epherites II
:horis
Kmt.
c Dynasty XXX: Ca. 378—341 B.C.E.
itive Kemetic Dynasty
:ctanebo I
capital at Tjebnutjer (Sebennytos).
Os
er of Macedon defeats the Persian Army at ti
wasion and occupation of Kmt under Alexa
XX)I: 323—30 B.C.I.
Ic Dy’ asty
I (S4r)
ia beqomes the Kemetic administrative capit:
(Famius African Scholar-Priest) writes a Hist
he di.’ides the Kemetic royal families into d
11 (Phladelphus) opens ports at Arsinoe, My
‘ian Tvuseum and Library founded.
nes (Celebrated African Scholar and the First
y charts the earth’s circjmference and writes
III (Euergetes)
[V (Phulopator)
tta Stone (A bilingual
V (Epiphanes)
VI (Philometor)
VII (Neos Philopator)
Viii (Euergetes II)
LX (Soter II)
(Alexander I)
U (Alexander II)
‘set and Na-nefer-ka-ptah and Khaemwaset a
(11 (Neos Dionysos)
VII commits suicide.
Caesar claims Kmt as a province of the Rom
e Battle of Issus.
der of Macedon in
ry ofEg)’pt (Aegvptia
‘nasties.
s Hormos and Bereni
Librarian at Alexandi
e Canon of the Kings
ctanebo II defeated by Persians under Ataxerxes Ill in 343 B.C.E.
Egypt Rev lied
22
a)
e.
a)
of
E.
d his son Si-Osiri wiit
rn Empire in 30 B.C.L
I.
decree of Ptolemy IV)Iinscribed in 196 B.C
OF GODS AND MEN:
EGYPT’S OLD KINGDOM
Wayne B. Chandler
And, I say unto you, that through the inspirational writings
of him who is my word unto the nations, shot! tlte land of
Khem be caused to give forth those secrets to mankind
which 1 shall cause to be hidden there . .
Osiris, The Book of Truth
In this chapter! hope to demonstrate that the origin of the civilization ofEgypt
(Khem) was black African, specifically Ethiopian or Anti. In order to understand
the progression of events which I hope wilt lead us to the revision of Egypt’s
history, I wilt give an overview of archaeology in Egypt. In orderfor the reader
to fully appreciate the achievements of Egyptian civilization, I will summarize
the notable accomplishments of the early Egyptians.
For centuries, countries too numerous to mention have competed for the right
to lay c)aim to Egypt, the birthplace of science, philosophy, art, and yes, the
very genesis of civilization as we know it. Those origins which have become
most popular over the centuries are India, Sumeria, Mesopotamia, and Arabia.
Ironically, with the advent of the archaeologist, the historical perspectives be
came even more confusing. For this pioneering school, trying to solve the ar
chaic mysteries of this culture became more a cause of frustration than a source
of adventure. Too often were archaeologists confronted with pieces of a puzzle
that did not seem to fit. In what finally became an historical frenzy to make sense
of data accumulated from temple, tomb, and terrain, archaeologists committed
the cardinal sin of sanding square pegs so they might fit into round holes.
Personal bias and racial prejudice prevented most of these scientists, many of
whom were great scholars, from seeing the obvious—that Egypt was born a ...
Cush-Meroe, Kemet-Egypt, Punt, Other Berberia, Azania & the Orientalization of the Roman Empire: Common Origin, Migrations, Ancestral Culture & Lands of Oromos, Sudanese & Other Cushites
First published on 24th March 2021 here:
https://megalommatis.wordpress.com/2021/03/24/cush-meroe-kemet-egypt-punt-other-berberia-azania-the-orientalization-of-the-roman-empire-common-origin-migrations-ancestral-culture-lands-of-oromos-sudanese-other-cushites/
Cush-Meroe, Kemet-Egypt, Punt, Other Berberia, Azania & the Orientalization of the Roman Empire: Common Origin, Migrations, Ancestral Culture & Lands of Oromos, Sudanese & Other Cushites
First published on 24th March 2021 here:
https://megalommatis.wordpress.com/2021/03/24/cush-meroe-kemet-egypt-punt-other-berberia-azania-the-orientalization-of-the-roman-empire-common-origin-migrations-ancestral-culture-lands-of-oromos-sudanese-other-cushites/
Historical Dictionary of Ancient Egypt was the first volume in the Historical Dictionaries of Ancient Civilizations and Historical Eras series, and now it is the first to be expanded and updated. This is quite fitting
because while the Egyptian civilization is not the oldest, it is certainly the grandest. It stands out for the vast area it covered, the amazing span of its history, and the exceptional works of art and architecture it left behind.
The Egyptian civilization is also one of the most topical of the ancient cultures, its achievements studied in classrooms around the globe, major events—or simulations thereof—conveyed in movies and operas,
and its vestiges still visited by countless millions of people every year, whether in present-day Egypt or dozens of museums. There are indeed few who do not recognize the pyramids and the Sphinx, Luxor and the Valley of the Kings, and Tutankhamun and Cleopatra.
This series of historical dictionaries, like the others, provides information on significant people, places, and events. In this second edition, both the old and new eras of achievement are presented. Entries provide information on ancient kings and queens, generals and workmen, as
well as the archaeologists who brought these important figures to light and the sites that display them. The book also covers such broader subjects as art, language, and religion and aspects of architecture and historical periods. The volume is supported by a chronology of key events, an introduction that places the significant happenings in context, and appendixes containing a dynastic list and museums with Egyptian collections.
The extensive bibliography, carefully structured by subject,
leads the reader to additional authoritative sources. While this second edition resembles the first, it has been substantially expanded with many new entries and updated with the latest research.
Without the Nile, the rise of Egypt as one of the oldest civilization would not be possible. Travellers to Egypt would be surprise to find the desert is never very far from the Nile. The predictable cycle of flooding of the Nile was a blessing, a major factor to enable civilization to put down its roots in Egypt. This presentation can only give you a briefest of all introductions. It touches upon the deep rooted origin of the Egyptian civilization, it sketches all the important monuments and marks major turning points in their history for its 3000 years of existence. After centuries later, its people disappeared. It civilization forgotten. Though the ruins of their monument and in particular their writing, we began to rediscover their world again, their people, their culture, their religion and their history. We know a lot about their ancient Egypt, perhaps more than others civilization of the time, because they left us with a lot of records in writing. What we have found are fascinations, a human ascend in our long journey to civilization
Explore the Issue PapersYou will choose a topic from the Complet.docxelbanglis
Explore the Issue Papers
You will choose a topic from the Complete Marriage and Family Home Reference Guide to study more closely. In 4–6 pages, you will compare current knowledge with facts from research and then examine the chosen topic from both a psychological and a theological perspective.
1. Briefly provide your initial thoughts on the topic. This section will not require source material. The purpose is simply for you to identify what you know about this topic. You may discuss facts, a biblical perspective, the moral dilemma involved in the topic, or just your thoughts around the topic. This section must be 1 page.
2. Look at the research that has been done on the topic. This section must be well-organized with headings and subheadings and must include at least 4 empirical sources. This section must be 2–3 pages. You may consider, but are not confined to, the following prompts and questions:
· Check some of what you know against what research has to say. How could this topic affect a marriage or family?
· What are benefits and consequences of approaching this topic and working through it within the affected family unit?
