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An analysis of the SmartPay Program at the U.S. Army Communications Electronics CommandEmbrey-Jones, Gloria J. 12 1900 (has links)
This research examines the use of the Government-wide credit card program, SmartPay, at the U. S. Armyαs Communications Electronics Command (CECOM), Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. The primary intent is to establish whether the program has attained the objectives established by regulatory guidance. It identifies the basic processes/procedures with use of the card and evaluates how CECOM and tenant activities have embraced this acquisition reform initiative. This thesis identifies the benefits and any drawbacks that cardholders and Approving Officials have encountered while using the card. The conclusions based on this research are that credit card implementation at Fort Monmouth has been successful and is an effective method of decentralizing acquisition. Research results confirm that while there is an apparent need for follow-up training, the management controls are in place and effective to prevent misuse and/or abuse of the credit card. Finally, recommendations include development of a follow-up training program for all cardholders, increasing usage of credit card as a payment vehicle on established contracts, designating a champion for the program and re-examining the need for credit card purchases to be entered into the Material Acquisition Processing System. / Naval Postgraduate School author (civilian)
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An analysis of the SmartPay Program at the U.S. Army Communications Electronics Command/Embrey-Jones, Gloria J. January 2001 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S. in Contract Management) Naval Postgraduate School, December 2001. / "December 2001." Thesis Advisor(s): Cuskey,, Jeffrey R ; Mihalek, Edward W. Includes bibliographical references (p. 173-178). Also available online.
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Academic skills and linguistic power : negotiating a syllabus for the acquisition of multi-faceted litaracies in English / Muchativugwa Liberty HoveHove, Muchativugwa Liberty January 2012 (has links)
From a purposive sample of thirty (30) previously disadvantaged learners sponsored by the
Telkom Foundation and currently enrolled at an elite private secondary school in South
Africa. this study unde1iook a baseline survey of the participants writing and comprehension
skills. The pen and pencil survey. including a questionnaire, identified their competency
levels and the gaps in the participants· language skills.
Over a three-year period. the study examined and extended the participants· writing styles in
their comprehension and composition scripts on three genres - expository, narrative and
descriptive. From the three genre texts, it was established that their sentence structures ranged
from the simple, compound to the complex variety. Using the Hypotaxis Index as a
quantitative measure to analyse the written texts, which is the cow1t of subordinated clauses.
appropriate linking devices and the successful co-ordination of ideas in sentences calculated
as a percentage of the total clauses making the composition. it was established that the higher
the Hypotaxis Index, the more accomplished and successful the writing (Horning, 1998:
Balfour, 2007; Allison, 2002). Discursive and expository compositions that displayed the
characteristics of appropriately projected thoughts, and an awareness of the perceived
audience, were more successful than those that relied on simple subject and verb concord
sentence structures.
A major challenge in the analysis of the compositions stemmed from incidents where
incomplete clauses were used, with no evident subject-verb pattern or concord. There were
also some relatively successful compositions that depended on simple and compound
sentence structures only.
It was derived from this three-year longitudinal study that an attempt to improve the writing
quality and strength of the secondary school learners would be through a deliberate focus on
dc,·eloping their cognitive academic literacy (CALP) skills through the design. development
and implementation of a task-based syllabus based on the specifications of Breen ( 1999).
Long and Crookes (2006) and the ecological factors of the International School of South
Africa. Explicit grammar instruction, particularly the structural patterning of the sentences
that learners used in their writing. v•as decided upon as a practical reinforcement for language
skills that the learners needed in order to develop academic literacy proficiency skills in
English. The Hypotaxis Index, if correctly calculated, should be a significant indicator of
what intervention could be effected in order to improve learner's skills. / Thesis (PhD.(English) North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 2012
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Predictors of novel inflection learning by preschool-aged boysNakamura, Monica, 1965- January 1989 (has links)
Twenty normally developing boys between the ages of 4:4 (years:months) and 5:7 were presented with stories designed to teach novel vocabulary and morphological inflections. A multiple regression analysis assessed the extent to which selected verbal and nonverbal skills contributed to the prediction of their performance on the inflection stories (INFL). Current inflection skills, as measured by the Grammatic Closure subtest of the Illinois Test of Psycholinguistic Abilities, accounted for nearly half of the INFL variance. In addition, performance on a posttest of vocabulary learning significantly (p .05) contributed to the prediction of INFL performance. None of the three nonverbal measures was a significant contributor, although closer analysis of these findings indicates that the relationship between nonverbal rule learning and inflection learning warrants further investigation. The results suggest that inflection learning is a language-specific phenomenon more tied to vocabulary skills than to nonverbal cognitive skills.
