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The Art and Science of Making Up Your Mind presents basic
decision-making principles and tools to help the reader respond
efficiently and wisely to everyday dilemmas. Although most
decisions are made informally (whether intuitively without
deliberate thought, or based on careful reflection), over the
centuries people have tried to develop systematic, scientific and
structured ways in which to make decisions. Using qualitative
counterparts to quantitative models, Rex Brown takes the reader
through the basics, like 'what is a decision' and then considers a
wide variety of real-life decisions, explaining how the best
judgments can be made using logical principles. Combining multiple
evaluations of the same judgment ("hybrid judgment") and exploring
innovative analytical concepts (such as "ideal judgment"), this
book explores and analyzes the skills needed to master the basics
of non-mathematical decision making, and what should be done, using
real world illustrations of decision methods. The book is an ideal
companion for students of Thinking, Reasoning and Decision-Making,
and also for anyone wanting to understand how to make better
judgments in their everyday lives.
Interweaving phenomenological, hermeneutical, and sociopolitical
analyses, this book considers the ways in which feminists
conceptualize and produce the temporalities of feminism, including
the time of the trace, narrative time, calendar time, and
generational time.
IT management and staff are called upon to perform the almost-impossible tasks of evaluating, purchasing, integrating, and maintaining complex IT systems, and directing these systems to meet the ever-changing goals of an organization. Add to that the spending restraints of a down economy, and IT managers find themselves in need of a thoughtful, real-world guide that can maximize resources and bring efficiency to often chaotic environments.
IS Management Handbook, Eighth Edition details how IT professionals can align people, information, and technology with the strategic goals of an organization. The handbook offers technical and business insight from dozens of leading names from the technology sector, with a major focus on maximizing the performance of existing resources during tough economic times.
The handbook provides the information that allows IT managers to effectively organize people and processes, and efficiently integrate and maintain infrastructure, applications, support systems, e-business tools, and databases.
El lexico-gramatica del espanol ofrece una aproximacion alternativa
al estudio de la gramatica avanzada del espanol. Este libro brinda
al estudiante un enfoque autentico y contextualizado del uso del
espanol, basandose en datos provenientes de corpus de espanol-L1 y
L2 junto a la investigacion linguistica a fin de describir las
caracteristicas lexico-gramaticales fundamentales de la lengua y su
variacion. Cada capitulo incluye actividades guiadas para que los
estudiantes puedan realizar busquedas en estos corpus con el
proposito de llegar a conclusiones fundamentadas en evidencias
empiricas sobre como los aprendices de varios niveles de
competencia usan ciertos elementos lexico-gramaticales. Este libro
representa un recurso ideal para los estudiantes de la gramatica
avanzada del espanol a nivel de pregrado y posgrado. El
lexico-gramatica del espanol provides an alternative approach to
the study of advanced Spanish grammar. Drawing on L1 and L2 Spanish
language corpora and linguistic research to describe key
lexico-grammatical characteristics of the Spanish language, this
book gives students insight into real, variable, and contextualized
usage of Spanish. Each chapter includes guided exercises so that
students can conduct their own searches of the corpus and draw
evidence-based conclusions on how particular grammar structures are
used by Spanish speakers at varying levels of proficiency. This is
an ideal resource for advanced undergraduate and postgraduate
students of Spanish language and linguistics.
Spanish remains a large and constant fixture in the foreign
language learning landscape in the United States. As Spanish
language study has grown, so too has the diversity of students and
contexts of use, placing the field in the midst of a curricular
identity crisis. Spanish has become a second, rather than a
foreign, language in the US, which leads to unique opportunities
and challenges for curriculum and syllabus design, materials
development, individual and program assessment, and classroom
pedagogy. In their book, Brown and Thompson address these
challenges and provide a vision of Spanish language education for
the twenty-first century. Using data from the College Board, ETS,
and the authors' own institutions, as well as responses to their
national survey of almost seven hundred Spanish language educators,
the authors argue that the field needs to evolve to reflect changes
in the sociocultural, socioeducational, and sociopolitical
landscape of the US. The authors provide coherent and compelling
discussion of the most pressing issues facing Spanish
post-secondary education and strategies for converting these
challenges into opportunities. Topics that are addressed in the
book include: Heritage learners, service learning in
Spanish-speaking communities, Spanish for specific purposes,
assessment, unique needs for Spanish teacher training, online and
hybrid teaching, and the relevance of ACTFL's national standards
for Spanish post-secondary education. An essential read for Spanish
language scholars, especially those interested in curriculum design
and pedagogy, that includes supporting reflection questions and
pedagogical activities for use in upper-level undergraduate and
graduate-level courses.
