Unlocking the collective wisdom of the executive team is a major step toward competitive advantage. When communication, collaboration and creativity are given room to breathe, the impact on both workplace behavior and strategic outcomes produces measurable profitability.
Tapping into this collective wisdom remains a challenge for many organizations. Alignment is not automatic and needs to be cultivated. Instilling collaboration within the executive team by driving deep understanding of each individual team member fosters reassurance that executives can rely upon each to engage mutual accountability.
It takes a village to operate a successful catering and events company, but the village
people must share the same value, vision, and purpose. Often there is one or
more members of a leadership team that simply can’t adopt the company’s culture
and will cause the entire team to be disjointed or dysfunctional. In this session based
on the principals in Patrick Lencioni’s book, The Advantage, Warren will teach
how to define a company’s culture, how to get your team to embrace that culture,
and how to face the hard decisions that must be made when a talented and loyal
team member just can’t fit into the model.
Unlocking the collective wisdom of the executive team is a major step toward competitive advantage. When communication, collaboration and creativity are given room to breathe, the impact on both workplace behavior and strategic outcomes produces measurable profitability.
Tapping into this collective wisdom remains a challenge for many organizations. Alignment is not automatic and needs to be cultivated. Instilling collaboration within the executive team by driving deep understanding of each individual team member fosters reassurance that executives can rely upon each to engage mutual accountability.
It takes a village to operate a successful catering and events company, but the village
people must share the same value, vision, and purpose. Often there is one or
more members of a leadership team that simply can’t adopt the company’s culture
and will cause the entire team to be disjointed or dysfunctional. In this session based
on the principals in Patrick Lencioni’s book, The Advantage, Warren will teach
how to define a company’s culture, how to get your team to embrace that culture,
and how to face the hard decisions that must be made when a talented and loyal
team member just can’t fit into the model.
Personal development is a major concern for organizations in today's work world. This PowerPoint attempts to shed some light on how an organization and individuals can begin their journey to improved performance through personal development.
Effective communication is a critical component of organizational success. It is used to exchange information, persuade others to accept our message, solve problems and, even, entertain. Yet, not every organization or their leaders do it well. To become an effective communicator, you need to have the desire, understand the communication process, master basic skills and practice. Kindly Call us for More information tel: +2 01223575508 - Email: info@360solutionsegypt.com - website : www.360experientialsolutions.com
TMA World Viewpoint 33: A Guide To Strategic MentoringTMA World
The retention of talent within an organization is fundamental to its success in the competitive global business environment.
Mentoring is an important strategic initiative, which is designed to ensure that your talent is not only retained, but developed.
This TMA World presentation provides a short guide to effective strategic mentoring.
For more information on strategic mentoring and the other skills you and your organization require to thrive in the borderless workplace, contact us today: enquiries@tmaworld.com or visit our website: www.tmaworld.com
A company is an organism. It lives and grows. Introducing new strategy into the organism can rejuvenate and strengthen the entire system. It can also choke the system at different points, preventing the organism from thriving. This presentation will help you understand how to avoid and overcome the 7 choke points of strategy implementation.
Build winning teams - Matt Lock AssociatesMatt Lock
Coaching-led development for leaders and teams searching for exceptional levels of performance. We help you engage with the people and situations around you in more dynamic, effective and impactful ways.
A detailed module for providing training to First time managers. It is a very important exercise for any organization since the FTMs are moving in to manager's role from individual contributor. This process is as sensitive as changing the railway track for trains.
It covers below topics:
Effective Team building
Steps for effective team building
Continuous Development
PMS Cycle
High Performance Nurturing
Coaching
Mentoring
Art of Feedback
Steps to provide effective feedback
Art of delegation
Learn to success
A detailed module for providing training to First time managers. It is a very important exercise for any organization since the FTMs are moving in to manager's role from individual contributor. This process is as sensitive as changing the railway track for trains.
It covers below topics:
Effective Team building
Steps for effective team building
Continuous Development
PMS Cycle
High Performance Nurturing
Coaching
Mentoring
Art of Feedback
Steps to provide effective feedback
Art of delegation
Learn to success
A detailed module for providing training to First time managers. It is a very important exercise for any organization since the FTMs are moving in to manager's role from individual contributor. This process is as sensitive as changing the railway track for trains.
It covers below topics:
Effective Team building
Steps for effective team building
Continuous Development
PMS Cycle
High Performance Nurturing
Coaching
Mentoring
Art of Feedback
Steps to provide effective feedback
Art of delegation
Learn to success
A detailed module for providing training to First time managers. It is a very important exercise for any organization since the FTMs are moving in to manager's role from individual contributor. This process is as sensitive as changing the railway track for trains.
It covers below topics:
Effective Team building
Steps for effective team building
Continuous Development
PMS Cycle
High Performance Nurturing
Coaching
Mentoring
Art of Feedback
Steps to provide effective feedback
Art of delegation
Learn to success
A detailed module for providing training to First time managers. It is a very important exercise for any organization since the FTMs are moving in to manager's role from individual contributor. This process is as sensitive as changing the railway track for trains.
It covers below topics:
Effective Team building
Steps for effective team building
Continuous Development
PMS Cycle
High Performance Nurturing
Coaching
Mentoring
Art of Feedback
Steps to provide effective feedback
Art of delegation
Learn to success
A detailed module for providing training to First time managers. It is a very important exercise for any organization since the FTMs are moving in to manager's role from individual contributor. This process is as sensitive as changing the railway track for trains.
It covers below topics:
Effective Team building
Steps for effective team building
Continuous Development
PMS Cycle
High Performance Nurturing
Coaching
Mentoring
Art
Are unresolved conflicts affecting team functioning? Would you like to make conflict a source of growth for your team? Would like a road map to get there?
