910 resultados para Information And Communications Technology
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"September 1983."
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At head of title: Department of the Interior, Franklin K. Lane, secretary. Bureau of Mines, Van. H. Manning, director.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Title Varies: U.S. International Information and Educational Exchange Program; International Information and Educational Exchange Program; Semiannual Report of the Secretary of State To Congress; International Educational Exchange Program
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"DHEW publication no. (OHDS) 77-20410." [etc.]
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"Catalog number 63437X"--P. [4] of cover.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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This study examined the role of information, efficacy, and 3 stressors in predicting adjustment to organizational change. Participants were 589 government employees undergoing an 18-month process of regionalization. To examine if the predictor variables had long-term effects on adjustment, the authors assessed psychological well-being, client engagement, and job satisfaction again at a 2-year follow-up. At Time 1, there was evidence to suggest that information was indirectly related to psychological well-being, client engagement, and job satisfaction, via its positive relationship to efficacy. There also was evidence to suggest that efficacy was related to reduced stress appraisals, thereby heightening client engagement. Last, there was consistent support for the stress-buffering role of Time I self-efficacy in the prediction of Time 2 job satisfaction.
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This article considers questions of technological change, innovation, and communication from a disability perspective. Using a critical social perspective on disability, we offer an Australian case study to analyse disability in national telecommunications policy. In doing so, we critique the systemic lack of incorporation of disability in national visions, policies, and programmes. Accordingly, we argue for a cohesive, and genuine commitment to incorporating disability considerations in all areas of information and communication technology policy and scholarship.