941 resultados para Historical development
Resumo:
In double columns.
Resumo:
"November 1984."
Resumo:
Robert E. Whitmoyer, OARDC Historical Records Officer.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Bibliography: p. 204-211.
Resumo:
"Authorities consulted in the compilation of this work": vol. !, p. [xii]
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
This paper will present a brief history and work of Pro-Literacy and identify the aspects that serve as a model for other volunteer organizations. Pro- Literacy is an adult literacy program that has been successful in sustaining growth and promoting literacy nationally.
Resumo:
An brief history of the developments in the Iowa highway administration between 1838 and 1929.
Resumo:
Repeat photography is an efficient, effective and useful method to identify trends of changes in the landscapes. It was used to illustrate long-term changes occurring in the landscapes. In the Northeast of Portugal, landscapes changes is currently driven mostly by agriculture abandonment and agriculture and energy policy. However, there is a need to monitoring changes in the region using a multitemporal and multiscale approach. This project aimed to establish an online repository of oblique digital photography from the region to be used to register the condition of the landscape as recorded in historical and contemporary photography over time as well as to support qualitative and quantitative assessment of change in the landscape using repeat photography techniques and methods. It involved the development of a relational database and a series of web-based services using PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor language, and the development of an interface, with Joomla, of pictures uploading and downloading by users. The repository will make possible to upload, store, search by location, theme, or date, display, and download pictures for Northeastern Portugal. The website service is devoted to help researchers to obtain quickly the photographs needed to apply RP through a developed search engine. It can be accessed at: http://esa.ipb.pt/digitalandscape/.
Resumo:
Questa tesi di laurea si colloca all'interno del progetto Erasmus + IDENTITIES, il cui obiettivo è sviluppare materiali didattici interdisciplinari per la formazione iniziale degli insegnanti. Nello specifico, si dà seguito ad una ricerca condotta da Lorenzo Miani, finalizzata a mettere in evidenza come la Teoria della Relatività Speciale (STR) sia storicamente nata da una speciale interazione tra matematica e fisica. Tale co-evoluzione è stata cercata, e messa in evidenza, attraverso l’analisi dei quattro articoli fondativi della STR scritti da Lorentz (1904), Poincaré (1906), Einstein (1905) e Minkowski (1908). Per l’analisi di questi articoli abbiamo utilizzato la metafora del “confine”, esposta nella metateoria di Akkerman e Bakker (2011), riferendosi al confine tra Matematica e Fisica. È stato sviluppato uno strumento operativo di analisi di articoli originali per estrarne il rapporto tra le due discipline. Un’analisi di questo tipo può portare un contributo considerevole al Justification Problem, intercettando la possibilità di indagare sull’identità della Matematica, intesa come disciplina. Questo tipo di analisi ha permesso di comprendere gli “stili al confine” di ogni autore, e la natura delle Trasformazioni di Lorentz in quanto oggetto di confine. È inoltre illustrata la progettazione di un’attività per la formazione iniziale degli insegnanti. Questa si configura come un tutorial per lavori di gruppo, ed è stata sperimentata nel corso di Didattica della Fisica dell’Università di Bologna, tenuto dalla Professoressa Olivia Levrini. Grazie all’attività, è stato possibile riflettere sulle identità disciplinari e sull’importanza di fare “esperienze di confine” per superare stereotipi. Lo strumento elaborato nella tesi si apre a sviluppi futuri, dal momento che si presta ad essere utilizzato per l’analisi di una grande varietà di testi e per la costruzione di “boundary zone”, sempre più auspicate e incentivate nei report europei.
Resumo:
This paper focuses on the higher order factors affecting successful adoption of technologies. Drawing on the "actor-oriented perspective" in rural sociology, it is argued that successful examples of adoption at this higher level result from a complex conjunction of people and events, with outcomes that may have been quite unanticipated at the outset. From this perspective, research and extension projects and programs are viewed as arenas in which social actors–village leaders, farmers, researchers (local and international), aid officials, municipal agents, extension workers, and traders–pursue their own short- and long-term objectives and strategies. To this end, they maneuver, negotiate, organize, cooperate, participate, coerce, obstruct, form coalitions, adopt, adapt, and reject, all within a specific geographical and historical context.
Resumo:
Clinicians working in the field of congenital and paediatric cardiology have long felt the need for a common diagnostic and therapeutic nomenclature and coding system with which to classify patients of all ages with congenital and acquired cardiac disease. A cohesive and comprehensive system of nomenclature, suitable for setting a global standard for multicentric analysis of outcomes and stratification of risk, has only recently emerged, namely, The International Paediatric and Congenital Cardiac Code. This review, will give an historical perspective on the development of systems of nomenclature in general, and specifically with respect to the diagnosis and treatment of patients with paediatric and congenital cardiac disease. Finally, current and future efforts to merge such systems into the paperless environment of the electronic health or patient record on a global scale are briefly explored. On October 6, 2000, The International Nomenclature Committee for Pediatric and Congenital Heart Disease was established. In January, 2005, the International Nomenclature Committee was constituted in Canada as The International Society for Nomenclature of Paediatric and Congenital Heart Disease. This International Society now has three working groups. The Nomenclature Working Group developed The International Paediatric and Congenital Cardiac Code and will continue to maintain, expand, update, and preserve this International Code. It will also provide ready access to the International Code for the global paediatric and congenital cardiology and cardiac surgery communities, related disciplines, the healthcare industry, and governmental agencies, both electronically and in published form. The Definitions Working Group will write definitions for the terms in the International Paediatric and Congenital Cardiac Code, building on the previously published definitions from the Nomenclature Working Group. The Archiving Working Group, also known as The Congenital Heart Archiving Research Team, will link images and videos to the International Paediatric and Congenital Cardiac Code. The images and videos will be acquired from cardiac morphologic specimens and imaging modalities such as echocardiography, angiography, computerized axial tomography and magnetic resonance imaging, as well as intraoperative images and videos. Efforts are ongoing to expand the usage of The International Paediatric and Congenital Cardiac Code to other areas of global healthcare. Collaborative efforts are under-way involving the leadership of The International Nomenclature Committee for Pediatric and Congenital Heart Disease and the representatives of the steering group responsible for the creation of the 11th revision of the International Classification of Diseases, administered by the World Health Organisation. Similar collaborative efforts are underway involving the leadership of The International Nomenclature Committee for Pediatric and Congenital Heart Disease and the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation, who are the owners of the Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine or ""SNOMED"". The International Paediatric and Congenital Cardiac Code was created by specialists in the field to name and classify paediatric and congenital cardiac disease and its treatment. It is a comprehensive code that can be freely downloaded from the internet (http://www.IPCCC.net) and is already in use worldwide, particularly for international comparisons of outcomes. The goal of this effort is to create strategies for stratification of risk and to improve healthcare for the individual patient. The collaboration with the World Heath Organization, the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation, and the healthcare Industry, will lead to further enhancement of the International Code, and to Its more universal use.