862 resultados para Golf Course
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This paper presents some research on the choice of a course of study as related to a certain social, family and labor context. The methodology used included the definition of the theoretical basis and a series of empirical investigations which comprised different kinds of sur- veys, records, observations, participants as well as other fieldwork. The results obtained shed some light on the issue and raise new questions. This study was especially carried out to analyze the choice of the following courses of study: Law, Psychology and the different Teaching Courses.
Corso storico di un canale: Il canale di Castiglia = Historie course of a canal The Canal of Castile
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The main objective of this course, conducted by Jóvenes Nucleares (Spanish Young Generation in Nuclear, JJNN), a non-profit organization that depends on the Spanish Nuclear Society (SNE) is to pass on basic knowledge about Science and Nuclear Technology to the general public, mostly students and introduce them to its most relevant points. The purposes of this course are to provide general information, to answer the most common questions about Nuclear Energy and to motivate the young students to start a career in nuclear. Therefore, it is directed mainly to high school and university students, but also to general people that wants to learn about the key issues of such an important matter in our society. Anybody could attend the course, as no specific scientific education is required. The course is done at least once a year, during the Annual Meeting of the Spanish Nuclear Society, which takes place in a different Spanish city each time. The course is done also to whichever university or institution that asks for it to JJNN, with the only limit of the presenter´s availability. The course is divided into the following chapters: Physical nuclear and radiation principles, Nuclear power plants, Nuclear safety, Nuclear fuel, Radioactive waste, Decommission of nuclear facilities, Future nuclear power plants, Other uses of nuclear technology, Nuclear energy, climate change and sustainable development. The course is divided into 15 minutes lessons on the above topics, imparted by young professionals, experts in the field that belongs either to the Spanish Young Generation in Nuclear, either to companies and institutions related with nuclear energy. At the end of the course, a 200 pages book with the contents of the course is handed to every member of the audience. This book is also distributed in other course editions at high schools and universities in order to promote the scientific dissemination of the Nuclear Technology. As an extra motivation, JJNN delivers a course certificate to the assistants. At the end of the last edition course, in Santiago de Compostela, the assistants were asked to provide a feedback about it. Some really interesting lessons were learned, that will be very useful to improve next editions of the course. As a general conclusion of the courses it can be said that many of the students that have assisted to the course have increased their motivation in the nuclear field, and hopefully it will help the young talents to choose the nuclear field to develop their careers
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This paper describes a practical activity, part of the renewable energy course where the students have to build their own complete wind generation system, including blades, PM-generator, power electronics and control. After connecting the system to the electric grid the system has been tested during real wind scenarios. The paper will describe the electric part of the work surface-mounted permanent magnet machine design criteria as well as the power electronics part for the power control and the grid connection. A Kalman filter is used for the voltage phase estimation and current commands obtained in order to control active and reactive power. The connection to the grid has been done and active and reactive power has been measured in the system.
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This paper presents the innovations in the practical work of the Data Structures subject carried out in the last five years, including a transition period and a first year of implantation of the European Higher Education Area. The practical coursework is inspired by a project-based methodology and from 2008/2009 additional laboratory sessions are included in the subject schedule. We will present the academic results and ratios of the mentioned time period which imply a significant improvement on students' performance.
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The purpose of this document is to serve as the printed material for the seminar "An Introductory Course on Constraint Logic Programming". The intended audience of this seminar are industrial programmers with a degree in Computer Science but little previous experience with constraint programming. The seminar itself has been field tested, prior to the writing of this document, with a group of the application programmers of Esprit project P23182, "VOCAL", aimed at developing an application in scheduling of field maintenance tasks in the context of an electric utility company. The contents of this paper follow essentially the flow of the seminar slides. However, there are some differences. These differences stem from our perception from the experience of teaching the seminar, that the technical aspects are the ones which need more attention and clearer explanations in the written version. Thus, this document includes more examples than those in the slides, more exercises (and the solutions to them), as well as four additional programming projects, with which we hope the reader will obtain a clearer view of the process of development and tuning of programs using CLP. On the other hand, several parts of the seminar have been taken out: those related with the account of fields and applications in which C(L)P is useful, and the enumerations of C(L)P tools available. We feel that the slides are clear enough, and that for more information on available tools, the interested reader will find more up-to-date information by browsing the Web or asking the vendors directly. More details in this direction will actually boil down to summarizing a user manual, which is not the aim of this document.