3. Compare the psychological and theological perspectives of the topic. The point here is to compare what the research says about the topic to what the Bible says about the topic. Not all of the topics from "The Quick-Reference Guide to Marriage and Family Counseling" are directly mentioned in the Bible. However, you may use biblical principles and discuss similarities and discrepancies found between these 2 perspectives. This section must be 1–2 pages.
4. The conclusion of this paper must include a good summary of the information provided in the preceding 3 sections. You must also provide an idea for future study of the topic. What further information could be provided in relation to this topic? For example, what are some variables that play a part of depression in marriage? Is depression within marriage easier to work through if the depression is a result of a mood disorder or of circumstances outside of the marriage?
5. Correct current APA formatting must be implemented throughout this paper, including avoiding first person and using properly formatted citations and headings. A title page and references page must be included; however, an abstract will NOT be necessary for this assignment. Assignment instructions and the grading rubric must be carefully reviewed to ensure that all assignment criteria are met.
Reference
Dobson, J. (2000). Complete marriage and family home reference guide. Carol Stream, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. ISBN: 9780842352673.
OVERVIEW
Synthesize conceptual information pertinent to the research question; this is information that you extract from the articles selected for this review. Submit a draft literature review.
Note: Developing a research proposal requires specific steps that need to be executed in a sequence. The assessments in this course are presented in sequence ...
Experimental and Quasi-Experimental DesignsChapter 5.docxelbanglis
Experimental and Quasi-Experimental Designs
Chapter 5
*
Introduction
Experiments are best suited for explanation and evaluation research
Experiments involve:
Taking action
Observing the consequences of that action
Especially suited for hypothesis testing
Often occur in the field
The Classical Experiment Classical experiment: a specific way of structuring researchInvolves three major components:
Independent variable and dependent variable
Pretesting and posttesting
Experimental group and control group
Independent and Dependent Variables
The independent variable takes the form of a dichotomous stimulus that is either present or absent
It varies (i.e., is independent) in our experimental process
The dependent variable is the outcome, the effect we expect to see
Might be physical conditions, social behavior, attitudes, feelings, or beliefs
Pretesting and Posttesting
Subjects are initially measured in terms of the DV prior to association with the IV (pretested)
Then, they are exposed to the IV
Then, they are remeasured in terms of the DV (posttested)
Differences noted between the measurements on the DV are attributed to influence of IV
Experimental and Control Groups
Experimental group: exposed to whatever treatment, policy, initiative we are testing
Control group: very similar to experimental group, except that they are NOT exposed
Can involve more than one experimental or control group
If we see a difference, we want to make sure it is due to the IV, and not to a difference between the two groups
Placebo
We often don’t want people to know if they are receiving treatment or not
We expose our control group to a “dummy” independent variable just so we are treating everyone the same
Medical research: participants don’t know what they are taking
Ensures that changes in DV actually result from IV and are not psychologically based
Double-Blind Experiment
Experimenters may be more likely to “observe” improvements among those who received drug
In a double-blind experiment, neither the subjects nor the experimenters know which is the experimental group and which is the control group
Selecting Subjects
First, must decide on target population – the group to which the results of your experiment will apply
Second, must decide how to select particular members from that group for your experiment
Cardinal rule – ensure that experimental and control groups are as similar as possible
RandomizationRandomization: produces an experimental and control group that are statistically equivalentEssential feature of experimentsEliminates systematic bias
Experiments and Causal Inference
Experimental design ensures:
Cause precedes effect via taking posttest
Empirical correlation exists via comparing pretest to posttest
No spurious 3rd variable influencing correlation via posttest comparison between experimental and control groups, and via randomization
Example of Research Using an Experimental Design
Researchers at the University of Marylan ...
Explain the role of the community health nurse in partnership with.docxelbanglis
Explain the role of the community health nurse in partnership with community stakeholders for population health promotion. Explain why it is important to appraise community resources (nonprofit, spiritual/religious, etc.) as part of a community assessment and why these resources are important in population health promotion.
...
Explain how building partner capacity is the greatest challenge in.docxelbanglis
Explain how building partner capacity is the greatest challenge in Operation INHERENT RESOLVE (OIR) in Iraq with these points:
· Explain how the Department of Defense (DoD) can overcome that challenge through Security Cooperation.
· Explain how the DoD can overcome that challenge through Enhancing U.S. Military Logistics
Summation of how the DoD ought to consider how it could transition to teaching our partners to fish, rather than simply fishing for them.
· APA format.
· 1150 words.
· Six work citations
· must include:
· a Cover Page,
· Abstract,
· Body of the paper, and
· Endnotes
Last name_First_Course(ex AP5510)_Assignment_Title
Assignment Title
By
Name
Course Name
DD MMM YYYY
Instructor: (Instructor’s Name)
College
Distance Learning
JBSA
Effective, purposeful communication is essential in the military profession. Following these instructions will help you properly complete your writing assignment and will improve your chances for success.
This template exemplifies the format for essays. Each essay must include a properly formatted cover page (see above), double-spaced text, Times New Roman 12pt font, 1-inch margins, as well as full endnote-style citations for paraphrasing and quotations in accordance with the Author Guide, Section 5.5. Endnotes are not counted as part of your total word count. The, Appendix A provides examples of endnote formats. Do not include a bibliography in these short essay assignments; however, ensure your full endnotes contain all source information.
Use quotation marks when you quote directly from the work of other writers. This is a relatively short assignment, so use block quotations sparingly to allow your own original thoughts to shine through.
You may notice minor variations between your consolidated lesson readers, which require different endnote formats. Some bundle the readings into a single document with continuous pagination (see example endnote 1 at the end of this document).
Other lesson readers retain each author’s original pagination (see example note 2).
You should use the author’s original pagination wherever it is possible to do so. Remember, cite any material used from the instructional narrative portion of the consolidated lesson reading file with “as the author (see example endnote 3).
The midterm and final essay exams are academic papers; write each in a narrative style, not a bullet/point paper. Refer to the assignment rubric located in your Grade Center for grading criteria. If you have any questions, contact your course instructor.
Much like your next level of leadership, the program requires effective writing founded on critical thinking and communication skills. Each essay you write as you progress toward graduation provides an opportunity for you to hone these abilities. Additionally, these assignments comprise a large portion of your final grade in each course. Therefore, successful course completion is contingent on your writing performance. The most ...
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Historical Dictionary of Ancient Egypt was the first volume in the Historical Dictionaries of Ancient Civilizations and Historical Eras series, and now it is the first to be expanded and updated. This is quite fitting
because while the Egyptian civilization is not the oldest, it is certainly the grandest. It stands out for the vast area it covered, the amazing span of its history, and the exceptional works of art and architecture it left behind.
The Egyptian civilization is also one of the most topical of the ancient cultures, its achievements studied in classrooms around the globe, major events—or simulations thereof—conveyed in movies and operas,
and its vestiges still visited by countless millions of people every year, whether in present-day Egypt or dozens of museums. There are indeed few who do not recognize the pyramids and the Sphinx, Luxor and the Valley of the Kings, and Tutankhamun and Cleopatra.
This series of historical dictionaries, like the others, provides information on significant people, places, and events. In this second edition, both the old and new eras of achievement are presented. Entries provide information on ancient kings and queens, generals and workmen, as
well as the archaeologists who brought these important figures to light and the sites that display them. The book also covers such broader subjects as art, language, and religion and aspects of architecture and historical periods. The volume is supported by a chronology of key events, an introduction that places the significant happenings in context, and appendixes containing a dynastic list and museums with Egyptian collections.