This book describes a variety of programs -- firmly based in
psychological theory and modern decision analysis -- that are
suitable for teaching adolescents how to improve both their own
decision making skills and their understanding of the decision
making of others. Providing practical advice as well as theoretical
analysis, this volume addresses general questions such as the
nature and rationale of the enterprise, its implementation, and its
evaluation. Relevant to several current adolescent problems
including drug abuse, this is an excellent source, either as
research, new curriculum, or enrichment of old curriculum.
El lexico-gramatica del espanol ofrece una aproximacion alternativa
al estudio de la gramatica avanzada del espanol. Este libro brinda
al estudiante un enfoque autentico y contextualizado del uso del
espanol, basandose en datos provenientes de corpus de espanol-L1 y
L2 junto a la investigacion linguistica a fin de describir las
caracteristicas lexico-gramaticales fundamentales de la lengua y su
variacion. Cada capitulo incluye actividades guiadas para que los
estudiantes puedan realizar busquedas en estos corpus con el
proposito de llegar a conclusiones fundamentadas en evidencias
empiricas sobre como los aprendices de varios niveles de
competencia usan ciertos elementos lexico-gramaticales. Este libro
representa un recurso ideal para los estudiantes de la gramatica
avanzada del espanol a nivel de pregrado y posgrado. El
lexico-gramatica del espanol provides an alternative approach to
the study of advanced Spanish grammar. Drawing on L1 and L2 Spanish
language corpora and linguistic research to describe key
lexico-grammatical characteristics of the Spanish language, this
book gives students insight into real, variable, and contextualized
usage of Spanish. Each chapter includes guided exercises so that
students can conduct their own searches of the corpus and draw
evidence-based conclusions on how particular grammar structures are
used by Spanish speakers at varying levels of proficiency. This is
an ideal resource for advanced undergraduate and postgraduate
students of Spanish language and linguistics.
Indicators of child and youth well-being are indispensable tools
for improving the lives of children. In this new book," "the
nation's leading development researchers review the recent progress
made in the measurement, collection, dissemination, and use of
indicators of child and youth well-being. In addition, they
identify opportunities for future research to expand and improve on
the indicator data available, so as to develop greater measures of
positive development.
The first eleven chapters cover key indicators in the areas of
health, education, social, and emotional development and then
social context indicators of the family, peers, school, and the
community. The book then goes on to demonstrate the use of
indicators for influencing policy at the state and local levels.
One chapter discusses how social indicators were used to guide
welfare reform and another recounts the use of the indicators to
guide local planning. The volume concludes with a discussion of
summary indices of well-being and the methodological challenges of
constructing such indices.
Written in an accessible manner for policy makers, practitioners,
and researchers concerned with children's' well-being, including
experts in developmental, social, community, and educational
psychology, the book also serves as a supplementary text in public
policy and the social sciences. The policy chapters will be of
particular interest to those who use child and youth indicators to
guide policy development.
The Art and Science of Making Up Your Mind presents basic
decision-making principles and tools to help the reader respond
efficiently and wisely to everyday dilemmas. Although most
decisions are made informally (whether intuitively without
deliberate thought, or based on careful reflection), over the
centuries people have tried to develop systematic, scientific and
structured ways in which to make decisions. Using qualitative
counterparts to quantitative models, Rex Brown takes the reader
through the basics, like 'what is a decision' and then considers a
wide variety of real-life decisions, explaining how the best
judgments can be made using logical principles. Combining multiple
evaluations of the same judgment ("hybrid judgment") and exploring
innovative analytical concepts (such as "ideal judgment"), this
book explores and analyzes the skills needed to master the basics
of non-mathematical decision making, and what should be done, using
real world illustrations of decision methods. The book is an ideal
companion for students of Thinking, Reasoning and Decision-Making,
and also for anyone wanting to understand how to make better
judgments in their everyday lives.
