797 resultados para school drug policy
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Running title: ONDCP white paper.
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National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Washington, D.C.
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National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Washington, D.C.
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National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Washington, D.C.
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"July 29, 1992."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
Contested elements, competing voices : values added Australian school gender equity policy 1975-2004
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A szerzők kutatásának célja a magyar kórházak gyógyszerbeszállítókkal kapcsolatos magatartásának jobb megértése. A szervezeti viselkedés természetéből adódóan a szerzők kutatásukat a komplexitás paradigmájára támaszkodva (Mucchielli, 2004) végezték el. Ahhoz, hogy kórházak beszerzési döntéseinek komplex eljárásait megvizsgálják, egy vegyes kutatási módszer alkalmazására volt szükség. Elméleti háttérként az üzleti kapcsolatok értékének integrált modelljét alkalmazták. A tanulmányban bemutatják egy kvantitatív és egy kvalitatív kutatás eredményeit a magyarországi kórházak és a gyógyszerbeszállítók közötti üzleti kapcsolatokban. ________________ The main goal of this research is to better understand the behaviour of the Hungarian hospital in their relationship with drug suppliers. The nature of the organisational behaviour guides the authors to conduct their research on the complexity paradigm (Mucchielli, 2004). To be able to explore the complex procedure of purchasing decisions in the hospitals, they applied a research design based on mixed method research. As a theoretical background the authors used the integrated model of business relationship value. In their paper they introduce the results of a quantitative and a qualitative research about the business relationships between hospitals and drug suppliers in Hungary.
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This study examined the intergenerational effects of parental conviction of a substance-related charge on children's academic performance and, conditional on a conviction, whether completion of an adult drug treatment court (DTC) program was associated with improved school performance. State administrative data from North Carolina courts, birth records, and school records were linked for 2005-2012. Math and reading end-of-grade test scores and absenteeism were examined for 5 groups of children, those with parents who: were not convicted on any criminal charge, were convicted on a substance-related charge and not referred by a court to a DTC, were referred to a DTC but did not enroll, enrolled in a DTC but did not complete, and completed a DTC program. Accounting for demographic and socioeconomic factors, the school performance of children whose parents were convicted of a substance-related offense was worse than that of children whose parents were not convicted on any charge. These differences were statistically significant but substantially reduced after controlling for socioeconomic characteristics; for example, mother's educational attainment. We found no evidence that parent participation in an adult DTC program led to improved school performance of their children. While the children of convicted parents fared worse on average, much--but not all--of this difference was attributed to socioeconomic factors, with the result that parental conviction remained a risk factor for poorer school performance. Even though adult DTCs have been shown to have other benefits, we could detect no intergenerational benefit in improved school performance of their children.
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This paper studies the curriculum policy trajectories that have characterized the teaching of secondary school History as a subject that is historically enmeshed in the politics of nation-state making in post-independence Zimbabwe. Through content analysis, the paper examines the ways in which the post-independence History syllabi, namely 2166 and 2167, have drawn from recent historiographies to frame both the aims and content of school History. The argument developed is that both syllabi have been deployed to serve the envisaged nation-state project; with Syllabus 2166 associated with the socialist nation-state project of the 1980s and 2167 with patriotic history since 2000. The paper concludes that such (mis)uses of school are not unique to Zimbabwe, but represent the political instrumentalization of school History that has become prevalent throughout the world.