The extensive bibliography, carefully structured by subject,
leads the reader to additional authoritative sources. While this second edition resembles the first, it has been substantially expanded with many new entries and updated with the latest research.
Without the Nile, the rise of Egypt as one of the oldest civilization would not be possible. Travellers to Egypt would be surprise to find the desert is never very far from the Nile. The predictable cycle of flooding of the Nile was a blessing, a major factor to enable civilization to put down its roots in Egypt. This presentation can only give you a briefest of all introductions. It touches upon the deep rooted origin of the Egyptian civilization, it sketches all the important monuments and marks major turning points in their history for its 3000 years of existence. After centuries later, its people disappeared. It civilization forgotten. Though the ruins of their monument and in particular their writing, we began to rediscover their world again, their people, their culture, their religion and their history. We know a lot about their ancient Egypt, perhaps more than others civilization of the time, because they left us with a lot of records in writing. What we have found are fascinations, a human ascend in our long journey to civilization
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Explore the Issue PapersYou will choose a topic from the Complet.docxelbanglis
Explore the Issue Papers
You will choose a topic from the Complete Marriage and Family Home Reference Guide to study more closely. In 4–6 pages, you will compare current knowledge with facts from research and then examine the chosen topic from both a psychological and a theological perspective.
1. Briefly provide your initial thoughts on the topic. This section will not require source material. The purpose is simply for you to identify what you know about this topic. You may discuss facts, a biblical perspective, the moral dilemma involved in the topic, or just your thoughts around the topic. This section must be 1 page.
2. Look at the research that has been done on the topic. This section must be well-organized with headings and subheadings and must include at least 4 empirical sources. This section must be 2–3 pages. You may consider, but are not confined to, the following prompts and questions:
· Check some of what you know against what research has to say. How could this topic affect a marriage or family?
· What are benefits and consequences of approaching this topic and working through it within the affected family unit?
3. Compare the psychological and theological perspectives of the topic. The point here is to compare what the research says about the topic to what the Bible says about the topic. Not all of the topics from "The Quick-Reference Guide to Marriage and Family Counseling" are directly mentioned in the Bible. However, you may use biblical principles and discuss similarities and discrepancies found between these 2 perspectives. This section must be 1–2 pages.
4. The conclusion of this paper must include a good summary of the information provided in the preceding 3 sections. You must also provide an idea for future study of the topic. What further information could be provided in relation to this topic? For example, what are some variables that play a part of depression in marriage? Is depression within marriage easier to work through if the depression is a result of a mood disorder or of circumstances outside of the marriage?
5. Correct current APA formatting must be implemented throughout this paper, including avoiding first person and using properly formatted citations and headings. A title page and references page must be included; however, an abstract will NOT be necessary for this assignment. Assignment instructions and the grading rubric must be carefully reviewed to ensure that all assignment criteria are met.
Reference
Dobson, J. (2000). Complete marriage and family home reference guide. Carol Stream, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. ISBN: 9780842352673.
OVERVIEW
Synthesize conceptual information pertinent to the research question; this is information that you extract from the articles selected for this review. Submit a draft literature review.
Note: Developing a research proposal requires specific steps that need to be executed in a sequence. The assessments in this course are presented in sequence ...
Experimental and Quasi-Experimental DesignsChapter 5.docxelbanglis
Experimental and Quasi-Experimental Designs
Chapter 5
*
Introduction
Experiments are best suited for explanation and evaluation research
Experiments involve:
Taking action
Observing the consequences of that action
Especially suited for hypothesis testing
Often occur in the field
The Classical Experiment Classical experiment: a specific way of structuring researchInvolves three major components:
Independent variable and dependent variable
Pretesting and posttesting
Experimental group and control group
Independent and Dependent Variables
The independent variable takes the form of a dichotomous stimulus that is either present or absent
It varies (i.e., is independent) in our experimental process
The dependent variable is the outcome, the effect we expect to see
Might be physical conditions, social behavior, attitudes, feelings, or beliefs
Pretesting and Posttesting
Subjects are initially measured in terms of the DV prior to association with the IV (pretested)
Then, they are exposed to the IV
Then, they are remeasured in terms of the DV (posttested)
Differences noted between the measurements on the DV are attributed to influence of IV
Experimental and Control Groups
Experimental group: exposed to whatever treatment, policy, initiative we are testing
Control group: very similar to experimental group, except that they are NOT exposed
Can involve more than one experimental or control group
If we see a difference, we want to make sure it is due to the IV, and not to a difference between the two groups
Placebo
We often don’t want people to know if they are receiving treatment or not
We expose our control group to a “dummy” independent variable just so we are treating everyone the same
Medical research: participants don’t know what they are taking
Ensures that changes in DV actually result from IV and are not psychologically based
Double-Blind Experiment
Experimenters may be more likely to “observe” improvements among those who received drug
In a double-blind experiment, neither the subjects nor the experimenters know which is the experimental group and which is the control group
Selecting Subjects
First, must decide on target population – the group to which the results of your experiment will apply
Second, must decide how to select particular members from that group for your experiment
Cardinal rule – ensure that experimental and control groups are as similar as possible
RandomizationRandomization: produces an experimental and control group that are statistically equivalentEssential feature of experimentsEliminates systematic bias
Experiments and Causal Inference
Experimental design ensures:
Cause precedes effect via taking posttest
Empirical correlation exists via comparing pretest to posttest
No spurious 3rd variable influencing correlation via posttest comparison between experimental and control groups, and via randomization
Example of Research Using an Experimental Design
Researchers at the University of Marylan ...
Explain the role of the community health nurse in partnership with.docxelbanglis
Explain the role of the community health nurse in partnership with community stakeholders for population health promotion. Explain why it is important to appraise community resources (nonprofit, spiritual/religious, etc.) as part of a community assessment and why these resources are important in population health promotion.
...
Explain how building partner capacity is the greatest challenge in.docxelbanglis
Explain how building partner capacity is the greatest challenge in Operation INHERENT RESOLVE (OIR) in Iraq with these points:
· Explain how the Department of Defense (DoD) can overcome that challenge through Security Cooperation.
· Explain how the DoD can overcome that challenge through Enhancing U.S. Military Logistics
Summation of how the DoD ought to consider how it could transition to teaching our partners to fish, rather than simply fishing for them.
· APA format.
· 1150 words.
· Six work citations
· must include:
· a Cover Page,
· Abstract,
· Body of the paper, and
· Endnotes
Last name_First_Course(ex AP5510)_Assignment_Title
Assignment Title
By
Name
Course Name
DD MMM YYYY
Instructor: (Instructor’s Name)
College
Distance Learning
JBSA
Effective, purposeful communication is essential in the military profession. Following these instructions will help you properly complete your writing assignment and will improve your chances for success.
This template exemplifies the format for essays. Each essay must include a properly formatted cover page (see above), double-spaced text, Times New Roman 12pt font, 1-inch margins, as well as full endnote-style citations for paraphrasing and quotations in accordance with the Author Guide, Section 5.5. Endnotes are not counted as part of your total word count. The, Appendix A provides examples of endnote formats. Do not include a bibliography in these short essay assignments; however, ensure your full endnotes contain all source information.
Use quotation marks when you quote directly from the work of other writers. This is a relatively short assignment, so use block quotations sparingly to allow your own original thoughts to shine through.
You may notice minor variations between your consolidated lesson readers, which require different endnote formats. Some bundle the readings into a single document with continuous pagination (see example endnote 1 at the end of this document).
Other lesson readers retain each author’s original pagination (see example note 2).