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Evaluating learning gain in a self-access language learning centre case studies of six low proficiency students /Law, Yuen-yi. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Hong Kong, 2009. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 70-80).
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The relationship between auditory discrimination and oral production of Spanish sounds in children and adults / Auditory discrimination and oral production of Spanish sounds.Rosenman, Alba Alicia Lipkin January 1981 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate the question of age in relation to second language learning aptitude. Foreign language proficiency involves many skills; two of these skills are listening and speaking. This study tested an aspect of listening, auditory discrimination, and an aspect of speaking, oral production. Both tests were given to a group of children and a group of adults to determine if both tests taken together would show one group to have a higher foreign language aptitude than the other group.Both tests were constructed for this study. The auditory discrimination test consisted of 22 minimal word pairs which differed by one distinctive feature; 8 minimal word pairs which had no differences were used as control items. Subjects listened to the pairs and answered "same" or "different." The oral production test consisted of 40 words which each subject heard twice and repeated once into a microphone. Both tests were recorded; the answers to the auditory discrimination test were recorded by the examiner, and the answers to the oral production test were recorded on tape and later evaluated by trained judges.A group of 50 children and a group of 50 adults participated in the study. Children were defined as first graders, and adults were defined as twelfth graders. Subjects were randomly chosen from the total first-grade population of 898 and the total twelfth grade population of 909 from the Muncie Community Schools in Muncie, Indiana. Fifteen elementary schools and three high schools were involved in the study. All subjects were native speakers of English and the language used for testing was Spanish. All subjects were tested individually.A two group multivariate analysis of variance was used to compare the vector of means of both tests for one group with the vector of means of both tests for the other group. Following a determination of significance, a univariate analysis of variance was used to determine the relative contribution of each measure to the overall results. A post hoc modified Hotelling's critical T2 was used to determine a more conservative value of T. The relationship between the two measures in this study was determined by a Pearson product-moment correlation.A moderate correlation between the two measures was found indicating some connection between auditory discrimination and oral production. These measures are conceptually related, but somewhat independent aspects of foreign language perception.While it was hypothesized that children would perform much better than adults, it was the adults who performed significantly better on both tests. The multivariate analysis of variance indicated that with both tests taken together, adults were superior in auditory discrimination and oral production. A univariate analysis indicated that adults also performed better on each test than the children. The null hypothesis, that there is no difference between groups, was rejected at the .0001 level.The findings of this study support the idea that adults, because of their cognitive advantage and maturity, are more efficient and successful in these two aspects of foreign language learning. Children did not exhibit the facility in foreign languages which early foreign language learning advocates have postulated.A number of studies which bypassed age as a critical factor in foreign language performance attributed differences between language learners to affective and environmental factors and to individual differences. In the experiment, the adults as a group performed significantly better than the children, but certain children as individuals were excellent in their performance just as certain adults as individuals were poor in their performance. However, the data from this study indicated that adults were generally superior to children on measures of auditory discrimination and oral production of foreign language sounds.
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On some Markovian Salvo combat modelsNeo, Say Beng. January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S. in Operations Research)--Naval Postgraduate School, December 2008. / Thesis Advisor(s): Kress, Moshe; Szechtman, Roberto. "December 2008." Description based on title screen as viewed on January 28, 2009. Includes bibliographical references (p. 55-56). Also available in print.
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Syntactic differences in maternal speech to prelinguistic infants at six months and ten monthsCuster, Deborah Ann. January 1983 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1983. / Typescript. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 36-40).
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The adult second language learners' requests for clarification a cross-sectional study /Chiang, Chi-pang. January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1982. / Typescript. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 53-57).
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A theory of automatic language acquisition /Cheung, Siu-nang, Bruce. January 1994 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hong Kong, 1994. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 198-205).
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