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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.
11

The History of the Denton County Electric Co-operative, Incorporated

Grundy, James Welton 01 1900 (has links)
This study seeks to examine the history of the Denton County Electric Co-operative and the Rural Electrification Administration, as well as the effect they had on electrifying rural agriculture sites.
12

Determining the Applicability of the Cognitive Orientation to daily Occupational Performance (CO-OP) as a Meta-Cognitive Rehabilitation Strategy for Individuals with Cognitive Impairment in Parkinson’s Disease

Bryden Dueck, Catherine 20 September 2016 (has links)
Purpose: This study aimed to understand the effects of the Cognitive Orientation to daily Occupational Performance (CO-OP) on successful engagement in desired occupations (goals), health-related quality of life, and caregiver stress for individuals with Parkinson’s Disease (PD)-related cognitive impairment and their caregivers. Methods: A mixed methods single-subject design was used. Quantitative and qualitative data were combined to gain a comprehensive understanding of results. Results: Participants successfully engaged in all three trained goals and both untrained goals, generalized CO-OP strategies to perform trained goals outside of treatment sessions, and transferred CO-OP strategies to perform untrained goals independently. Conclusions: Individuals with PD-related cognitive impairment are capable of successfully engaging in self-selected treatment goals that are trained during CO-OP sessions, generalizing CO-OP strategies they have learned in treatment in order to perform the same goals outside of treatment, and transferring CO-OP strategies in order to perform untrained goals independently. / October 2016
13

Green Beans - The Neighborhood Co-Op, Cooking, and Nutritional Living Center

Ricketts, Amee 01 January 2008 (has links)
Taking the time to learn how to eat healthfully and prepare nutritious meals has become a problem in today's modern living. 66 percent of American adults are overweight and 19 percent of American children are overweight1. Constrained by the demands of work, raising families, and other daily commitments leaves little time for taking care of one's nutritional needs in a simple, healthy, and efficient manner. This thesis strives to achieve a well designed neighborhood center that warmly invites customers to learn about the importance of nutrition and the effects our food choices have on our overall health, how to shop for healthy food choices, and the preparation of weekly meals in a friendly, non-intimidating environment. Customers will also have the opportunity to seek nutritional counseling advice, attend cooking classes, and participate in weekly meal preparation activities.
14

Analys och beräkning av konsignationsmaterial i pall hos Parker Hannifin AB i Trollhättan

Lingbrand, Johan January 2009 (has links)
<p>Parker Hannifin AB i Trollhättan ingår i en koncern som består av 263 fabriker med över 50 000 anställda. Med 300 anställda produceras, utvecklas och säljs huvudkomponenterna i mobila hydraulsystem. Parker i Trollhättan har konstruerat och tillverkat fasta pumpar och motorer för lastvagnar sedan 1980-talet.</p><p>Genom att eliminera aktiviteter som inte är värdeskapande och införa nya system strävar Parker efter att uppnå kortare ledtider, minskat bundet kapitel och ständiga förbättringar. Orsaken till att Parker vill införa konsignation är att det innebär många fördelar. Fördelarna är bland annat minskad administration, minskat bundet kapital och ökad tillgänglighet av detaljer.</p><p>Examensarbetet visar att den största vinsten med konsignationslager för kunden är att det eliminerar flera delar av flödet mellan avtal till betalning. Delar som elimineras är avropsarbete, fysisk mottagning, mottagningsrapport, lagerbokföring, fakturaregistrering, fakturakontroll samt materialrekvisition. För leverantören är vinsten att fritt kunna planera försörjningen till kunden efter sin egen kapacitet. Samtidigt lagras materialet kostnadsfritt hos kunden, Parker i Trollhättan.</p><p>Detaljerna ägs av leverantören då de ligger på lager hos Parker. Resultatet av examensarbetet visar att ägandet av material bör övergå till Parker då arbetsordern avrapporteras. Detaljernas lastbärare består av hel-pallar, där pallarna märks upp av en pallflagga. I examensarbetet har en pallflagga för konsignation skapats. Pallflaggan upplyser om att pallen innehåller konsignationsmaterial som ägs av leverantören. Informationsflödet är tydligt eftersom en fraktsedel skickas med det skickade materialet till Parker. Fraktsedeln kontrolleras med följesedel som fås av leverantören. Information måste också ges ut vid större förändringar i förbrukning så att båda parter känner sig trygga över vad som lagerhålls. Konsignation bygger på ett långsiktigt samarbete och bidrar till en tätare relation mellan företagen. Konsignation innebär en vinna/vinna-situation.</p>
15

