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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
461

1991-1993 Supplement to the General Catalog

University of Arizona 06 1900 (has links)
The University of Arizona catalogs contain information regarding curricula, fees, university policies, and procedures.
462

The personal adjustment of Arab students at selected British universities

Memdouh, Ali Al-Tikriti January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
463

Students under Honecker : an examination of responses of students in Berlin, Dresden and Jena to the ideology and politics of the Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands, 1971-1989, with reference to the GDR planned economy, the question of western imp

Rhys, Julian January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
464

Aspiring to a postcolonial engagement with the other : an investigation into student teachers' learning from their intercultural experiences during a South Indian study visit

Hoult, S. January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
465

Doel en funksies van 'n afdeling vir onderrigmedia aan 'n universiteit

20 November 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. (Education) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
466

Breast cancer prevention: The knowledge and skills of final-year undergraduate nursing students

Mayet, Zakeeya 20 November 2006 (has links)
Faculty of Health Sciences, Master of Science in Nursing Cell no:082-611-4199 / A quantitative research study in the form of a descriptive survey was undertaken with the aim of determining the level of knowledge and skills of final-year undergraduate nursing students relating to breast cancer prevention. The research objectives were as follows: to determine the awareness of, and orientation toward breast cancer preventative measures of final-year undergraduate nursing students; to determine the level of knowledge regarding breast cancer prevention of final-year undergraduate nursing students; to assess their psychomotor skills in performing a clinical breast examination; and to identify critical knowledge and skill deficits, with regard to breast cancer prevention. Data were collected from a sample of final-year undergraduate nursing students (n=62) from three universities in Gauteng. A self-administered questionnaire was used to collect data relating to theoretical knowledge. Direct, structured observation, using a self-compiled checklist, enabled the collection of data relating to psychomotor skills in clinical breast examinations. Data analysis was done with the aid of two computer software packages, namely MoonStats and Microsoft Excel. The findings of the research revealed that, although the students were positively orientated to the issue of breast cancer prevention, their theoretical knowledge regarding it was not largely below the level that would deem them competent. The mean score for theoretical knowledge regarding breast cancer prevention was 56%. In addition, the scores for their psychomotor skills in carrying out a clinical breast examination were generally poor. The mean score in this component of the study was 45%. Major theoretical and skill deficits were identified from the findings of the study. Recommendations proposed comprehensive educational coverage of breast cancer prevention in nursing curricula. It was suggested that nursing students become more actively involved in the promotion of breast cancer prevention in underserved communities. Furthermore it is suggested that nurses and nursing students become more involved in ongoing research in the field of breast cancer prevention.
467

A Cost study of overseas university education: the Hong Kong experience.

January 1991 (has links)
by Ma Hing Tong, William. / Thesis (M.A.Ed.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1991. / Bibliography: leaves [106]-112. / ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS / ABSTRACT / Chapter CHAPTER ONE --- OVERSEAS EDUCATION FOR HONG KONG STUDENTS / Chapter 1.1 --- Review of the Situation : Global Trends and Hong Kong Situation --- p.1 / Chapter 1.2 --- Importance of Cost Study of Overseas University Education --- p.6 / Chapter 1.3 --- The Aims of This Study --- p.7 / Chapter 1.4 --- Sources of Data --- p.9 / Chapter CHAPTER TWO --- MAJOR ISSUES IN OVERSEAS EDUCATION / Chapter 2.1 --- Overseas Student Policy in the Selected Major Host Countries --- p.11 / Chapter (i) --- Britain's Full-coat Fees Policy / Chapter (ii) --- Canada's Foreign Student Policy Development / Chapter (iii) --- Australia's Private Pull Fee Policy / Chapter (iv) --- United States of America / Chapter (v) --- Political Conaideration of Overseas Chinese Education in Taiwan / Chapter 2.2 --- Costs and Benefits of Overseas Students from the Perspective of Host Country --- p.26 / Chapter 2.3 --- Costs and Benefits of Overseas Students from the Perspective of Sending Country --- p.29 / Chapter (i) --- Cost Analysis / Chapter (ii) --- Benefit Analysis / Chapter CHAPTER THREE --- COST ANALYSIS FOR OVERSEAS EDUCATION FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF SENDING COUNTRY / Chapter 3.1 --- The Problem --- p.37 / Chapter 3.2 --- Cost Analysis of Overseas Education --- p.39 / Chapter 3.3 --- Coat of Overseas Education --- p.42 / Chapter (i) --- Tuition Fees / Chapter (ii) --- Living Costs / Chapter (iii) --- Traveling Expenses / Chapter (iv) --- Foregone Earnings / Chapter 3. 4 --- Cost to Each Constituency --- p.45 / Chapter (i) --- Host Country / Chapter (ii) --- Sending Country / Chapter (iii) --- Personal/family / Chapter CHAPTER FOUR --- ANALYZING COST OF HONG KONG OVERSEAS STUDENTS / Chapter 4.1 --- Britain --- p.52 / Chapter 4.2 --- Canada --- p.56 / Chapter 4.3 --- Australia --- p.58 / Chapter 4.4 --- America / Chapter 4.5 --- Taiwan --- p.63 / Chapter CHAPTER FIVE --- RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS / Chapter 5.1 --- Possible Bias of the Result --- p.67 / Chapter 5.2 --- Summarizing the Data --- p.68 / Chapter 5.3 --- Conclusions and Discussions --- p.73 / Chapter APPENDIX A --- HONG KONG STUDENTS IN BRITAIN --- p.81 / Chapter APPENDIX B --- HONG KONG STUDENTS IN CANADA --- p.87 / Chapter APPENDIX C --- HONG KONG STUDENTS IN AUSTRALIA --- p.91 / Chapter APPENDIX D --- HONG KONG STUDENTS IN AMERICA --- p.93 / Chapter APPENDIX E --- HONG KONG STUDENTS IN TAIWAN --- p.98 / Chapter APPENDIX F --- TRAVELLING EXPENSES OF HONG KONG STUDENTS --- p.102 / Chapter APPENDIX G --- ENROLLMENTS AND EXPENDITURE OF HONG KONG UNIVERSITIES --- p.104 / BIBLIOGRAPHY --- p.106
468