You should use the author’s original pagination wherever it is possible to do so. Remember, cite any material used from the instructional narrative portion of the consolidated lesson reading file with “as the author (see example endnote 3).
The midterm and final essay exams are academic papers; write each in a narrative style, not a bullet/point paper. Refer to the assignment rubric located in your Grade Center for grading criteria. If you have any questions, contact your course instructor.
Much like your next level of leadership, the program requires effective writing founded on critical thinking and communication skills. Each essay you write as you progress toward graduation provides an opportunity for you to hone these abilities. Additionally, these assignments comprise a large portion of your final grade in each course. Therefore, successful course completion is contingent on your writing performance. The most ...
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For this report, the professional interviewed is a computer Engineer/ Web Developer who works for Omnivision Technologies Inc., a corporation that designs and develops advanced digital technologies to use in mobile phones, notebooks, security cameras etc. across the United States. Mr. Nagarik Sharma is the technical manager of the organization and works at its headquarter in Santa Clara, California, and has been working in this position for the last five years. He provided very useful information about the computer science profession and highlighted a number of challenges common in the career. Further, he provided some recommendations on how the challenges can be dealt with. From the information provided by the him, it is clear that the computer science profession is full of challenges particularly regarding the fast changing technology. The interview revealed several important topics which require further research.
Methodology
The interview was conducted on a skype video call and lasted for slightly above 30 minutes. Before the interview, the interviewee was made clear to understand that the questions which were to be asked during the interview regards the profession, its concerns and challenges. The phone call was recorded during the entire conversation and the information later transcribed and key points extracted. This report is based only on important points and not everything that the interviewee said.
Essential Background
Computer science is a field of technology that deals with studying processes that interact with data and which can be depicted as data in program form. An expert in computer science has knowledge in computation theory as well as the practice of software systems design. Computer scientists are also popularly known as computer and information scientists and can work in a range of environments. For instance, these professionals work in private software publishers, government agencies, academic institutions, and engineering firms (Page & Smart, 2013). Wherever they work, computer scientists’ general roles include solving computing problems as well as developing new products.
The professional interviewed for this report has in-depth knowledge in computer systems and management. Through his leadership skill, he organizes the successful delivery of effective and efficient technical solutions within the company. He is responsible for planning, designing, developing, production, and testing communication systems.
He is also responsible for supervising:
· Technical and Operations teams
· Landline and Cellular network
· IT Infrastructure
· Service platforms
He works with the chief technical officer (who is an expert in telecommunications engineering) to design and develop software that facilitates landline and cellular networks.
Challenges
· Education: According to the interviewee, the challenges in the field of computer science starts right from education and training. He says that ...
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Expansion and Isolationism in Eurasia
How did approaches to cultural interaction shape empires in Eurasia?
Introduction
In 1279, under the leadership of Kublai Khan, the Mongols ousted the Song dynasty
and completed their conquest of China. As they
took control, they established the Yuan dynasty,
with Kublai Khan serving as emperor. However,
Mongol rule over China was relatively short lived.
Within 100 years, the Yuan dynasty would be
forced out by Chinese rebels.
Under Mongol rule, the Chinese became
increasingly angered by policies that favored
Mongols and foreigners. This anger and resentment
eventually resulted in unrest. Around 1350, small
states in China began to emerge to fight the
Mongols. Chinese leaders turned to military force to
advance their interests and establish regional
power. Some leaders were members of the upper class, and others were religious
leaders or bandits supported by peasants. By the middle of the 1350s, these Chinese
powers were united in their campaign to get rid of Mongol rule.
The years of ongoing warfare spurred military innovation among the Chinese.
Although the Mongols had access to gunpowder weapons, they did not develop new
technologies. In contrast, the first large cannons in China were manufactured by the
Chinese rebels. While the term “Gunpowder Empire” is often associated with the
Ottoman Empire, the Safavid Empire, and the Mughal Empire, the Chinese
advancements in gunpowder weaponry has led some historians to regard Ming China
as the world’s first gunpowder empire.
1
Expansion and Isolationism in Eurasia
How did approaches to cultural interaction shape empires in Eurasia?
In this lesson, you will learn about three countries in Eurasia that used gunpowder
to expand and maintain their control: China, Japan, and Russia. You will consider the
rise and fall of the Ming and Qing dynasties in China. You will examine the unification of
Japan under the Tokugawa. Finally, you will explore the growth of the Russian Empire
during the Romanov dynasty.
Section 1. China Under the Ming and Qing
Between the 14th and the early 20th centuries,
two dynasties governed China: the Ming and the Qing.
Both dynasties took power during times of upheaval.
To restore order, they established strong, centralized
rule and revived traditional Chinese values, including
Confucian ideals.
The Ming Revival By the mid-1300s, China was in
turmoil. The Mongols’ hold on power had became
unstable. Disease and natural disasters had weakened
the Mongol grip. Additionally, feuds broke out within the government, leaving the
countryside unprotected against bandits and rebels.
As life became more dangerous and difficult, Chinese peasants grew increasingly
frustrated with the incompetence of their rulers. Led by Zhu Yuanzhang, a peasant
uprising successfully invaded the city of Nanjing. In 1368, aided by gunpowder
weapons, Zhu and his army capt ...
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Paper Sections
Title
Introduction
Method
Tables and figures (if applicable)
Results
Tables and figures (if applicable)
Discussion
References
Presentation
Simplify, limit number of words, use color and formatting to highlight important points. Check spelling.
Include slides with the following
Title
Introduction
Method
Results
Tables and figures
Discussion
References (provide as a separate slide, but there is no need to discuss or ensure visibility of individual items on this slide.)
...
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Published: June 30, 2010
As schools break for summer, some families -- like mine -- are still planning their vacations. So I
took a look at two prominent travel sites, Expedia and Priceline, to see which one's media strategy
is likely to attract more trip planners.
Their media plans are especially important as the travel industry picks up after a tough 2009.
Demand for flights and hotels are rebounding and so, too, are airfares and room rates. With
slimmer margins on airline tickets, hotels have very much become the major battleground for
Expedia and Priceline and this is reflected in the focus of their advertising. Online Travel Agencies
(OTA's) accounted for 34.7% of all U.S. hotel bookings in the first quarter of 2010, up from 27.8% in
2009, Priceline CMO Brett Keller said in a recent speech.
Creative executions
Expedia launched a new branding campaign for 2010. Its tagline, "Where you book matters,"
accompanied a new logo incorporated into its creative messaging. The campaign, which targets
frequent leisure travelers, launched Dec. 26 with commercials featuring a visual metaphor of
building blocks as a way to demonstrate how consumers interact with Expedia. The first spot starts
with upbeat soft-rock music narrated by an unseen woman dictating her specifications for the
perfect "girls' weekend." She talks about having multiple hotel options and the ability to compare
dates for the best savings. Expedia's signature "dot coooom" jingle ends the spot. A spot with a
man's voice and trip goals was launched in February.
http://adage.com/
Priceline has built its position in the market on the opportunity for customers to name their own
price, brought to life through some hilarious spots fronted by pitchman William Shatner. This year,
Shatner introduced his new sidekick "Big Deal," a 520 lb 6'5" character who helps persuade hotels
to take a deal. In February, the Big Deal ads were joined by new creative that featured the
Negotiator's "Evil Twin" (played, of course, by Shatner). Priceline takes a karate chop at
Expedia.com (and Hotels.com), claiming that Priceline can get prices 50% lower.
