaluation
practice. The models section brings together contributions from
some of the most influential thinkers and practitioners in the
field. The chapters in this section provide perspective on the
dominant themes and emergent trends from individuals who have been,
and continue to be, the drivers of those trends. Contributions to
the issues section highlight some pervasive themes as well as
illuminate new areas of concern and interest that will affect how
we assess learning interventions in the organizations of today and
tomorrow.
This lesson is based upon the concepts gleaned from the
illuminating writing of the Chancellor og the Jewish Theological
Seminary of America, Rabbi Ismar Schorsch. It is appropriate for
students in grades 6-8.
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