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it's been 50years since the world witnessed the triumph of one of the iast revoiutíons of the twentieth-century starring a group of bearded men who descended from the mountains of Cuba and who wouid end up overthrowing the Batista regime. Ricardo Porro was a Cuban architect exiied for his revoiutionary ideais. Vittorio Garatti and Roberto Gottardi were itaiian immigrant architects. The three coincided in the effervescent city of Caracas in the iate 50's within the circie of friends of Carios Raui de Viiianueva, who had at that tí me, finished one of his most significant works, the City University of Caracas. United by a common circie of friends, they wouid soon receive their dream assignment: an Academy ofArt for the chiidren of workers in the revoiutionary Havana. The idea was directiy based on the triumphant ideoiogist of the revoiutíon: Fidei Castro and Che Guevara. Aii schoois had to represent the image of the new society. They wouid immediateiy depart for Havana. The year was 1961 and they had oniy a few months to pian and carry out the project. The schoois were officiaiiy opened in 1965 without having been compieted. The set was iocated in the Goif Course Country Ciub of Havana. The iands- cape of the goif course and the understanding of the piace, by the three architects, was the origin of the projects. initíaiiy, they worked with some common principies that conditíoned its architecturai answer and gave the group the homogeneity of a singie project: the integratíon with the iandsca- pe, the same constructíon system and a singie materiai. This research anaiyzes the conditíons used by the three architects in order to investígate the responses from the point of view of architecturai design. Han pasado más de 50 años desde que el mundo contempló el triunfo de una de las últimas revoluciones del siglo XX, protagonizada por un grupo de barbudos que descendían de la sierra de Cuba y que acabaría con el derrocamiento del régimen de Batista. Ricardo Porro era un arquitecto cubano exiliado por sus ideales revolucionarios. Vittorio Garatt y Roberto Gottardi eran arquitectos italianos emigrantes. Los tres coincidieron en la efervescente Caracas de Anales de los años 50 en torno a la figura de Carlos Raúl de Villanueva que terminaba en esa época una de sus obras más significativas, la Ciudad Universitaria de Caracas. Unidos por un círculo común de amistades pronto recibirán el encargo soñado: una Academia de las Artes para los hijos de los trabajadores en La Habana revolucionaria. La idea partia directamente de los ideólogos triunfantes de la revolución: Fidel Castro y el Che Guevara. El conjunto de las escuelas tenía que representar la imagen de la nueva sociedad. Inmediatamente partirán rumbo a La Habana. Corría el año 1961 y dispo¬nían de unos pocos meses para proyectar y ejecutar las obras. Las escuelas fueron oficialmente inauguradas en 1965 sin haberse concluido. El conjunto se ubicó en el campo de golf del Country Club de La Habana. El paisaje del campo de golf y el entendimiento del lugar, por parte de los tres arquitectos, fue el origen de los proyectos. Trabajaron inicialmente con unas premisas comunes que condicionaron su respuesta arquitectónica y le dieron al conjunto la homogeneidad de un único proyecto: la integración con el paisaje, un mismo sistema constructivo y un único material. Este trabajo de investigación parte de los condicionantes a los que se enfrentaron los tres arquitectos para así analizar las respuestas dadas desde el punto de vista del proyecto arquitectónico.
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An experience developed by the authors in the design of educational tools, funded on multimedia support for using in teaching, will be presented. These tools have been used on the subject of Helicopters, http://ocw.upm.es/ingenieriaaeroespacial/ helicopteros at the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (E.U.I.T. Aeronáutica). Throughout more than ten years, these didactical and educational elements have been defined and developed. It has the singularity that most of them have been designed for undergraduate students, as a part of their end of degree projectwork. This peculiarity has led to a wide range of proposals and solutions, as well as an appropriate approach. depending on the level of knowledge. The evolution of tools for developing these materials will be presented, discussing advantages and disadvantages. Finally, we will advance the new materials which are being prepared at present.
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The Bologna Declaration and the implementation of the European Higher Education Area are promoting the use of active learning methodologies. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effects obtained after applying active learning methodologies to the achievement of generic competences as well as to the academic performance. This study has been carried out at the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, where these methodologies have been applied to the Operating Systems I subject of the degree in Technical Engineering in Computer Systems. The fundamental hypothesis tested was whether the implementation of active learning methodologies (cooperative learning and problem based learning) favours the achievement of certain generic competences (‘teamwork’ and ‘planning and time management’) and also whether this fact improved the academic performance of our students. The original approach of this work consists in using psychometric tests to measure the degree of acquired student’s generic competences instead of using opinion surveys, as usual. Results indicated that active learning methodologies improve the academic performance when compared to the traditional lecture/discussion method, according to the success rate obtained. These methods seem to have as well an effect on the teamwork competence (the perception of the behaviour of the other members in the group) but not on the perception of each students’ behaviour. Active learning does not produce any significant change in the generic competence ‘planning and time management'.
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This paper describes the objectives, content, learning methodology and results of an online course on the History of Algorithms for engineering students at Polytechnic University of Madrid (UPM). This course is conducted in a virtual environment based on Moodle, with a student-centred educational model which includes a detailed planning of learning activities. Our experience indicates that this subject is highly motivating for students and the virtual environment facilitates competencies development
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The main purpose of this work is to describe the case of an online Java Programming course for engineering students to learn computer programming and to practice other non-technicalabilities: online training, self-assessment, teamwork and use of foreign languages. It is important that students develop confidence and competence in these skills, which will be required later in their professional tasks and/or in other engineering courses (life-long learning). Furthermore, this paper presents the pedagogical methodology, the results drawn from this experience and an objective performance comparison with another conventional (face-to-face) Java course.
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Matadores: Cortijano y Espana