941 resultados para Bologna. Istituto Geologico.
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New Middle Pliocene ichthyofauna (2.4-2.2 Ma) from central-eastern Italy (Samoggia Torrent, Bologna) are described. These ichthyolites were found in a rather thin laminated layer that was deposited after the 2.4 Ma climatic crisis. The origin of this deposit, in which 31 taxa have been classified, is to be related to anoxic events on a regional and, probably, supraregional scale. This ichthyofaunistic association, which consists of living genera, is characterized by a clearcut predominance of mesopelagic species. The palaeoclimatic characters of these ichthyofauna indicate subtropical-type waters, while from a palaeobiogeographic point of view there is a close relationship with the present-day Atlantic-Mediterranean bioprovince. The Samoggia deposit has yielded six taxa that are absent or only occasionally present in the Mediterranean: one of these, Spratelloides gracilis, is exclusive of the Indo-Pacific bioprovince.
Policing and planning child and adolescent neuropsychiatry : the reform process in Bologna 2009-2014
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Desde a aprovação do plano de saúde mental regional em Itália ... o Departamento Local de Saúde Mental e Perturbações aditivas em Bolonha, tem desenvolvido um projeto de reforma cujo objectivo é inovar o sistema de saúde mental local. ...ABSTRACT: Since the Regional mental health plan 2009-2011 was approved in Italy the Department of Mental Health and addictions of the Bologna local health trust developed as a laboratory aimed at innovating the mental health systen locally. ...
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This paper studies strategies to attract students from outside Europe to European preexperience masters. We characterize the value added by such masters through interviews with key players at the universities and multinational recruiting corporations. We considered a strategy for segmenting international students in the US and extended it to the European market. We have analyzed data from international applications to Nova SBE as a proxy for applications in European institutions. Based on that analysis we conclude with recommendations to attract suitable candidates from outside Europe. In particular we also provided three different solutions to attract students from the southern hemisphere: we conclude that European institutions should (a) increase the spring semester intake, (b) provide bridging courses for some students, or (c) could place some accepted candidates in internships before starting classes.
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For several years, all five medical faculties of Switzerland have embarked on a reform of their training curricula for two reasons: first, according to a new federal act issued in 2006 by the administration of the confederation, faculties needed to meet international standards in terms of content and pedagogic approaches; second, all Swiss universities and thus all medical faculties had to adapt the structure of their curriculum to the frame and principles which govern the Bologna process. This process is the result of the Bologna Declaration of June 1999 which proposes and requires a series of reforms to make European Higher Education more compatible and comparable, more competitive and more attractive for Europeans students. The present paper reviews some of the results achieved in the field, focusing on several issues such as the shortage of physicians and primary care practitioners, the importance of public health, community medicine and medical humanities, and the implementation of new training approaches including e-learning and simulation. In the future, faculties should work on several specific challenges such as: students' mobility, the improvement of students' autonomy and critical thinking as well as their generic and specific skills and finally a reflection on how to improve the attractiveness of the academic career, for physicians of both sexes.
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Comprend : Duo [sans texte] ; Vobis datum est noce [sic pour noscere] misterium
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Since its beginning in 1999, the Bologna Process has influenced various aspects of higher education in its member countries, e.g., degree structures, mobility, lifelong learning, social dimension and quality assurance. The social dimension creates the focus of this research. The social dimension entered the Bologna Process agenda in 2001. Despite a decade of reforms, it somehow remained as a vague element and received low scholarly attention. This research addresses to this gap. Firstly, different meanings of the social dimension according to the major European policy actors are analysed. Unfolding the understandings of the actors revealed that the social dimension is mostly understood in terms reflecting the diversity of population on the student body accessing to, progressing in and completing higher education, with a special concern on the underrepresented groups. However, it is not possible to observe a similar commonality concerning the actual policy measures to achieve this goal. Divergence occurs with respect to the addressed underrepresented groups, i.e., all underrepresented groups or people without formal qualifications and mature learners, and the values and institutional interests traditionally promoted by these actors. Secondly, the dissertation discusses the reflection of this social dimension understanding at the national level by looking at cases of Finland, Germany and Turkey. The in-depth analyses show an awareness of the social dimension among most of the national Bologna Process actors and a common understanding of the social dimension goals. However, this understanding has not triggered action in any of the countries. The countries acted on areas which they defined problematic before the Bologna Process. Finally, based on these findings the dissertation discusses the social dimension as a policy item that managed to get into the Bologna Process agenda, but neither grew into an implementable policy, nor drop out of it. To this aim, it makes use of the multiple streams framework and explains the low agenda status social dimension with: i. the lack of a pressing problem definition: the lack of clearly defined indicators and a comprehensive monitoring system, ii. the lack of a viable solution alternative: the proposal of developing national strategies and action plans closed the way to develop generic guidelines for the social dimension to be translated into national policy processes, iii. low political perceptivity: the recent trends opt for increasing efficiency, excellence and exclusiveness discourses rather than ensuring equality and inclusiveness iv. high constraints: the social dimension by definition requires more public funding which is less appreciated and strategic constraints of the actors in allocating their resources v. the type of policy entrepreneur: the social dimension is promoted by an international stakeholder, the European Students’ Union, instead of the ministers responsible for higher education The social dimension remains a policy item in the Bologna Process which is noble enough to agree but not urgent enough to act on.