Managing team conflict effectively is the art of fostering trust, resolving conflicts as they arise and facilitating productive communication. Highly functioning teams can debate challenging topics, make tough decisions, and hold each other accountable for results.
Chapter 27 The purchase agreement 185After read.docxwalterl4
Chapter 27: The purchase agreement 185
After reading this chapter, you’ll be able to:
• describe the multiple functions of a purchase agreement form;
• identify various types of purchase agreements; and
• understand the sections and provisions that make up a purchase
agreement.
Learning
Objectives
The purchase
agreement
Chapter
27
A newcomer’s entry as a real estate agent into the vocation of soliciting and
negotiating real estate transactions typically begins with the marketing and
locating of single family residences (SFRs) as a seller’s agent or a buyer’s agent
(also known as listing agents or selling agents, respectively).
Other properties an agent might work with include:
• one-to-four unit residential properties;
• apartments;
• commercial income properties (office buildings, commercial units and
industrial space);
• agricultural property; or
• unimproved parcels of land.
For real estate sales conveying ownership of a property, the primary
document used to negotiate the transaction between a buyer and seller
Types and
variations
equity purchase (EP)
agreement
purchase agreement Key Terms
For a further discussion of this topic, see Chapter 51 of Real Estate
Practice.
186 Real Estate Principles, Second Edition
is a purchase agreement form. Different types of properties each require
a different variety of purchase agreement. Various purchase agreement
comprise provisions necessary to negotiate the sale of a particular type of
property.
Three basic categories of purchase agreements exist for the documentation of
real estate sales. The categories are influenced primarily by legislation and
court decisions addressing the handling of the disclosures and due diligence
investigations in the marketing of properties
The three categories of purchase agreements are for:
• one-to-four unit residential property sales transactions;
• other than one-to-four unit residential property sales transactions,
such as for residential and commercial income properties and owner-
occupied business/farming properties; and
• land acquisition transactions.
Within each category of purchase agreement, several variations exist.
The variations cater to the specialized use of some properties, the diverse
arrangements for payment of the price, and to the specific conditions which
affect a property, particularly within the one-to-four unit residential property
category.
Purchase agreement variations for one-to-four unit residential sales
transactions include purchase agreements for:
• negotiating the conventional financing of the purchase price [See
Figure 1, RPI Form 150 ];
• negotiating a short sale [See RPI Form 150-1];
• negotiating a cash to new or existing mortgage, or a seller carryback
note [See RPI Form 150-2];
• negotiating for separate brokerage fees paid each broker by their client
[See RPI Form 151];
• negotiating the government insured financing (FHA/VA) of t.
Chapter 27Gender and Media Content, Uses, and ImpactDar.docxwalterl4
Chapter 27
Gender and Media: Content, Uses, and Impact
Dara N. Greenwood and Julia R. Lippman
Although research offers compelling evidence to suggest that men and women are far more simi-
lar than they are different across a wide variety of domains, our perceptions of gender difference
can lead us to believe that men and women do inhabit distinct gendered universes and can trigger
self-fulfilling prophecies that confirm these expectations. These perceptions can even guide how aca-
demics choose to interpret the research literature. Hyde’s (2005) review of 46 meta-analyses supports
a “gender similarities hypothesis,” namely, the magnitude of gender differences across these studies
as measured by effect size is small or negligible in over three quarters of the cases assessed. Put
differently, a “small” effect size (i.e., d < 0.35; Hyde, 2005) means that 85% of the distributions for
women and men overlap. This is not to say that a 15% difference in distributions is an insignificant
percentage, but it certainly illustrates that emphasizing difference to the exclusion of similarity paints
an inaccurate picture. Further, where moderate or large gender differences did emerge, they were
often the product of social context. For example, women are more likely than men to smile when
they know they are being observed (LaFrance, Hecht, & Paluck, 2003, as cited in Hyde, 2005). The
latter finding suggests that a given social situation may be of paramount importance in the apparent
differences between men and women.
The social environment can influence the manifestation of present attitudes and behaviors, but
it is also a powerful shaping force throughout the lifespan. In their discussion of a social cognitive
approach to gender development, Bussey and Bandura (2004) suggested that the mass media, in
addition to ongoing input from parents and peers, offer a “pervasive cultural modeling of gender
roles” (p. 108). It is not just children who assimilate cultural models, however; research on the
phenomenon of “possible selves” (Markus & Nurius, 1986) suggests that over the course of our
lives, we continue to draw hoped for as well as feared selves from “the categories made salient by the
individual’s particular sociocultural and historical context and from the models, images, and symbols
provided by the media and by the individual’s immediate social experiences” (p. 954, emphasis
added).
So how does the media environment contribute to our gendered perceptions and experiences?
With a few exceptions, the basic cognitive and emotional processes by which media exert an impact
tend to be similar for both men and women. The most robust gender differences exist at the level
of media representation and content and the selective exposure patterns that are, in part, a response
to gender-typed content. In order to understand how media affect women and men, it is crucial first
to understand systematic gender differences in media content, as well as any gender difference.
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TMA World Viewpoint 33: A Guide To Strategic MentoringTMA World
The retention of talent within an organization is fundamental to its success in the competitive global business environment.
Mentoring is an important strategic initiative, which is designed to ensure that your talent is not only retained, but developed.
This TMA World presentation provides a short guide to effective strategic mentoring.
For more information on strategic mentoring and the other skills you and your organization require to thrive in the borderless workplace, contact us today: enquiries@tmaworld.com or visit our website: www.tmaworld.com
A company is an organism. It lives and grows. Introducing new strategy into the organism can rejuvenate and strengthen the entire system. It can also choke the system at different points, preventing the organism from thriving. This presentation will help you understand how to avoid and overcome the 7 choke points of strategy implementation.