The strategies of the two companies differed noticeably. Expedia.com attracted 16.7 million unique
visitors in May, 59% more than the 10.5 million who visited Priceline.com, according to ComScore.
And Expedia media seems to reflect this, promoting the site as the generic travel brand for a broad
audience and highlighting its full range of services and travel destinations. Priceline is more single-
mindedly focused on price, and its media appears to target lower down the purchase funnel with an
emphasis on converting transactions.
RATINGS
Outstanding
Highly effective
Good
Disappointing
A disaster
Television strategy
Expedia. ...
Experiments with duckweed–moth systems suggest thatglobal wa.docxelbanglis
Experiments with duckweed–moth systems suggest that
global warming may reduce rather than promote
herbivory
TJISSE VAN DER HEIDE, RUDI M. M. ROIJACKERS, EDWIN T. H. M. PEETERS AND
EGBERT H. VAN NES
Department of Environmental Sciences, Aquatic Ecology and Water Quality Management group, Wageningen University,
Wageningen, The Netherlands
SUMMARY
1. Wilf & Labandeira (1999) suggested that increased temperatures because of global
warming will cause an increase in herbivory by insects. This conclusion was based on the
supposed effect of temperature on herbivores but did not consider an effect of temperature
on plant growth.
2. We studied the effect of temperature on grazing pressure by the small China-mark moth
(Cataclysta lemnata L.) on Lemna minor L. in laboratory experiments.
3. Between temperatures of 15 and 24 �C we found a sigmoidal increase in C. lemnata
grazing rates, and an approximately linear increase in L. minor growth rates. Therefore, an
increase in temperature did not always result in higher grazing pressure by this insect as
the regrowth of Lemna changes also.
4. At temperatures below 18.7 �C, Lemna benefited more than Cataclysta from an increase in
temperature, causing a decrease in grazing pressure.
5. In the context of global warming, we conclude that rising temperatures will not
necessarily increase grazing pressure by herbivorous insects.
Keywords: Cataclysta, grazing, herbivory, Lemna, temperature
Introduction
Duckweeds (Lemnaceae) are often abundant in dit-
ches and ponds (Landolt, 1986). Especially when
nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations in the water
column are high, the surface area can become covered
with dense floating mats of duckweed (Lüönd, 1980,
1983; Portielje & Roijackers, 1995). These mats have
large impacts on freshwater ecosystems, restricting
oxygen supply (Pokorny & Rejmánková, 1983), light
availability of algae and submerged macrophytes
(Wolek, 1974) and temperature fluxes (Dale &
Gillespie, 1976; Landolt, 1986; Goldsborough, 1993).
These changed conditions often have a negative effect
on the biodiversity of the ecosystem (Janse & van
Puijenbroek, 1998). Other free-floating plants such as
red water fern (Azolla filiculoides), water hyacinth
(Eichhornia crassipes) and water lettuce (Pistia stratiotes)
often cause serious problems in tropical and sub-
tropical regions (Mehra et al., 1999; Hill, 2003).
Various species of herbivorous insects consume
free-floating macrophytes. Several species of weevils
(Coleoptera: Curculionidae) are able to consume large
amounts of red water fern, water hyacinth and water
lettuce (Cilliers, 1991; Hill & Cilliers, 1999; Aguilar
et al., 2003), while the larvae of the semi-aquatic Small
China-mark moth (Cataclysta lemnata) are capable of
removing large parts of floating cover of Lemnaceae
covers (Wesenberg-Lund, 1943). Duckweed is not
only used as food source, but also as building material
Correspondence: Rudi M. M. Roijacker ...
EXP4304.521F19: Motivation 1
EXP4304.521F19: Motivation: Further Study Summaries (FSS); Version 1; Last modified August 22, 2019
Overview: Reeve’s textbook provides “readings for further study” at the end of most chapters. Choose readings of
interest throughout the course; then, for five select readings, compose a 1-3 page “further study summary” (FSS). FSS
instructions are posted under “Files” on CANVAS.
Deadline: Each FSS is worth up to 25 points. Final drafts of FSS #1-5 due by Monday, December 9.
Relation of FSS to DRP: Students may choose any “readings for further study” from the textbook for their FSS. Some
students find it helpful to select readings that are relevant to the directed research proposal (DRP; details below).
Questions and Feedback: Please email with any requests for developmental feedback, requests for help with the USF
library, and/or questions about academic honesty. Working drafts of FSS #1-5 may be submitted in advance of the
deadline for developmental feedback and/or for early-grading; working drafts of FSSs are to be emailed to
[email protected] with Request for Feedback in Subject Line.
Instructions/Rubric:
• Please number each summary (FSS #1, #2, #3, #4, and #5) – thank you!
• Please number your responses so that answers directly correspond to the questions provided below
• Per #7 below, FSS must follow the “APA citation basics” from Paiz et al. (2013) – see pages 2-3
• Review (i.e., non-empirical) articles are acceptable for summaries; please adjust instructions as needed
• Sample FSS available – see pages 4-7
1. Article: What is the article? (+2)
a) Title of article
b) Name of journal
c) Name of author(s)
2. Source: What is the source of the article? (+2) This will either be a chapter and page from the textbook (e.g.,
Grand Theories Era of Ch. 2, p. 45) or it will be chapter and slide from my lecture (e.g., Self-Determination
Theory, Ch. 5, slide 2)
3. Summary: What is the study about? (See a-d below) (+4)
a) What are the main research questions?
b) What is the design of the study?
c) What are its results?
d) Were there any ethical concerns?
4. Analysis of Theory and Results: Is the study well-done? (+3) How well does the method test its hypotheses? Is
there something that could be done in the future to improve the study?
5. Motivation and Emotion: What does the study have to do with motivation and emotion? (+3) Why do you
think this reading was identified as worthy of further investigation?
6. Value Added: What are TWO things that you learned from the further reading, relative to the textbook
chapter? (+8) What is the value of the article “above and beyond the chapter” if any?
7. In-text Citations and Reference Page: Follow APA citation-basics (+2) (Paiz et al., 2013;
https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/560/02/ -- see next two pages) (+3)
mailto:[email protected]
https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/560/ ...
Exercise Package 2 Systems and its properties (Tip Alwa.docxelbanglis
Exercise Package 2:
Systems and its properties: (Tip: Always use the components symbols, C, RS, KT, etc., in the derivation of
transfer function and only plug in component values at the last step. Show your steps and tell me a complete
story.)
1) Consider a 100mH inductor with v-i relationship in passive device labeling convention:
a. Find transfer function H(s) with current flowing through the inductor as the input, i(t),
and voltage across the inductor as the output, v(t), (in the unit of Ohms).
b. Find the same input-output relationship in the expression of differential equation.
c. Find v1(t) with input i1(t)=2sin(100t) (mA) and v2(t) with input i2(t)=0.4cos(500t) (mA)
respectively.
d. Show time invariant such that v(t)=v1(t−τ) as i(t)=i1(t−τ)=2sin(100t−0.9) (mA).
e. Show linearity using superposition such that v(t)=v1(t)+v2(t) as i(t)=i1(t)+i2(t).