Conscious Living: A Look at Two Low-Impact Intentional Communities

Price, Carmen S 07 May 2011 (has links)
Conscious Living is a series of visual solutions to a current and escalating problem in increasingly populated modern societies between its citizens and the environment they inhabit. Documented in the photographs are two dissimilar intentional communities that both strive to operate harmoniously with the surrounding ecology. Originally intending to address the misconception that low impact living is uncomfortable or unsatisfying, this research and my firsthand experience has led to conclusions that are more complex and less didactic. Although the images focus on these two communities, ultimately the intention is to provide the viewer with new perspectives on these niche groups, as well as options to implement low impact alternatives to their lifestyle.
16

Empowerment through co-operation: disability inclusion via multi-stakeholder co-operative development

Soles, Kama 21 September 2010
The disability community is one of the largest minority groups vulnerable to social exclusion and marginalization, too often forced into poverty, unemployment and social isolation through dependence on the state. This is the result of systemic discrimination, and is being challenged by the social model of disability which frames disability as a political creation: it proposes that barriers, prejudice, and exclusion created by society (purposely or inadvertently) are the ultimate factors defining disability. The social model empowers people with disabilities to dismantle barriers so they have choice, flexibility, and control to gain the dignity, autonomy, equality, and solidarity associated with human rights and citizenship, and calls for research that takes an emancipatory approach and has a political commitment to confront oppression and exclusion. This interdisciplinary Masters thesis looks at the ways co-operatives can be vehicles for inclusion and empowerment for the disability community. It looks particularly at the multi-stakeholder model of co-operative, which is especially promising for the empowerment of the disability community as it brings together different member categories in an appropriate form of interdependence. My research uses case study methodology to explore how socially constructed barriers are the impairment to development in the disability community and to identify successes where informal multi-stakeholder co-operatives have been used to empower people with disabilities through analysis on four dimensions: how consumer-controlled the co-op is, use of multi-stakeholder alliances, promotion of the social model of disability, and ability to promote economic inclusion and social solidarity. The disability community needs new opportunities for empowerment and community development to overcome disadvantage and marginalization, and this thesis explores the potential of multi-stakeholder co-operatives, vis-à-vis the social model of disability, to do this. This research will help shape policies needed to foster social inclusion to empower people with disabilities and build disability solidarity through co-operative development.
17

Analys och beräkning av konsignationsmaterial i pall hos Parker Hannifin AB i Trollhättan

Lingbrand, Johan January 2009 (has links)
Parker Hannifin AB i Trollhättan ingår i en koncern som består av 263 fabriker med över 50 000 anställda. Med 300 anställda produceras, utvecklas och säljs huvudkomponenterna i mobila hydraulsystem. Parker i Trollhättan har konstruerat och tillverkat fasta pumpar och motorer för lastvagnar sedan 1980-talet. Genom att eliminera aktiviteter som inte är värdeskapande och införa nya system strävar Parker efter att uppnå kortare ledtider, minskat bundet kapitel och ständiga förbättringar. Orsaken till att Parker vill införa konsignation är att det innebär många fördelar. Fördelarna är bland annat minskad administration, minskat bundet kapital och ökad tillgänglighet av detaljer. Examensarbetet visar att den största vinsten med konsignationslager för kunden är att det eliminerar flera delar av flödet mellan avtal till betalning. Delar som elimineras är avropsarbete, fysisk mottagning, mottagningsrapport, lagerbokföring, fakturaregistrering, fakturakontroll samt materialrekvisition. För leverantören är vinsten att fritt kunna planera försörjningen till kunden efter sin egen kapacitet. Samtidigt lagras materialet kostnadsfritt hos kunden, Parker i Trollhättan. Detaljerna ägs av leverantören då de ligger på lager hos Parker. Resultatet av examensarbetet visar att ägandet av material bör övergå till Parker då arbetsordern avrapporteras. Detaljernas lastbärare består av hel-pallar, där pallarna märks upp av en pallflagga. I examensarbetet har en pallflagga för konsignation skapats. Pallflaggan upplyser om att pallen innehåller konsignationsmaterial som ägs av leverantören. Informationsflödet är tydligt eftersom en fraktsedel skickas med det skickade materialet till Parker. Fraktsedeln kontrolleras med följesedel som fås av leverantören. Information måste också ges ut vid större förändringar i förbrukning så att båda parter känner sig trygga över vad som lagerhålls. Konsignation bygger på ett långsiktigt samarbete och bidrar till en tätare relation mellan företagen. Konsignation innebär en vinna/vinna-situation.
18