Build winning teams - Matt Lock AssociatesMatt Lock
Coaching-led development for leaders and teams searching for exceptional levels of performance. We help you engage with the people and situations around you in more dynamic, effective and impactful ways.
A detailed module for providing training to First time managers. It is a very important exercise for any organization since the FTMs are moving in to manager's role from individual contributor. This process is as sensitive as changing the railway track for trains.
It covers below topics:
Effective Team building
Steps for effective team building
Continuous Development
PMS Cycle
High Performance Nurturing
Coaching
Mentoring
Art of Feedback
Steps to provide effective feedback
Art of delegation
Learn to success
A detailed module for providing training to First time managers. It is a very important exercise for any organization since the FTMs are moving in to manager's role from individual contributor. This process is as sensitive as changing the railway track for trains.
It covers below topics:
Effective Team building
Steps for effective team building
Continuous Development
PMS Cycle
High Performance Nurturing
Coaching
Mentoring
Art of Feedback
Steps to provide effective feedback
Art of delegation
Learn to success
A detailed module for providing training to First time managers. It is a very important exercise for any organization since the FTMs are moving in to manager's role from individual contributor. This process is as sensitive as changing the railway track for trains.
It covers below topics:
Effective Team building
Steps for effective team building
Continuous Development
PMS Cycle
High Performance Nurturing
Coaching
Mentoring
Art of Feedback
Steps to provide effective feedback
Art of delegation
Learn to success
A detailed module for providing training to First time managers. It is a very important exercise for any organization since the FTMs are moving in to manager's role from individual contributor. This process is as sensitive as changing the railway track for trains.
It covers below topics:
Effective Team building
Steps for effective team building
Continuous Development
PMS Cycle
High Performance Nurturing
Coaching
Mentoring
Art of Feedback
Steps to provide effective feedback
Art of delegation
Learn to success
A detailed module for providing training to First time managers. It is a very important exercise for any organization since the FTMs are moving in to manager's role from individual contributor. This process is as sensitive as changing the railway track for trains.
It covers below topics:
Effective Team building
Steps for effective team building
Continuous Development
PMS Cycle
High Performance Nurturing
Coaching
Mentoring
Art of Feedback
Steps to provide effective feedback
Art of delegation
Learn to success
A detailed module for providing training to First time managers. It is a very important exercise for any organization since the FTMs are moving in to manager's role from individual contributor. This process is as sensitive as changing the railway track for trains.
It covers below topics:
Effective Team building
Steps for effective team building
Continuous Development
PMS Cycle
High Performance Nurturing
Coaching
Mentoring
Art
Are unresolved conflicts affecting team functioning? Would you like to make conflict a source of growth for your team? Would like a road map to get there?
Managing team conflict effectively is the art of fostering trust, resolving conflicts as they arise and facilitating productive communication. Highly functioning teams can debate challenging topics, make tough decisions, and hold each other accountable for results.
Similar to Chapter 3Team Communication and Difficult Conversations.docx (20)
Chapter 27 The purchase agreement 185After read.docxwalterl4
Chapter 27: The purchase agreement 185
After reading this chapter, you’ll be able to:
• describe the multiple functions of a purchase agreement form;
• identify various types of purchase agreements; and
• understand the sections and provisions that make up a purchase
agreement.
Learning
Objectives
The purchase
agreement
Chapter
27
A newcomer’s entry as a real estate agent into the vocation of soliciting and
negotiating real estate transactions typically begins with the marketing and
locating of single family residences (SFRs) as a seller’s agent or a buyer’s agent
(also known as listing agents or selling agents, respectively).
Other properties an agent might work with include:
• one-to-four unit residential properties;
• apartments;
• commercial income properties (office buildings, commercial units and
industrial space);
• agricultural property; or
• unimproved parcels of land.
For real estate sales conveying ownership of a property, the primary
document used to negotiate the transaction between a buyer and seller
Types and
variations
equity purchase (EP)
agreement
purchase agreement Key Terms
For a further discussion of this topic, see Chapter 51 of Real Estate
Practice.
186 Real Estate Principles, Second Edition
is a purchase agreement form. Different types of properties each require
a different variety of purchase agreement. Various purchase agreement
comprise provisions necessary to negotiate the sale of a particular type of
property.
Three basic categories of purchase agreements exist for the documentation of
real estate sales. The categories are influenced primarily by legislation and
court decisions addressing the handling of the disclosures and due diligence
investigations in the marketing of properties
The three categories of purchase agreements are for:
• one-to-four unit residential property sales transactions;
• other than one-to-four unit residential property sales transactions,
such as for residential and commercial income properties and owner-
occupied business/farming properties; and
• land acquisition transactions.
Within each category of purchase agreement, several variations exist.
The variations cater to the specialized use of some properties, the diverse
arrangements for payment of the price, and to the specific conditions which
affect a property, particularly within the one-to-four unit residential property
category.
Purchase agreement variations for one-to-four unit residential sales
transactions include purchase agreements for:
• negotiating the conventional financing of the purchase price [See
Figure 1, RPI Form 150 ];
• negotiating a short sale [See RPI Form 150-1];
• negotiating a cash to new or existing mortgage, or a seller carryback
note [See RPI Form 150-2];
• negotiating for separate brokerage fees paid each broker by their client
[See RPI Form 151];
• negotiating the government insured financing (FHA/VA) of t.