2) Given following, a practical integrator, circuit, where Rf=100KΩ, R1=9.1KΩ, RS=100Ω, C=0.1µF,
and the OpAmp is an ideal operational amplifier:
a. Find the transfer function in between the output VO(t) and input VS(t), VO(t)=H(s){VS(t)}.
b. Find the same input-output relationship in the expression of differential equation.
c. Find VO1(t) (sinusoidal steady state response) with input VS1(t)=0.2sin(100t) (V) and VO2(t)
with input VS2(t)=0.4cos(5000t) (V) respectively.
d. Show time invariant such that VO(t)= VO1(t−τ) as VS(t)= VS1(t−τ)=0.2sin(100t−0.9) (V).
e. Show linearity using superposition such that VO(t)= VO1(t)+VO2(t) with VS(t)=VS1(t)+ VS2(t).
3) Here is a typical coupling network in electronics where coupling capacitor, selected, C=0.022µF,
input impedance, Zi=5.7KΩ, and input source resistor, RS=520Ω:
a. Find the transfer function, H(s), Vout(t)=H(s){Vin(t)}.
b. Find the same input-output relationship in the expression of differential equation.
c. Find VOut(t) (sinusoidal steady state response) with input Vin1(t)=2sin(50t+0.4) (V) and
Vin2(t) with input Vin2(t)=4cos(10000t) (V) respectively.
4) Here is a typical bypass network in electronics where bypass capacitor, selected, C=10µF, and
the equivalent (Thevenin) resistor of circuit to be bypassed, Req=376Ω:
Vcc+
Vcc-
Vo
Vs
Rf
R1Rs
C
Vin Vout
CRs
Zi
a. Find the transfer function, H(s), VS(t)=H(s){IS(t)} (note: the unit is ohm).
b. Find the same input-output relationship in the expression of differential equation.
c. Find VS1(t) (sinusoidal steady state response) with input Is1(t)=0.2cos(10t+0.3) (A) and
VS2(t) with input IS2(t)=0.5cos(10000t) (A) respectively.
5) The following circuit is an active filter (2nd order Butterworth low-pass filter), with the selected
values: R=10KΩ, C=8200pF, Rf=68KΩ, and R1=120KΩ.
a. Derive the transfer function, H(s), Vout(t)=H(s){Vin(t)}. (Tip: the selected R is much greater
than RS such that RS can be ignored in the derivation. Label extraordinary nodes and use
node voltage method. OpAmp is considered ideal.)
b. Show that th ...
Exercises for Chapter 8 Exercises III Reflective ListeningRef.docxelbanglis
Exercises for Chapter 8
Exercises III: Reflective Listening
Reflective Listening I
Instructions: People communicate words and ideas, and sometimes it seems appropriate to respond to the content of what someone has just said. Behind the words, however, lie the feelings. Often it is most helpful to respond to the feelings.
Following are statements made by people with problems. For each statement, first identify the feeling; write down the word you think best describes how the person might be feeling. Next, write a brief empathic response—a short sentence that includes the feeling. Refer to the sample openers provided in Chapter 7 under the heading “Useful Responses.”
1. “When I was in court, the defense attorney really pounded me. You know, like he thought I was lying or didn’t believe me or thought I was exaggerating.”
FEELING:
EMPATHIC RESPONSE:
2. “Those dirty, lousy creeps! Everything was fine in my life, and they really, really ruined everything! I don’t care if I go on or not. Why live if someone can just take everything away from you in one night?”
FEELING:
EMPATHIC RESPONSE:
3. “I know you said this is temporary housing and all, but I never had a place like this place. I can’t stand to think I have to move again sometime, and God knows where I’ll go.”
FEELING:
EMPATHIC RESPONSE:
4. “This whole setup is the pits. He gets to stay in the house after beating me half to death, and I have to go to this cramped little room. Does that make sense?”
FEELING:
EMPATHIC RESPONSE:
Instructions Part II: Now go back and respond to the content in each of these vignettes.
Reflective Listening II
Instructions: People communicate words and ideas, and sometimes it seems appropriate to respond to the content of what someone has just said. Behind the words, however, lie the feelings. Often it is most helpful to respond to the feelings.
Following are statements made by people with problems. For each statement, first identify the feeling; write down the word you think best describes how the person might be feeling. Next, write a brief empathic response—a short sentence that includes the feeling. Refer to the sample openers provided in Chapter 7 under the heading “Useful Responses.”
1. “Sometimes it kind of makes me sick to think of all the stuff I did when I was drinking. I’d like to go and take it all back, but how do you ever do that?”
FEELING:
EMPATHIC RESPONSE:
2. “I just can’t go out in the car. All I hear is the screech of tires and the awful thud and scrape of metal. I thought I was dying. I can see it all before me as if it was yesterday.”
FEELING:
EMPATHIC RESPONSE:
3. “We have a neighborhood problem here! Yes we do! A real big idiot lives in that house. A real nut! He trimmed my own yard with a string trimmer and threw stones all over my car. Ruined the paint!”
FEELING:
EMPATHIC RESPONSE:
4. “I never meant to get pregnant. I know everyone says that, but I didn’t! I can’t think straight. What about my job and school and all ...
Exercise 9-08On July 1, 2019, Sheridan Company purchased new equ.docxelbanglis
Exercise 9-08
On July 1, 2019, Sheridan Company purchased new equipment for $80,000. Its estimated useful life was 8 years with a $12,000 salvage value. On December 31, 2022, the company estimated that the equipment’s remaining useful life was 10 years, with a revised salvage value of $5,000.
Prepare the journal entry to record depreciation on December 31, 2019. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually. If no entry is required, select "No Entry" for the account titles and enter 0 for the amounts.)
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
enter an account title
enter a debit amount
enter a credit amount
enter an account title
enter a debit amount
enter a credit amount
Prepare the journal entry to record depreciation on December 31, 2020. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually. If no entry is required, select "No Entry" for the account titles and enter 0 for the amounts.)
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
enter an account title
enter a debit amount
enter a credit amount
enter an account title
enter a debit amount
enter a credit amount
Compute the revised annual depreciation on December 31, 2022.
Revised annual depreciation
$
Prepare the journal entry to record depreciation on December 31, 2022. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually. If no entry is required, select "No Entry" for the account titles and enter 0 for the amounts.)
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
enter an account title
enter a debit amount
enter a credit amount
enter an account title
enter a debit amount
enter a credit amount
Compute the balance in Accumulated Depreciation—Equipment for this equipment after depreciation expense has been recorded on December 31, 2022.
Accumulated Depreciation—Equipment
$
Problem 9-03A
Ivanhoe Company had the following assets on January 1, 2022.
Item
Cost
Purchase Date
Useful Life
(in years)
Salvage Value
Machinery
$73,000
Jan. 1, 2012
10
$ 0
Forklift
32,000
Jan. 1, 2019
5
0
Truck
38,400
Jan. 1, 2017
8
3,000
During 2022, each of the assets was removed from service. The machinery was retired on January 1. The forklift was sold on June 30 for $12,200. The truck was discarded on December 31.
Journalize all entries required on the above dates, including entries to update depreciation, where applicable, on disposed assets. The company uses straight-line depreciation. All depreciation was up to date as of December 31, 2021. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when the amount is entered. Do not indent manually. If no entry is required, select "No Entry" for the account titles and enter 0 for the amounts.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
choose a transaction date
enter an account title
enter a debit amount
enter a credit amount
enter an ac ...
ExemplaryVery GoodProficientOpportunity for ImprovementU.docxelbanglis
Exemplary
Very Good
Proficient
Opportunity for Improvement
Unacceptable
Element 1a: Content of Executive Summary: Responding to the Questions
6.5 (5%)
Student presents a thorough and complete Executive Summary with rich, articulate, and well-reasoned responses to all of the questions posed in the assignment and eloquently embeds them into a cohesive and compelling Executive Summary, with direct and relevant references to the Course and Program Outcomes.