Empowerment through co-operation: disability inclusion via multi-stakeholder co-operative development

Soles, Kama 21 September 2010 (has links)
The disability community is one of the largest minority groups vulnerable to social exclusion and marginalization, too often forced into poverty, unemployment and social isolation through dependence on the state. This is the result of systemic discrimination, and is being challenged by the social model of disability which frames disability as a political creation: it proposes that barriers, prejudice, and exclusion created by society (purposely or inadvertently) are the ultimate factors defining disability. The social model empowers people with disabilities to dismantle barriers so they have choice, flexibility, and control to gain the dignity, autonomy, equality, and solidarity associated with human rights and citizenship, and calls for research that takes an emancipatory approach and has a political commitment to confront oppression and exclusion. This interdisciplinary Masters thesis looks at the ways co-operatives can be vehicles for inclusion and empowerment for the disability community. It looks particularly at the multi-stakeholder model of co-operative, which is especially promising for the empowerment of the disability community as it brings together different member categories in an appropriate form of interdependence. My research uses case study methodology to explore how socially constructed barriers are the impairment to development in the disability community and to identify successes where informal multi-stakeholder co-operatives have been used to empower people with disabilities through analysis on four dimensions: how consumer-controlled the co-op is, use of multi-stakeholder alliances, promotion of the social model of disability, and ability to promote economic inclusion and social solidarity. The disability community needs new opportunities for empowerment and community development to overcome disadvantage and marginalization, and this thesis explores the potential of multi-stakeholder co-operatives, vis-à-vis the social model of disability, to do this. This research will help shape policies needed to foster social inclusion to empower people with disabilities and build disability solidarity through co-operative development.
19

Debt in Swedish Co-op Organizations and Selling Prices : A quantitative study of the effect of debt on cessionprices of co-ops

Binaku, Ifete, Lingbrant, Peter January 2010 (has links)
This study is focused on finding what impact the debt of co-op organizations has on cession prices. This is performed through a quantitative method, using multiple multi-linear regression analysis on a sample of 322 observations of co-op purchases in the inner areas of Stockholm in February 2010. The regressions are also applied to different sub-samples constructed within the observations. Previous theories and research on price fixing, capital structure and market efficiency are discussed in the context of the results. This study also presents a brief discussion on the structure of the Swedish housing market. The results show that the debt-ratios do not significantly affect the cession prices. However, the nominal amount of debt per co-op affects the cession price negatively. The results also show that co-op sizes, the monthly fee and the number of rooms do affect the price significantly. Also, common assumptions about co-ops, such as the idea that new co-op organizations would have more debt than old ones, are explored empirically. The market-to-book-ratio of the observations is also calculated in order to explain the results from the coefficient for booked debt and debt-ratios.
20

