911 resultados para Books of work
Resumo:
Resumen tomado de la publicaci??n
Resumo:
Recurso sobre la planificación de clases y cursos para estudiantes de inglés como lengua extranjera. La mayoría de los capítulos están organizados alrededor de preguntas que el profesor se podría hacer al planificar una lección o un curso. Cada capítulo ofrece respuestas a las preguntas planteadas o implícitas en el título del capítulo como: quiénes son los estudiantes; cuál es la lección; cómo se aprende; cómo puedo enseñar; qué materiales se pueden seleccionar; cómo empezar a trabajar en la planificación; qué actividades se pueden utilizar y adaptar.
Resumo:
Resumen basado en el de la publicación
Resumo:
An overview of organization in the construction industry is identified from plans of work published in the UK. This provides a basis for identifying the essential steps through which any construction project must pass. It is shown that all construction projects pass through a set of stages of work, consisting of inception, feasibility, scheme design, detail design, contract formation, construction and commissioning. Although there may be changes to the sequence and importance of these stages, their identification helps in making judgements about organizational structure on construction projects.
Resumo:
This paper concerns the prospective implementation of the proposed 'corporate killing' offence. These proposals suggested that the Health and Safety Executive (HSE)-the body currently responsible for regulating work-related health and safety issues-should handle cases in which a 'corporate killing' charge is a possibility. Relatively little attention has been paid to this issue of implementation. An empirical investigation was undertaken to assess the compatibility of the HSE's methodology and enforcement philosophy with the new offence. It was found that inspectors categorize themselves as enforcers of criminal law, see enforcement action as valuable and support the new offence, but disagree over its use. They also broadly supported the HSE taking responsibility for the new offence. This suggests that 'corporate killing' may not necessarily be incompatible with the HSE's modus operandi, and there may be positive reasons forgiving the HSE this responsibility.