Spanish remains a large and constant fixture in the foreign
language learning landscape in the United States. As Spanish
language study has grown, so too has the diversity of students and
contexts of use, placing the field in the midst of a curricular
identity crisis. Spanish has become a second, rather than a
foreign, language in the US, which leads to unique opportunities
and challenges for curriculum and syllabus design, materials
development, individual and program assessment, and classroom
pedagogy. In their book, Brown and Thompson address these
challenges and provide a vision of Spanish language education for
the twenty-first century. Using data from the College Board, ETS,
and the authors' own institutions, as well as responses to their
national survey of almost seven hundred Spanish language educators,
the authors argue that the field needs to evolve to reflect changes
in the sociocultural, socioeducational, and sociopolitical
landscape of the US. The authors provide coherent and compelling
discussion of the most pressing issues facing Spanish
post-secondary education and strategies for converting these
challenges into opportunities. Topics that are addressed in the
book include: Heritage learners, service learning in
Spanish-speaking communities, Spanish for specific purposes,
assessment, unique needs for Spanish teacher training, online and
hybrid teaching, and the relevance of ACTFL's national standards
for Spanish post-secondary education. An essential read for Spanish
language scholars, especially those interested in curriculum design
and pedagogy, that includes supporting reflection questions and
pedagogical activities for use in upper-level undergraduate and
graduate-level courses.
Interweaving phenomenological, hermeneutical, and sociopolitical
analyses, this book considers the ways in which feminists
conceptualize and produce the temporalities of feminism, including
the time of the trace, narrative time, calendar time, and
generational time.
Don't shut down by accident
A carefully planned shutdown will improve your plant's safety and
efficiency, while one that "just happens" can be disastrous.
Developed from the author's highly successful seminars, this book
takes you step by step through successfully managing production
shutdowns. Identify what must be done, schedule equipment and
staff, use project-management software, and save both dollars and
downtime.
* Prioritize needs and identify what can be accomplished within
time and budget constraints
* Determine whether outside help is required
* Schedule the order and priority of projects
* Learn to use CPM (Critical Path Methods) or PERT (Program
Evaluation Review Technique)
* Plan for new or additional work that may arise during a
shutdown
* Report and document preparation and execution
* Identify and record future needs the shutdown reveals
In psychology, motivation refers to the initiation, direction,
intensity and persistence of behaviour. Motivation is a temporal
and dynamic state that should not be confused with personality or
emotion. Motivation is having the desire and willingness to do
something. A motivated person can be reaching for a long-term goal
such as becoming a professional writer or a more short-term goal
like learning how to spell a particular word. Personality
invariably refers to more or less permanent characteristics of an
individual's state of being (eg: shy, extrovert, conscientious). As
opposed to motivation, emotion refers to temporal states that do
not immediately link to behaviour (e.g., anger, grief, happiness).
This book presents that latest research in this field.
Increase in survival for very low birth weight infants has been
observed, due to various improvements in perinatal care. However
neurodevelopmental outcome remains a major issue. The effect of
early environmental factors (during the hospital stay) and routine
NICU practices on neurobehavioral development is discussed.
Developmental care is an association of environmental and
behavioural strategies designed to decrease the stress of preterm
neonates. These interventions can be used alone or in association
into more complex programs as the Neonatal Individualised
Developmental Care and Assessment Program (NIDCAP). Despite growing
scientific literature, the medical impact of developmental care is
still controversial. Major differences in medical and nursing
practices are observed. This book reviews the theoretical framework
underlying developmental care and the research-based data in
different fields: neuroscience, developmental psychology, medicine
and nursing. Reflections on the impact on staff are included.
Recommendations for new research programs on this important aspect
of neonatal care are proposed.
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Masters of Darkness (Paperback)
Murray Leinster; Illustrated by Howard V. Brown, Virgil Finlay
bundle available
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R823
Discovery Miles 8 230
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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