An evaluation study of the instructional media programs in colleges and universities in Arkansas

Leverett, Ronald Earl January 2010 (has links)
Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
469

Analysis of recreation and park curricula and professionals in Kansas

Widuta, Stephen January 2011 (has links)
Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
470

The idea of the university in Australia in the 1990s.

Sinclair-Jones, Janet A. January 1996 (has links)
Over the past ten years Australian higher education has undergone a transformation from a binary structure, marked by a division of 'traditional universities' and colleges of advanced education, to a uniform university structure. This transformation was first proposed in 1987 by the Hon. John Dawkins, Minister for Employment, Education and Training in the Hawke Labor Government. The proposals appeared in the form of a 'Green' policy discussion paper which drew substantial amounts of criticism from the academy, but nonetheless were swiftly transformed into policy as a 'White' paper or policy statement. Since that time, Australian higher education institutions have been subject to a series of changes that have fundamentally changed the patterns of tertiary education provision established over the previous forty years. They have experienced a re-allocation of research funds which has eroded the established advantage of the traditional universities; they have been obliged to accept amalgamations; and, student numbers have expanded at a rate and to a proportion never previously imagined. All of this has been achieved under the banner of improving Australia's place in the highly competitive international economy. The champions of a restructured higher education sector have argued that this competitiveness is greatly dependent upon Australia's ability to improve the scientific and technical base of its human capital: higher education must move towards a more efficient and effective provision of education which will meet the needs of the market.The transformation of higher education has been achieved without the unanimous blessing of the academy. Many of the most strident critics of what have come to be known as the Dawkins Reforms are academics who have expressed dismay at these changes. In particular there has been as strongly argued case that the reforms, with their ++ / emphasis on science and technology, mark the end of liberal education in Australia. Australian higher education is now, they declare, the site of mass education based upon a new instrumentalism in which the liberal arts have no significant place.This dissertation takes such criticisms as its focus. In particular it attempts to show that the critique founded upon a defence of the inherent role of liberal education in the Australian university sector has been misguided. Furthermore, the dissertation argues that because so much of the attack on the restructuring policy took this form there was little place for a substantial critical appraisal of the validity of restructuring based upon an imperative of the market.The idea of the university in Australia as one fundamentally defined by liberal education is examined at two levels. First, it is argued that the notion of liberal education used to defend the university against new instrumentalism is an idealised notion which both ignores the historical construction of such an idea at a time when liberalism itself was undergoing transformation, and, wrongly assumes the absence of instrumentalism, within it. Second, the history of the establishment of the university in Australia is reviewed to show that whilst the founders of the universities often had sympathies for the liberal arts, from the outset Australian universities were consistently conditioned by the drive for instrumental education.Higher education policies in the post-WWII era are given particular attention in order to show that mass higher education is no new phenomenon, but the continuation of the drive towards expanded education provision. Just as with the expansion of schooling to mass schooling, a greatly expanded higher education sector has been necessary to fulfil the continued demands of the social democratic consensus. The thesis concludes with the argument ++ / that the critique of higher education reforms has been hobbled by the absence of a critical sociology of education which could place the restructuring of Australian higher education in the context of the transformation of social to market democracy.

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