Chapter 27Gender and Media Content, Uses, and ImpactDar.docxwalterl4
Chapter 27
Gender and Media: Content, Uses, and Impact
Dara N. Greenwood and Julia R. Lippman
Although research offers compelling evidence to suggest that men and women are far more simi-
lar than they are different across a wide variety of domains, our perceptions of gender difference
can lead us to believe that men and women do inhabit distinct gendered universes and can trigger
self-fulfilling prophecies that confirm these expectations. These perceptions can even guide how aca-
demics choose to interpret the research literature. Hyde’s (2005) review of 46 meta-analyses supports
a “gender similarities hypothesis,” namely, the magnitude of gender differences across these studies
as measured by effect size is small or negligible in over three quarters of the cases assessed. Put
differently, a “small” effect size (i.e., d < 0.35; Hyde, 2005) means that 85% of the distributions for
women and men overlap. This is not to say that a 15% difference in distributions is an insignificant
percentage, but it certainly illustrates that emphasizing difference to the exclusion of similarity paints
an inaccurate picture. Further, where moderate or large gender differences did emerge, they were
often the product of social context. For example, women are more likely than men to smile when
they know they are being observed (LaFrance, Hecht, & Paluck, 2003, as cited in Hyde, 2005). The
latter finding suggests that a given social situation may be of paramount importance in the apparent
differences between men and women.
The social environment can influence the manifestation of present attitudes and behaviors, but
it is also a powerful shaping force throughout the lifespan. In their discussion of a social cognitive
approach to gender development, Bussey and Bandura (2004) suggested that the mass media, in
addition to ongoing input from parents and peers, offer a “pervasive cultural modeling of gender
roles” (p. 108). It is not just children who assimilate cultural models, however; research on the
phenomenon of “possible selves” (Markus & Nurius, 1986) suggests that over the course of our
lives, we continue to draw hoped for as well as feared selves from “the categories made salient by the
individual’s particular sociocultural and historical context and from the models, images, and symbols
provided by the media and by the individual’s immediate social experiences” (p. 954, emphasis
added).
So how does the media environment contribute to our gendered perceptions and experiences?
With a few exceptions, the basic cognitive and emotional processes by which media exert an impact
tend to be similar for both men and women. The most robust gender differences exist at the level
of media representation and content and the selective exposure patterns that are, in part, a response
to gender-typed content. In order to understand how media affect women and men, it is crucial first
to understand systematic gender differences in media content, as well as any gender difference.
CHAPTER 25Arab Unity and Disunity (since 1967)THE CRIS.docxwalterl4
CHAPTER 25
Arab Unity and Disunity (since 1967)
THE CRISIS OF 1973
'Abd al-Nasir lived for three years after his defeat. His position in the
world had been badly shaken by it; his relationships with the United States
and Britain were soured by his accusation and belief that they had helped
Israel militarily during the war, and by the American insistence that Israel
would withdraw from conquered territories only in return for peace. His
position in regard to other Arab rulers was weakened as the limitations of
his power became clear. One immediate result of the war of 1967 was that
he cut his losses in Yemen, and made an agreement with Saudi Arabia by
which his forces were withdrawn.
Inside Egypt, however, his position was still strong. At the end of the
fateful week in June 1967 he announced his resignation, but this aroused
widespread protests in Egypt and some other Arab countries, perhaps
because of skilful organization, but perhaps because of a feeling that his
resignation would be a deeper defeat and humiliation. His hold over
popular sentiment in other Arab countries also remained strong. Both
because of his own stature and because of the recognized position of Egypt,
he was the indispensable broker between the Palestinians and those among
whom they lived. In the years after 1967, the growth of Palestinian national
feeling and the increasing strength of Fatah, which controlled the PLO
from 1969, led to a number of incidents of guerilla action against Israel,
and Israeli reprisals against the lands where the Palestinians had some
freedom of action. In 1969, Egyptian intervention brought about an
agreement between the Lebanese government and the PLO, which set the
limits within which the PLO would be free to operate in southern Lebanon.
In the next year, 1970, severe fighting broke out in Jordan between the
army and Palestinian guerilla groups which seemed on the point of taking
over power in the country. The Jordanian government was able to impose
416
ARAB UNITY AND DISUNITY (SINCE 1967)
its authority and end the freedom of action of the Palestinian groups, and
once more it was the mediation of 'Abd al-Nasir which made peace between
them.
Immediately after this, 'Abd al-Nasir suddenly died. The extraordinary
scenes at his funeral, with millions weeping in the streets, certainly meant
something; at least for the moment, it was difficult to imagine Egypt or the
Arab world without him. His death was the end of an era of hope for an
Arab world united and made new.
'Abd al-Nasir was succeeded by a colleague of long standing, Anwar
Sadat (19 1 8-81). It seemed, at first, that Egypt would continue as before.
In other Arab countries, too, changes in 1969 and 1970 brought to power
people who seemed likely to follow a policy roughly similar to Nasirism or
at least consistent with it. In Morocco and Tunisia, it is true, there was no
basic change at this time; King Hasan and those around him, and Bourguiba
.
Chapter 28 presents historical challenges to creating a sense of pe.docxwalterl4
Chapter 28 presents historical challenges to creating “a sense of personal meaning and value in life” with the growth of technology. What additional supports/strategies might be used to complement using technology in the human services field? How can these services be used to enhance socialization?
.
Chapter 24 Palliative and End-of-Life CareThe hospice nur.docxwalterl4
Chapter 24
: Palliative and End-of-Life Care
The hospice nurse has a unique role in the provision of end of life services.
1. Mention important roles (at least 3) of the nurse while providing quality end -of-life care to seriously ill persons and their families. Explain your answer.
.