6.04 (4.65%)
Student presents an Executive Summary with well-reasoned responses to all of the questions posed in the assignment and embeds them into an Executive Summary with references to the Course and Program Outcomes.
5.53 (4.25%)
Student presents an Executive Summary of the course that addresses the questions posed in the assignment and makes some connections to the Course and Program Outcomes. Some examples and resources support thinking.
4.88 (3.75%)
Student provides cursory coverage of some or all the questions posed as part of the requirements for the Executive Summary or does not address all of the questions, although he/she does provide a summary of one or two.
0 (0%)
Not submitted or little to no evidence of addressing the criterion.
Element 1b: Content of Executive Summary: Impact of Lessons Learned In Course
6.5 (5%)
Student provides a comprehensive summary of his/her main lessons from the course and how those support his/her achievement of at least two course outcomes providing a rich assessment of the main ideas or conclusions he/she has taken from the experience in the course including assessing how these will affect his/her practices now and in the future.
6.04 (4.65%)
Student provides a summary of his/her main lessons from the course and how those support his/her achievement of one or two course outcomes providing an assessment of the main ideas or conclusions he/she has taken from the experience in the course including assessing how these will affect his/her practices now and in the future.
5.53 (4.25%)
Student provides a description of the main lessons of the course and how those relate to his/her achievement of course and program outcomes as well as how these will affect his/her practices now and in the future.
4.88 (3.75%)
Student summarizes a few main points from the classroom, but does not create an Executive Summary aligned with the expectations as outlined in the document provided in the classroom.
0 (0%)
Not submitted or little to no evidence of addressing the criterion.
Element 1c: Format of Executive Summary: Beginning
6.5 (5%)
Student begins the Executive Summary with a compelling statement of its purpose and presents a succinct and cohesive summary that focuses on the main outcomes he/she ascertained from the course and his/her experience in engaging in the assignments and discussions. Relevant examples and resources support thinking.
6.04 (4.65%)
Student begins the Executive Summary with a statement of its purpose and presents a succinct summary that focuses on ...
Exercise Question #1 Highlight your table in Excel. Copy the ta.docxelbanglis
Exercise Question #1
Highlight your table in Excel. Copy the table. In Word, place cursor where you want to Paste the Table. Right click and under Paste Options click Picture. This will paste the Table into your Word document as a Picture.
Discussion: Your Discussion should be double spaced and fill the rest of the page.
Exercise Question #2
Discussion:
1064
435
323
243
134
Project A
Project B
Project C
Project D
Weighted
& Total
Score
Project\
Criteria &
Weight
Criteria 1Criteria 2Criteria 3
1073
134
353
543
231
Project D
Project\
Criteria &
Weight
Project B
Criteria 2Criteria 3
Weighted
& Total
Score
Project A
Criteria 1
Project C
C9-1
CASE STUDY 9
ST. LUKE'S HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
Hospitals have been some of the earliest adopters of wireless local area
networks (WLANs). The clinician user population is typically mobile and
spread out across a number of buildings, with a need to enter and access
data in real time. St. Luke's Episcopal Health System in Houston, Texas
(www.stlukestexas.com) is a good example of a hospital that has made
effective use wireless technologies to streamline clinical work processes.
Their wireless network is distributed throughout several hospital buildings
and is used in many different applications. The majority of the St. Luke’s
staff uses wireless devices to access data in real-time, 24 hours a day.
Examples include the following:
• Diagnosing patients and charting their progress: Doctors and
nurses use wireless laptops and tablet PCs to track and chart patient
care data.
• Prescriptions: Medications are dispensed from a cart that is wheeled
from room to room. Clinician uses a wireless scanner to scan the
patient's ID bracelet. If a prescription order has been changed or
cancelled, the clinician will know immediately because the mobile device
displays current patient data.
http://www.stlukestexas.com/
C9-2
• Critical care units: These areas use the WLAN because running hard
wires would mean moving ceiling panels. The dust and microbes that
such work stirs up would pose a threat to patients.
• Case management: The case managers in the Utilization Management
Department use the WLAN to document patient reviews, insurance
calls/authorization information, and denial information. The wireless
session enables real time access to information that ensures the correct
level of care for a patient and/or timely discharge.
• Blood management: Blood management is a complex process that
involves monitoring both patients and blood products during all stages of
a treatment process. To ensure that blood products and patients are
matched correctly, St. Luke’s uses a wireless bar code scanning process
that involves scanning both patient and blood product bar codes during
the infusion process. This enables clinicians to confirm patient and blood
product identification before proceeding with t ...
Executive SummaryXYZ Development, LLC has requested ASU Geotechn.docxelbanglis
Executive Summary
XYZ Development, LLC has requested ASU Geotechnical, Inc. to organize a geotechnical evaluation with recommendations regarding foundation for three planned structures. XYZ Development, LLC has planned to construct a three-story medical tower, a one-story office building, and a multi-story parking garage on a 10-acre property that is in West Memphis, AR. In addition, an 18-feet high retaining wall is planned to be constructed on the north side of the parking garage.
ASU Geotechnical, Inc. was provided with soil data included a log of a borehole that extended to a depth of 100 feet. Has recommended a 6’ x 6’ shallow foundation for the one- story building at depth of 5 feet. The expected settlement under the foundation for the parking garage was calculated to be 1.09 inches, and the expected settlement for the medical tower was calculated to be 0.78 inch. Also, ASU Geotechnical, Inc. has recommended a drilled shaft deep foundation design to be used for the three-story medical tower. Furthermore, for the 3-story medical tower the pile should have a diameter of 48 inches and reach a depth of 40 feet below the ground surface with a total of 2 piles required per column. For the multi-story parking garage, a drilled shaft should have a diameter of 48 inches and reach a depth of 70 feet below the ground surface with a total of 2 piles required per column.
The expected total differential settlement for the parking garage was calculated to be 0.31 inches, and the total differential settlement for the tower was calculated to be 0.23 inch. The recommended dimensions for the retaining wall include a 12-foot-wide footing base with 1.5-foot thickness. The entire retaining wall should have a total height of 20 feet, with only 18 feet above the ground surface. The 0.5 foot of soil above the toe was placed to adjust the effects of sliding of the wall. The base of the stem wall should have a thickness of 1.5-foot, and the top of the stem wall should have a thickness of 8 inches. Also, the factor of safety for sliding was calculated to be 1.59, the factor of safety for the bearing capacity was calculated to be 2.78
Introduction
XYZ Development, LLC in planning to construct residential and commercial facilities on a 10-acre property that is in West Memphis, AR the largest city in Crittenden County. The property will include a one-story office building, a three-story medical tower, and a multi-story parking garage with an 18-feet high retaining wall on the north side of the parking garage. The expected maximum column load for the one- story office building would be 50 kips, 350 kips for the three-story medical tower, and 900 kips for the parking garage. The dead load was expected to be 65 % of the maximum column load with column spacing at 35 feet. ABC Engineering, Inc. has requested ASU geotechnical Inc. to submit a geotechnical report that included: shallow foundation recommendations, total and different settlements under the maximum column ...
Exemplary
Proficient
Progressing
Emerging
Element (1): Responsiveness: Did the student respond to the main question of the week?
9 points (28%)
Posts exceed requirements of the Discussion instructions (e.g., respond to the question being asked; go beyond what is required [i.e., incorporates additional readings outside of the assigned Learning Resources, and/or shares relevant professional experiences]; are substantive, reflective, and refers to Learning Resources demonstrating that the student has considered the information in Learning Resources and colleague postings).