The added value of a cooperative education program

Weisz, Miriam S., miriam.weisz@rmit.edu.au January 2002 (has links)
Co-operative education (co-op) is a form of work-integrated-learning that involves university undergraduate students undertaking full-time paid and discipline-related employment as a structured part of their program of study. Co-op programs provide learning opportunities for students that enable them to integrate their work and their academic experiences. Such opportunities, provided that a number of conditions are met, can lead to deep level learning. Deep level learning results when students engage in and interact with the material that they are learning so that the material is integrated into their knowledge and personal understanding. Whether or not deep level learning occurs through co-op, depends on various factors including the learning opportunities provided by co-op employers, the students' own commitment and ability to learn, and the commitment of university staff to support this learning. Insufficient resourcing of co-op programs by universities and ultimately the government places a major constraint on the programs' potential effectiveness in bringing about the desired learning outcomes for students. This is particularly the case in Australia where universities are under enormous pressure of reduced government funding and the long-term sustainability of co-op programs is under threat. In order to justify more funding for co-op programs, it is important to identify and measure the outcomes associated with undertaking co-op. There has been a great deal written about the outcomes of co-op programs and the associated benefits that accrue to the major co-op stakeholders; students, graduates, universities and employers. Most of the measurement of these outcomes has, however, taken place in North America. Furthermore, studies have generally focused on the outcomes for one, or sometimes two, stakeholder groups. The results of many of these studies have been limited by confounding variables and have been very mixed; with some providing evidence that supports co-op and others providing evidence that does not. Little work has been done to estimate the costs associated with running co-op programs. This thesis considered the research question of what is the added value of a cooperative education program. A positivistic paradigm was adopted and empirical measures of learning and employment outcomes were analyzed for co-op compared to non co-op students and graduates. The graduates taking part in the study were matched in an effort to overcome some of the methodological limitations of other studies. The majority of the graduates had completed an Economics, Finance or Commerce degree at one of two major universities located in Melbourne, Australia: one university provides a compulsory co-op program, the other does not. Through the analysis of the learning outcomes of co-op, this study found that co-op led to a reduction in the proportion of students adopting a surface approach to learning. The shift from students adopting a surface approach to students adopting a deep approach to learning as a result of co-op, was not evidenced as strongly as expected. This may have resulted in part, from the lack of funding necessary to provide the level of learning support required to bring about these learning outcomes. There is, however, evidence to suggest that co-op has a significant impact on the academic performance of students and particularly for those whose academic performance pre co-op was low. When employment outcomes for co-op graduates and non co-op graduates were analyzed, it was evident that 90% of co-op graduates, compared to only 19% of non co-op graduates, found discipline-related employment within one month of actively seeking a job. Furthermore, co-op graduates took an average of two weeks to find employment whereas non co-op graduates, with no undergraduate discipline-related work experience, took an average of three-and-a-half months. There is evidence that employers recognized, through increased salaries, the benefit of the co-op year over and above the experience that can be gained from summer placements, traineeships and post co-op discipline-related work. While the starting salary for co-op graduates, was significantly higher than for non co-op graduates, this difference disappeared when both cohorts had the same number of years of industry experience. Even though this result, which is consistent with other studies, appeared not to demonstrate the increased salary advantages associated with co-op, there is another factor that needed to be taken into consideration. The co-op graduates in this study had a range of academic achievements yet their graduate employment outcomes were at least the same as those for the non co-op graduates who were all high academic achievers. The impact that co-op has on the achievement of relevant strategic goals and key performance indicators specified by the co-op university was considered and an estimation was also undertaken of the cost of providing this co-op program over and above the government funding received for its support. It was found that while the co-op program attracted students with the same university entry score as the non co-op program, the non co-op graduates would, with hindsight, have chosen a co-op degree. This suggests that the pool of quality students applying for entry into the university offering co-op programs could be increased with more effective marketing of co-op to secondary school-leavers. Academic progression rates and retention rates, two university key performance indicators, were high for co-op students and co-op was a significant factor in achieving the university objective of graduate employability. While co-op has had a significant impact on the achievement of relevant university goals, it was also found that the university that offers co-op incurs a funding shortfall of approximately $1,300 for every Economics and Finance co-op student. This amounted to a total funding shortfall of $41,600 for the 32 co-op students included in this study. One option that is available to the university to find support for the long-term financial sustainability of co-op programs is to seek a share of the significant cost savings experienced by the two other major stakeholders in a co-op program - the government and the employers of co-op graduates. The estimated savings in graduate recruitment costs as a result of co-op students returning to companies as graduate recruits varied from $1,100 to $3,000 per graduate. This resulted in a total saving of between $19,000 and $51,000 for the 17 Economics and Finance students in this study who returned to their co-op companies as graduate recruits. The impact of co-op on social welfare payments made by the government was also quite significant. It was estimated that co-op led to savings of approximately $15,000 in social welfare payments for every co-op graduate - the total social welfare payments made to all the non co-op graduates being $147,000 higher than the total social welfare payments paid to the co-op graduates included in this study. To achieve these benefits of co-op, the government funds co-op programs at a rate of $1,800 per student. For the 800 RMIT Business students who currently undertake co-op each year, the funding shortfall experienced by RMIT was extrapolated to be $1.04m. The associated saving to graduate employers was estimated to be between $500,000 and $1.37m and the expected saving to the government in social welfare payments was estimated to be over $4m while the total funding of co-op programs for the 800 students by the government was $1.44m. These figures provide a strong case for an increase in the financial support of co-op programs. In conclusion, while there is a need to extend the research into the added benefits of a cooperative education program to a longitudinal study also covering other discipline areas, there is evidence to show that improved academic and employment outcomes occur for co-op graduates compared to non co-op graduates. There is also evidence of significant cost savings that accrue to the Australian Federal Government and to graduate employers as a result of co-op. If these data can be used to transfer resources to the universities that provide these programs then greater efforts can be made to direct the resources in a way that will further enhance the learning and the employment outcomes for co-op graduates.

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