Chapter 3Linking IT to Business Metrics From the first time IT.docxwalterl4
Chapter 3
Linking IT to Business Metrics
From the first time IT started making a significant dent in corporate balance sheets, the holy grail of academics, consultants, and business and IT managers has been to show that what a company spends on IT has a direct impact on its performance. Early efforts to do this, such as those trying to link various measures of IT input (e.g., budget dollars, number of PCs, number of projects) with various measures of business performance (e.g., profit, productivity, stock value) all failed to show any relationship at all (Marchand et al. 2000). Since then, everyone has prop- erly concluded that the relationship between what is done in IT and what happens in the business is considerably more complex than these studies first supposed. In fact, many researchers would suggest that the relationship is so filtered through a variety of “conversion effects” (Cronk and Fitzgerald 1999) as to be practically impossible to demonstrate. Most IT managers would agree. They have long argued that technology is not the major stumbling block to achieving business performance; it is the business itself—the processes, the managers, the culture, and the skills—that makes the differ- ence. Therefore, it is simply not realistic to expect to see a clear correlation between IT and business performance at any level. When technology is successful, it is a team effort, and the contributions of the IT and business components of an initiative cannot and should not be separated.
Nevertheless, IT expenditures must be justified. Thus, most companies have concentrated on determining the “business value” that specific IT projects deliver. By focusing on a goal that matters to business (e.g., better information, faster transaction processing, reduced staff), then breaking this goal down into smaller projects that IT can affect directly, they have tried to “peel the onion” and show specifically how IT delivers value in a piecemeal fashion. Thus, a series of surrogate measures are usually used to demonstrate IT’s impact in an organization. (See Chapter 1 for more details.)
More recently, companies are taking another look at business performance met- rics and IT. They believe it is time to “put the onion back together” and focus on what
1 This chapter is based on the authors’ previously published article, Smith, H. A., J. D. McKeen, and C. Street. “Linking IT to Business Metrics.” Journal of Information Science and Technology 1, no. 1 (2004): 13–26. Reproduced by permission of the Information Institute.
1
27
28 Section I • Delivering Value with IT
really matters to the enterprise. This perspective argues that employees who truly understand what their business is trying to achieve can sense the right ways to per- sonally improve performance that will show up at a business unit and organizational level. “People who understand the business and are informed will be proactive and ... have a disposition to create business value every day in many.
Chapter 4 A Tour of the CellChapter 4 A Tour of the CellName.docxwalterl4
Chapter 4: A Tour of the Cell
Chapter 4: A Tour of the Cell
Name ________________________ Period _________
Chapter 4: A Tour of the Cell
Guided Reading Activities
Chapter Content: The Microscopic World of Cells
1. The ____________ states that all cells come from existing cells and that organisms are made of cells.
2. Complete the table that compares prokaryotic to eukaryotic cells.
Prokaryotes
Eukaryotes
Description of cells
3. A scientist discovers a cell in a sample of water from Utah’s Great Salt Lake. She discovers the cell has a cell wall, ribosomes, and a nucleoid region. Upon further microscopic observation the scientist notices the nucleoid region contains a single chromosome. Which of the following cells would it most likely be?
A) Prokaryote
B) Animal cell
C) Plant cell
D) Eukaryote
4. Complete the following table illustrating the differences between plant and animal cells.
Plant cells
Animal cells
Shared features
Unique features
Chapter Content: Membrane Structure
Complete the following questions as you read the fourth chapter content—Membrane Structure:
1. True or false: If false, please make it a correct statement. The plasma membrane regulates the movement of substances into and out of the cell.
2. Students, when asked to diagram a simple cell membrane, many times draw the structure
below. What is wrong with this structure? In other words, briefly explain why it is incorrect.
3. Which of the following statements best describes the structure of a cell membrane?
A) Proteins sandwiched between two layers of phospholipids
B) Proteins embedded in two layers of phospholipids
C) A layer of protein coating a layer of phospholipids
D) Phospholipids sandwiched between two layers of protein
4. A cell’s plasma membrane is described as being a ______________ because it is composed of a variety of molecules that are constantly in motion around each other.
5. Figure 4.5b on page 60 of your textbook indicates that membrane proteins will have both hydrophilic and hydrophobic regions. Briefly explain why a membrane protein would need both regions. Refer to the figure to aid you in answering the question.
7. List three common bacterial targets of antibiotics.
Chapter Content: The Nucleus and Ribosomes: Genetic Control of the Cell
Complete the following questions as you read the fourth chapter content—The Nucleus and Ribosomes: Genetic Control of the Cell:
1. Complete the following table regarding the nucleus.
Nuclear envelope
Nuclear pores
Nucleolus
Nucleus
Function
2. The nuclear envelope has passages for substances moving into and out of the nucleus. These passages are called nuclear pores and they are made by proteins that are inserted into the plasma membrane that makes up the nuclear envelope. These proteins would be assembled by:
A) Free-floating ribosomes
B) The nucleus
C) Ribosomes bound to the endoplasmic reticulum
D) Nuclear pores
3. What are the functions of a protein.
4. Does DNA lea.
Chapter 4 Data Communications and Networking 1 of 40 .docxwalterl4
Chapter 4: Data Communications and Networking
1 of 40
ACCOUNTING INFORMATION SYSTEMS: A DATABASE APPROACH
by: Uday S. Murthy, Ph.D., ACA and S. Michael Groomer, Ph.D., CPA, CISA
Data Communications and Networking
Learning Objectives
After studying this chapter you should be able to:
• identify the five components of a telecommunications network,
• distinguish between terminals and workstations,
• explain the various types of transmission links, including physical and “through
the air” links,
• differentiate between alternative transmission methods such as analog and digital
transmission, circuit switching and packet switching,
• describe in general terms the functioning of line sharing devices and switches,
• explain the role of network architecture and standards,
• explain the OSI telecommunications model,
• distinguish between local area networks and wide area networks,
• describe alternative computer network configurations including ring, star, and bus
networks,
• understand the various types of wide area networks, including the options for
centralized data processing networks and distributed data processing networks,
• explain the concept of a client/server system,
• understand the architecture and functioning of the Internet,
• distinguish between the Internet and Intranets,
• describe the operation of electronic data interchange arrangements between
organizations,
• explain the concept of e-business and its emerging importance in the global
economy.