9 points
Posts are responsive to and meet the requirements of the Discussion instructions. Posts respond to the question being asked in a substantive, reflective way and refer to Learning Resources demonstrating that the student has read, viewed, and considered the Learning Resources and colleague postings.
7–8 points
Posts are somewhat responsive to the requirements of the Discussion instructions. Posts are not substantive and rely more on anecdotal evidence (i.e., largely comprised of student opinion); and/or does not adequately demonstrate that the student has read, viewed, and considered Learning Resources and colleague postings.
4–6 points
Posts are unresponsive to the requirements of the Discussion instructions; miss the point of the question by providing responses that are not substantive and/or solely anecdotal (i.e., comprised of only student opinion); and do not demonstrate that the student has read, viewed, and considered Learning Resources and colleague postings.
0–3 points
Element (2): Critical Thinking, Analysis, and Synthesis: Is the student able to make meaning of the information?
9 points (28%)
Posts demonstrate the student’s ability to apply, reflect, AND synthesize concepts and issues presented in the weekly Learning Objectives. Student has integrated and mastered the general principles, ideas, and skills presented. Reflections include clear and direct correlation to authentic examples or are drawn from professional experience; insights demonstrate significant changes in awareness, self-understanding, and knowledge.
9 points
Posts demonstrate the student’s ability to apply, reflect OR synthesize concepts and issues presented in the weekly Learning Objectives. The student has integrated many of the general principles, ideas, and skills presented. Reflections include clear and direct correlation to authentic examples or are drawn from professional experience, share insights that demonstrate a change in awareness, self- understanding, and knowledge.
7–8 points
Posts demonstrate minimal ability to apply, reflect, or synthesize concepts and issues presented in the weekly Learning Objectives. The student has not fully integrated the general principles, ideas, and skills presented. There are little to no salient reflections, examples, or insights/experiences provided.
4–6 points
Posts demonstrate a lack of ability to apply, reflect, or synthesize c ...
Biological screening of herbal drugs: Introduction and Need for
Phyto-Pharmacological Screening, New Strategies for evaluating
Natural Products, In vitro evaluation techniques for Antioxidants, Antimicrobial and Anticancer drugs. In vivo evaluation techniques
for Anti-inflammatory, Antiulcer, Anticancer, Wound healing, Antidiabetic, Hepatoprotective, Cardio protective, Diuretics and
Antifertility, Toxicity studies as per OECD guidelines
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.
Francesca Gottschalk - How can education support child empowerment.pptxEduSkills OECD
Francesca Gottschalk from the OECD’s Centre for Educational Research and Innovation presents at the Ask an Expert Webinar: How can education support child empowerment?
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
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.
Macroeconomics- Movie Location
This will be used as part of your Personal Professional Portfolio once graded.
Objective:
Prepare a presentation or a paper using research, basic comparative analysis, data organization and application of economic information. You will make an informed assessment of an economic climate outside of the United States to accomplish an entertainment industry objective.
Honest Reviews of Tim Han LMA Course Program.pptxtimhan337
Personal development courses are widely available today, with each one promising life-changing outcomes. Tim Han’s Life Mastery Achievers (LMA) Course has drawn a lot of interest. In addition to offering my frank assessment of Success Insider’s LMA Course, this piece examines the course’s effects via a variety of Tim Han LMA course reviews and Success Insider comments.
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Normal Labour/ Stages of Labour/ Mechanism of LabourWasim Ak
Normal labor is also termed spontaneous labor, defined as the natural physiological process through which the fetus, placenta, and membranes are expelled from the uterus through the birth canal at term (37 to 42 weeks
A Survey of Techniques for Maximizing LLM Performance.pptx
epherites IIhorisKmt.c Dynasty XXX Ca. 378—341 B.C.E.docx
1. epherites II
:horis
Kmt.
c Dynasty XXX: Ca. 378—341 B.C.E.
itive Kemetic Dynasty
:ctanebo I
capital at Tjebnutjer (Sebennytos).
Os
er of Macedon defeats the Persian Army at ti
wasion and occupation of Kmt under Alexa
XX)I: 323—30 B.C.I.
Ic Dy’ asty
I (S4r)
ia beqomes the Kemetic administrative capit:
(Famius African Scholar-Priest) writes a Hist
he di.’ides the Kemetic royal families into d
11 (Phladelphus) opens ports at Arsinoe, My
‘ian Tvuseum and Library founded.
nes (Celebrated African Scholar and the First
y charts the earth’s circjmference and writes
III (Euergetes)
[V (Phulopator)
tta Stone (A bilingual
V (Epiphanes)
VI (Philometor)
VII (Neos Philopator)
2. Viii (Euergetes II)
LX (Soter II)
(Alexander I)
U (Alexander II)
‘set and Na-nefer-ka-ptah and Khaemwaset a
(11 (Neos Dionysos)
VII commits suicide.
Caesar claims Kmt as a province of the Rom
e Battle of Issus.
der of Macedon in
ry ofEg)’pt (Aegvptia
‘nasties.
s Hormos and Bereni
Librarian at Alexandi
e Canon of the Kings
ctanebo II defeated by Persians under Ataxerxes Ill in 343
B.C.E.
Egypt Rev lied
22
a)
e.
a)
of
E.
3. d his son Si-Osiri wiit
rn Empire in 30 B.C.L
I.
decree of Ptolemy IV)Iinscribed in 196 B.C
OF GODS AND MEN:
EGYPT’S OLD KINGDOM
Wayne B. Chandler
And, I say unto you, that through the inspirational writings
of him who is my word unto the nations, shot! tlte land of
Khem be caused to give forth those secrets to mankind
which 1 shall cause to be hidden there . .
Osiris, The Book of Truth
In this chapter! hope to demonstrate that the origin of the
civilization ofEgypt
(Khem) was black African, specifically Ethiopian or Anti. In
order to understand
the progression of events which I hope wilt lead us to the
revision of Egypt’s
history, I wilt give an overview of archaeology in Egypt. In
orderfor the reader
to fully appreciate the achievements of Egyptian civilization, I
will summarize
the notable accomplishments of the early Egyptians.
4. For centuries, countries too numerous to mention have
competed for the right
to lay c)aim to Egypt, the birthplace of science, philosophy, art,
and yes, the
very genesis of civilization as we know it. Those origins which
have become
most popular over the centuries are India, Sumeria,
Mesopotamia, and Arabia.
Ironically, with the advent of the archaeologist, the historical
perspectives be
came even more confusing. For this pioneering school, trying to
solve the ar
chaic mysteries of this culture became more a cause of
frustration than a source
of adventure. Too often were archaeologists confronted with
pieces of a puzzle
that did not seem to fit. In what finally became an historical
frenzy to make sense
of data accumulated from temple, tomb, and terrain,
archaeologists committed
the cardinal sin of sanding square pegs so they might fit into
round holes.
Personal bias and racial prejudice prevented most of these
scientists, many of
5. whom were great scholars, from seeing the obvious—that Egypt
was born and
culturally nurtured from the very womb of Africa herself! In the
words of Chiekh
Anta Diop, “. . . The history of Black Africa will remain
suspended in air and
cannot be written correctly until African historians dare to
connect it with the
history of Egypt.”2
The 1900’s ushered in a new era of archaeological exploration,
for the first
time since the inception of Egyptology several historians began
to paint a more
117I
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