Notes #1- Geography, Early Greece, Polis, Govt, Homer, Religion, Daily Life ahelfrich
The document provides background information on early Greece and its city-states. It describes the geography of Greece, including its location on the Balkan Peninsula with a coastline along the Aegean Sea. The mountains made farming difficult so the Greeks relied on fishing, sailing, and trade. This geography also led to the development of separate city-states rather than a large kingdom. Each city-state had its own government, laws, and identity. Democracy first developed in Athens, where only landowning men could vote. The document also summarizes aspects of religion, mythology, and daily life in ancient Greece.
This document provides a 10-minute guide to understanding health reform in the United States. It is divided into several sections that explain the basics of how health reform works, clarify common misconceptions about the law, and provide examples of how different people can access health insurance under the new system. The guide aims to help readers understand what changes health reform means for them and their access to affordable health insurance plans.
Notes #1- Geography, Early Greece, Polis, Govt, Homer, Religion, Daily Life ahelfrich
The document provides background information on early Greece and its city-states. It describes the geography of Greece, including its location on the Balkan Peninsula with a coastline along the Aegean Sea. The mountains made farming difficult so the Greeks relied on fishing, sailing, and trade. This geography also led to the development of separate city-states rather than a large kingdom. Each city-state had its own government, laws, and identity. Democracy first developed in Athens, where only landowning men could vote. The document also summarizes aspects of religion, mythology, and daily life in ancient Greece.
This document provides a 10-minute guide to understanding health reform in the United States. It is divided into several sections that explain the basics of how health reform works, clarify common misconceptions about the law, and provide examples of how different people can access health insurance under the new system. The guide aims to help readers understand what changes health reform means for them and their access to affordable health insurance plans.
This document provides background information on several early civilizations that originated in Mesopotamia and the surrounding regions between 3500 BCE and 100 BCE. It summarizes that the Sumerians established the first cities in Mesopotamia and developed cuneiform writing and the wheel. The Babylonians later conquered the Sumerians and made advances in law, astronomy, and astrology under King Hammurabi. Subsequent groups like the Assyrians, Phoenicians, Persians, and Hebrews adopted and expanded upon the cultural and technological foundations laid by earlier Mesopotamian societies.
Makato was an orphan boy in Thailand who worked hard his entire life. One day, while working near the king, a small shell called a cowrie fell near the king. Makato picked it up and returned it to the king, who allowed Makato to keep it. Makato used the cowrie to buy lettuce seeds, which he diligently grew into a large garden. He later gifted the king some of the lettuce, impressing the king with his intelligence and work ethic. Over the years, Makato served the king loyally and was promoted to high positions, eventually marrying the king's daughter and becoming the ruler of Mon kingdom.
The document discusses various methods to improve drug solubility including physical modifications like particle size reduction through micronization or formation of nanosuspensions, modification of crystal habit through polymorphism, and drug dispersion in carriers through techniques like solid dispersions. It also discusses chemical modifications such as changing pH, use of buffers, and derivatization. Other methods covered are complexation, solubilization by surfactants to form microemulsions, co-crystallization, cosolvency, hydrotrophy, and solvent deposition. The biopharmaceutical classification system relating solubility and permeability to drug absorption is also summarized.
This document provides background information on several early civilizations that originated in Mesopotamia and the surrounding regions between 3500 BCE and 100 BCE. It summarizes that the Sumerians established the first cities in Mesopotamia and developed cuneiform writing and the wheel. The Babylonians later conquered the Sumerians and made advances in law, astronomy, and astrology under King Hammurabi. Subsequent groups like the Assyrians, Phoenicians, Persians, and Hebrews adopted and expanded upon the cultural and technological foundations laid by earlier Mesopotamian societies.
Makato was an orphan boy in Thailand who worked hard his entire life. One day, while working near the king, a small shell called a cowrie fell near the king. Makato picked it up and returned it to the king, who allowed Makato to keep it. Makato used the cowrie to buy lettuce seeds, which he diligently grew into a large garden. He later gifted the king some of the lettuce, impressing the king with his intelligence and work ethic. Over the years, Makato served the king loyally and was promoted to high positions, eventually marrying the king's daughter and becoming the ruler of Mon kingdom.
The document discusses various methods to improve drug solubility including physical modifications like particle size reduction through micronization or formation of nanosuspensions, modification of crystal habit through polymorphism, and drug dispersion in carriers through techniques like solid dispersions. It also discusses chemical modifications such as changing pH, use of buffers, and derivatization. Other methods covered are complexation, solubilization by surfactants to form microemulsions, co-crystallization, cosolvency, hydrotrophy, and solvent deposition. The biopharmaceutical classification system relating solubility and permeability to drug absorption is also summarized.
2. OPPILAITOS JA SEN STRATEGIA
1. Ammatillisen koulutuksen tehtävä
• tuottaa osaajia tulevaisuuden työelämän tarpeisiin
• KSAO kouluttaa nuoria ja aikuisia seudun
elinkeinoelämän palvelukseen
3. OPPILAITOS JA SEN STRATEGIA
2. Ammatillista koulutusta ohjaavat lait ja asetukset
• OKM valmistelee ammatilliseen koulutukseen
liittyvän lainsäädännön ja valtioneuvoston
päätökset sekä ohjaa ja valvoo toimialaa
• säädökset löytyvät suomeksi ja ruotsiksi valtion
säädöstietopankki Finlexistä (http://www.finlex.fi/fi/)
ja esim. OKM:n sivulta:
http://www.minedu.fi/OPM/Koulutus/ammatillinen_koulut
4. OPPILAITOS JA SEN STRATEGIA
3. Ammatillisen koulutuksen järjestäjä
• koulutuksen järjestämistä varten OKM antaa ammatillisen
koulutuksen järjestämisluvan ja siihen sisältyvän
koulutustehtävän
• koulutuksen järjestäjät vastaavat järjestämislupansa
puitteissa ammatillisen koulutuksen organisoinnista omalla
alueellaan, koulutuksen suuntaamisesta alueensa elinkeino-
ja työelämän tarpeiden mukaisesti, sekä opetussuunnitelmien
sisällöistä opetussuunnitelmien perusteiden pohjalta
• Kouvolan kaupunki on KSAOn koulutuksen järjestäjä
6. OPPILAITOS JA SEN STRATEGIA
5. Ammattiopiston opiskelijat
• nuoret suorittavat ammatillisia perustutkintoja ammatillisena
peruskoulutuksena
• aikuiset suorittavat ammatillisia perustutkintoja, ammatti- ja
erikoisammattitutkintoja näyttötutkintona, jonka
suorittamiseen kuuluu tavallisesti myös valmistavaa
koulutusta
• oppisopimuskoulutukseen voivat hakea sekä nuoret ja
aikuiset
7. OPPILAITOS JA SEN STRATEGIA
6. Ammatillisen peruskoulutuksen alat KSAOssa:
• Kulttuuriala
• Luonnontieteiden ala
• Tekniikan ja liikenteen ala
• Luonnonvara- ja ympäristöala
• Sosiaali-, terveys- ja liikunta-ala
• Yhteiskuntatieteiden, liiketalouden ja hallinnon ala
• Matkailu-, ravitsemus- ja talousala