The dramatic technological advances that swept the computer industry in the seventies
and eighties resulted in the development of extremely fast and powerful personal
Chapter 4: Data Communications and Networking
2 of 40
computers. These personal computers made it possible to maximize individual
productivity. However, most current hardware and software technological developments
have been aimed at maximizing group productivity. Increasingly, personal computers
are networked together to enable communication between users and to facilitate
sharing of data and resources. This chapter is aimed at providing a basic understanding
of a range of telecommunications concepts including local area and wide area networks.
We also discuss some recent communications technologies affecting business such as
client/server systems, the Internet, and electronic data interchange. Almost all
computer systems in organizations today are networked, and these networked
computer systems invariably house a wealth of accounting information. It is therefore
important for accountants to have a working knowledge of data communications and
networking concepts.
Telecommunications concepts
Telecommunications refers to the electronic transmission of information from a point of
origin to a point of destination. A telecommunications network is composed of five
components: (1) terminals and workstations, (2) transmission links, (3) tra.
Chapter 3 The APA Ethics Code and Ethical Decision MakingThe APA.docxwalterl4
Chapter 3 The APA Ethics Code and Ethical Decision Making
The APA’s Ethics Code provides a set of aspirational principles and behavioral rules written broadly to apply to psychologists’ varied roles and the diverse contexts in which the science and practice of psychology are conducted. The five aspirational principles described in Chapter 2 represent the core values of the discipline of psychology that guide members in recognizing in broad terms the moral rightness or wrongness of an act. As an articulation of the universal moral values intrinsic to the discipline, the aspirational principles are intended to inspire right actions but do not specify what those actions might be. The ethical standards that will be discussed in later chapters of this book are concerned with specific behaviors that reflect the application of these moral principles to the work of psychologists in specific settings and with specific populations. In their everyday activities, psychologists will find many instances in which familiarity with and adherence to specific Ethical Standards provide adequate foundation for ethical actions. There will also be many instances in which (a) the means by which to comply with a standard are not readily apparent, (b) two seemingly competing standards appear equally appropriate, (c) application of a single standard or set of standards appears consistent with one aspirational principle but inconsistent with another, or (d) a judgment is required to determine whether exemption criteria for a particular standard are met.
The Ethics Code is not a formula for solving these ethical challenges. Psychologists are not moral technocrats simply working their way through a decision tree of ethical rules. Rather, the Ethics Code provides psychologists with a set of aspirations and broad general rules of conduct that psychologists must interpret and apply as a function of the unique scientific and professional roles and relationships in which they are embedded. Successful application of the principles and standards of the Ethics Code involves a conception of psychologists as active moral agents committed to the good and just practice and science of psychology. Ethical decision making thus involves a commitment to applying the Ethics Code and other legal and professional standards to construct rather than simply discover solutions to ethical quandaries (APA, 2012f).
This chapter discusses the ethical attitudes and decision-making strategies that can help psychologists prepare for, identify, and resolve ethical challenges as they continuously emerge and evolve in the dynamic discipline of psychology. An opportunity to apply these strategies is provided in the cases at the end of each chapter and the 10 case studies presented in Appendix A.
Ethical Commitment and Virtues
The development of a dynamic set of ethical standards for psychologists’ work-related conduct requires a personal commitment and lifelong effort to act ethically; to encourage ethical.
Chapter 3 3Plainchant Alleluia, Caro mea”Composed ca. 1275This.docxwalterl4
Chapter 3 3Plainchant Alleluia, “Caro mea”
Composed: ca. 1275
This brief chant is from the Mass for the Feast of Corpus Christi. It is a responsorial chant in which a chorus “responds” to a solo singer. As is so often the case with medieval plainchant, we do not know the identity of the composer, though it was probably written by a monk or priest. This chapter's recording, by an all-male ensemble, reflects the way this chant would have been sung in a medieval monastery.Learning Objectives
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3.1Describe how the Alleluia functioned in the context of the Mass.
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3.2Define responsorial chant.
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3.3Identify the unison texture of plainchant as it is heard in “Caro mea” from the Mass for the Feast of Corpus Christi.
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3.4Explain the use of contrast in the performance of “Caro mea.”
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3.5Define melisma and identify melismas in “Caro mea.”
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3.6Describe how plainchant assists in promoting calm and well-being.
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Plainchant was an integral part of every service of worship in the Medieval church. The Alleluia “Caro mea” is one of many plainchants used during the Mass for the Feast of Corpus Christi (Latin for “Body of Christ”), which celebrates the Holy Sacrament, the body (bread) and blood (wine) of Christ. Like all Masses, the Mass for the Feast of Corpus Christi consists of a combination of elements that are unchanging (the “Ordinary”—the Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, and Agnus Dei) and elements that change according to the specific Sunday or feast day (the “Propers”—Introit, Gradual, Alleluia, Offertory, Communion). The texts for the Propers of the Mass for the Feast of Corpus Christi all deal in some way with the ritual of the Holy Sacrament.