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„Egoist dank Bachelor?“ (Zeit online 2009). So lautet der Titel einer Leserdebatte zu ehrenamtlichem Engagement an der Hochschule, welche in der Online-Ausgabe der Wochenzeitung Die Zeit angestoßen wurde. Der zur Diskussion beitragende User „taralenatara“ äußerte sich am 27. Dezember 2009 um 18.15 Uhr folgendermaßen dazu: „Ich engagiere mich neben meinem Studium im FSR [Fachschaftsrat] und ich muss sagen, dass diese Arbeit sehr viel Zeit in Anspruch nimmt, die ich eigentlich bei meinem Bachelorstudium gar nicht habe. Ich habe zu tun, alles unter einen Hut zu bekommen. Wenn ich meine Arbeit gut machen möchte, muss ich aufpassen, dass das Studium nicht auf der Strecke bleibt. Zudem kann trotz Interesse kaum jemand für so eine Aufgabe gewonnen werden, da alle als Grund ‚Zeitmangel‘ angeben. Ist natürlich u.a. Studiengang abhängig – aber der Unterschied zwischen Diplom- und Bachelorzeiten ist deutlich zu spüren.“ Ein subjektiver Beitrag wie dieser kann sicherlich nicht als allgemeingültig betrachtet werden. Dennoch kritisieren diese und andere Aussagen weiterer Diskussionsteilnehmer den Bologna-Prozess – auch im Vergleich zu den traditionellen Studiengängen wie Diplom oder Magister – bezüglich seines Einflusses auf ehrenamtliches Engagement Studierender vehement. Unter anderem wird die Kritik über folgende Schlagworte angeführt: Überfüllte Lehrpläne, zunehmender Druck, viele Referate und Klausuren, wenig bis keine Freizeit und (oder dadurch?) eingeschränkte oder keine Zeit bzw. Möglichkeit für ehrenamtliches studentisches Engagement an der Hochschule. Bedeutet dies nun, wie Zeit online (2009) provokativ schreibt, „Ellenbogen statt Ehrenamt“ und steht diese Aussage exemplarisch für die Be- bzw. Verhinderung von ehrenamtlichem Engagement durch den Bologna-Prozess? In der vorliegenden Wissenschaftlichen Hausarbeit zum 1. Staatsexamen soll eben jenes Verhältnis herausgestellt werden, ob und inwieweit sich der Bologna-Prozess und ehrenamtliches Engagement an der Hochschule wirklich unversöhnlich gegenüberstehen. Weiter soll thematisiert werden, welche möglichen Zukunftsperspektiven sich daraus ergeben. Die Arbeit gliedert sich hierfür in fünf Teile (inklusive eines resümierenden Fazits), die nachfolgend erläutert werden.
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The Bologna Process defends the adoption of a higher education in teaching-learning methodologies that – in contraposition to the previous model based on the transmission of knowledge, which for being essentially theoretical, gives the student a passive role in the knowledge construction process – allows a (pro) active, autonomous and practical learning, where the student acquires and develops his competences. The personal tutorial guidance sessions are included in the teaching contact hours. This abstract presents a study about the University of Minho (first cycle) Courses Students’ perceptions of the personal tutorial guidance sessions’ relevance in the scope of the learning-teaching process, so as to confirm if the implementation/implantation of the commonly called tutorial (type) education, as an approach to an active, autonomous and practical learning, is sensed by the learners themselves
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En el artículo la autora nos relata sus experiencias al visitar la Fiera del Libro per Ragazzi y el Salon du livre et de la presse Jeunesse.
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Resumen tomado de la publicación. Monográfico con el título: El proceso de Bolonia : dinámicas y desafíos de la enseñanza superior en Europa a comienzos de una nueva época
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Resumen tomado de la publicaci??n. Monogr??fico con el t??tulo: El proceso de Bolonia : din??micas y desaf??os de la ense??anza superior en Europa a comienzos de una nueva ??poca
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Resumen tomado de la publicación. Monográfico con el título: El proceso de Bolonia : dinámicas y desafíos de la enseñanza superior en Europa a comienzos de una nueva época
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Resumen tomado de la publicaci??n. Monogr??fico con el t??tulo: El proceso de Bolonia : din??micas y desaf??os de la ense??anza superior en Europa a comienzos de una nueva ??poca
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Resumen tomado de la publicación. Monográfico con el título: El proceso de Bolonia : dinámicas y desafíos de la enseñanza superior en Europa a comienzos de una nueva época