The text for the Alleluia for this feast day is taken from the Gospel of John, 6:55–56. These are the words Jesus spoke to his disciples and others at the synagogue at Caprenaum, and they foreshadow the words he would say at the Last Supper the night before his crucifixion, when he distributed bread and wine to his disciples as part of the traditional Passover meal.
A priest (center) leads the celebration of Mass with the assistance of monks (left), who are singing from a notated manuscript.PERFORMANCEChilling to Chant
Plainchant has long been recognized as an element that enhances meditation, prayer, and devotion: It figures prominently in many of the world's religions (see Expand Your Playlist: Chant, Chapter 1). The gentle flow of the melodies, the absence of repetitive rhythms, and the relatively narrow range of timbre all help create a sense of calm and well-being. Scientists are gradually discovering that there is a physiological factor at work here as well. Dr. Alan Watkins, a senior lecturer in neuroscience at Imperial College London, has noted that “the musical structure of chanting can have a significant and positive physiological impact . . . studies also demonstrate that such practices have been shown to lower blood pressure, increase levels of the performance hormone DHEA as.
chapter 3
Chapter 3 Managerial Decision Making
1. Describe the phases of managerial decision making.
2. Describe the barriers to managerial decision making.
3. Describe the challenges involved in managing group decision making.
4. Describe the components involved in Herbert Simon’s organizational decision-making process.
.
Chapter 3What are GPNs and how do they function and operate W.docxwalterl4
Chapter 3
What are GPNs and how do they function and operate? Who are the GPN actors that are referred to in Chapter 3 and do they work with each other or against each other?
Discuss extent to which capital is becoming reterritorialized or disembodied. What does this currently mean to international business which attempts to expand internationally?
Discuss the extent to which TNCs and / or financialization affect process of globalization, and vice versa.
Are Non-Government Production entities (NGOs) an effective way to curb excesses of YNCs, or part of the problems?
Group #1 members will take the argument in support of this statement that NGOs are an effective way to curb excesses of TNCs.
Chapter 4
Technological change is defined as a socially and institutionalized embedded process. Do you agree with this statement and why or why not?
There are supposedly four types of technological change. List them and define what they mean. Are there more? List these as well.
Which is more significant, communications technology or transportation technology?
Group #2 members are to take the position in support of transportation technology.
Conduct the trends identified by this chapter and where they might lead to the future, if at all.
Book: ISBN:978146251955-2
GLOBAL SHIFT 7E
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CHAPTER 3the story of the slave ship, the Zong- in Novembe.docxwalterl4
CHAPTER 3
the story of the slave ship, the Zong:
- in November of 1781, after 3 months at sea the Zong was nearing the ‘New World’ from the western coast of Africa
- had started with 471 African individuals intended for the slave trade
- fresh water was very low and disease had broken out
- in accordance with the ‘economics’ of the slave trade and the norms of the time, the slaves were considered ‘cargo’ – no different from livestock
- the ‘cargo’ had been insured at the beginning of the trip
— slaves that died of natural causes (lack of water, disease) would not be covered by the insurance
— however, if the slaves died from being thrown overboard while still alive, the ship owners’ insurance would cover the lose
— hoping to save water and reduce the spread of disease, 54 sick slaves were chained together and thrown overboard
— over 2 days, more live slaves were thrown overboard (total: 132 persons)
at 1st the insurance company was going to pay, but a new freed slave, Equiano (living free in England now) made an abolitionist aware and a new trial determined the slaves were people, not cargo or livestock and the ship owners did not get the insurance
foundations of US
- beginning in 1600s and through 1700s the US is an agricultural society
- land and labor are needed
- to get land and labor 3 groups were made into minority status
— these groups joined the colonies, then the US through colonization
— these 3 groups are still having problems today (Native American, African American, Hispanic/Mexican American)
two themes throughout this text
1) what the current subsistence technology is for a specific time period) (impacts majority – minority relations at that time (subsistence technology: how a society provides for basic goods, services (shelter, food, water) for its people) (see table)
what’s important
hunting / gathering / foraging
human energy
little stratification
- dependent of what nature provides
agriculture
human energy and animal energy
- more surplus
- increased stratification
- majority / minority relationship is likely to be patriarchal
- land ownership
- cheap, easily controllable workforce
industrialization
addition of other energy sources, culminating in electricity
- even more surplus
- even more stratification
- capital to build factories, buy machinery and raw materials, pay workers
post industrialization / information
electricity
human energy
- high stratification
education
2) what the contact situation is when 2 or more groups first make contact (impacts majority – minority relations at the time and later)
the initial contact situation
- application of the Noel and Blauner Hypotheses
- they are not mutually exclusive; they look at similar, overlapping issues
- much can be learned by applying both hypotheses
— Noel hypothesis
Noel Hypotheses
at contact
conditions
result
Noel
Two or more groups come together
if the following conditions exist
- ethnocentrism
- competition
- power differential among the groups
resul.
Chapter 3What is the basic accounting equation Give an exampl.docxwalterl4
Chapter 3
What is the basic accounting equation? Give an example of how a business transaction would effect the basic accounting equation.
Give an example of a journal entry using at least two accounts.
Give one example each of asset, liability, equity, revenue and expense accounts and the normal balance of debit or credit.
Give an example that shows the basic steps in the recording process.
What is the purpose of a trial balance?
Define cash activities as operating, investing, or financing and give one example of each.
Please rephrase for student A and student B. Attachments below is their answers.
.
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
The Roman Empire A Historical Colossus.pdfkaushalkr1407
The Roman Empire, a vast and enduring power, stands as one of history's most remarkable civilizations, leaving an indelible imprint on the world. It emerged from the Roman Republic, transitioning into an imperial powerhouse under the leadership of Augustus Caesar in 27 BCE. This transformation marked the beginning of an era defined by unprecedented territorial expansion, architectural marvels, and profound cultural influence.
The empire's roots lie in the city of Rome, founded, according to legend, by Romulus in 753 BCE. Over centuries, Rome evolved from a small settlement to a formidable republic, characterized by a complex political system with elected officials and checks on power. However, internal strife, class conflicts, and military ambitions paved the way for the end of the Republic. Julius Caesar’s dictatorship and subsequent assassination in 44 BCE created a power vacuum, leading to a civil war. Octavian, later Augustus, emerged victorious, heralding the Roman Empire’s birth.
Under Augustus, the empire experienced the Pax Romana, a 200-year period of relative peace and stability. Augustus reformed the military, established efficient administrative systems, and initiated grand construction projects. The empire's borders expanded, encompassing territories from Britain to Egypt and from Spain to the Euphrates. Roman legions, renowned for their discipline and engineering prowess, secured and maintained these vast territories, building roads, fortifications, and cities that facilitated control and integration.
The Roman Empire’s society was hierarchical, with a rigid class system. At the top were the patricians, wealthy elites who held significant political power. Below them were the plebeians, free citizens with limited political influence, and the vast numbers of slaves who formed the backbone of the economy. The family unit was central, governed by the paterfamilias, the male head who held absolute authority.
Culturally, the Romans were eclectic, absorbing and adapting elements from the civilizations they encountered, particularly the Greeks. Roman art, literature, and philosophy reflected this synthesis, creating a rich cultural tapestry. Latin, the Roman language, became the lingua franca of the Western world, influencing numerous modern languages.
Roman architecture and engineering achievements were monumental. They perfected the arch, vault, and dome, constructing enduring structures like the Colosseum, Pantheon, and aqueducts. These engineering marvels not only showcased Roman ingenuity but also served practical purposes, from public entertainment to water supply.
Palestine last event orientationfvgnh .pptxRaedMohamed3
An EFL lesson about the current events in Palestine. It is intended to be for intermediate students who wish to increase their listening skills through a short lesson in power point.
Welcome to TechSoup New Member Orientation and Q&A (May 2024).pdfTechSoup
In this webinar you will learn how your organization can access TechSoup's wide variety of product discount and donation programs. From hardware to software, we'll give you a tour of the tools available to help your nonprofit with productivity, collaboration, financial management, donor tracking, security, and more.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
The French Revolution, which began in 1789, was a period of radical social and political upheaval in France. It marked the decline of absolute monarchies, the rise of secular and democratic republics, and the eventual rise of Napoleon Bonaparte. This revolutionary period is crucial in understanding the transition from feudalism to modernity in Europe.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
21. efforts for convention guests.
Kip Yamada, marketing associate, develop campaigns for
business travelers.
Jeff Anderton, marketing assistant, conduct market research and
analytics.
Kailey Change, marketing assistant, create concepts and
graphics for campaigns.
Communication Protocol
We will post project updates, recommendations, and relevant
experiences to our team blog. Team members should post
roughly twice per week.
We will respond to direct messages from each other (emails,
phone calls) within four hours.
We recognize the value of each team member’s ideas. We will
discuss differences of opinion with one another immediately,
directly, and respectfully.
Meetings
We will hold meetings on the 1st and 3rd Wednesdays of each
month at 10:00 a.m.
We will rotate facilitators for each meeting. The facilitator will
ensure agenda items are covered with the input of all team
members.
The facilitator should create the agenda. By the Monday
preceding each meeting, the facilitator should make a call for
agenda items. The facilitator should distribute the final agenda
as a blog post by Tuesday at noon on the day before each
meeting.
We will rotate note-takers for each meeting.
The note-taker should post minutes to the team blog by the end
of the day on Tuesday.
The note-taker will create calendar entries for all action items.
Decision Making
We aim for consensus. If we do not achieve consensus,
decisions will be based on a majority vote of the general
manager, the director of marketing, and the director of
conventions.
25. Action Items: Develop and conduct survey that identifies price
points at which conference guests are willing to purchase
Internet service. Responsibility: Barbara and Jeff; Completion
time: December 15. Develop price sensitivity estimates and
related revenue impacts. Responsibility: Barbara; Completion
Time: December 15.
Agenda Item 2: Improving Customer Satisfaction
Discussion: Jeff presented customer satisfaction ratings of
Prestigio and three local competitors. The group agreed that our
customer satisfaction ratings have improved, particularly in
relation to competitors. We are most concerned about the areas
of cleanliness, business center, and meeting rooms.
Action Items: Develop plans to improve the equipment and
furnishings of the business center. Responsibility: Andrea;
Completion Date: December 15. Develop plans for improving
cleanliness and meeting rooms. Responsibility: Nancy, Andrea;
Completion date: January 15.
Agenda Item 3: Enterprise Social Software
Discussion: Andrea encouraged the group to log on to the new
enterprise social platform throughout the day, share documents,
use wikis, and stay aware of progress on shared projects.
Action Item: Use a wiki to collaborate on a joint project with
another member of the marketing team. Responsibility: All
members of marketing team; Completion Time: December 15.
Agenda Item 4: New Promotions
Discussion: Nancy introduced her plans for Valentine’s
promotions, including a price special and advertising campaign
designed to cater to local-area couples.
Action Item: Negotiate TV and print ad campaign details with
ad agency. Responsibility: Nancy, Kip; Completion Time:
December 1.
The participants are listed at the bottom of the meeting minutes:
Andrea Garcia, Nancy Jeffreys, Barbara Brookshire, Kip
Yamada (note-taker), Jeff Anderton.
Return to slide