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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.
1

Tao Fong Shan Christian Centre : a sustainable landscape development /

Fan, Tak-lai, Terry. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (M.L.A.)--University of Hong Kong, 1995. / Includes special study report entitled: Solar applications to landscape design. Includes bibliographical references.
2

Tao Fong Shan Christian Centre a sustainable landscape development /

Fan, Tak-lai, Terry. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (M.L.A.)--University of Hong Kong, 1995. / Includes special study report entitled : Solar applications to landscape design. Includes bibliographical references. Also available in print.
3

Transitions institutionnelles et professionnalisation des enseignants : le cas du « tutorat partagé » comme révélateur des organisateurs de l'activité du formateur / Institutional transitions and professionalisation of the teachers : the case of the « shared tutoring » like revealing of the organizers of the activity of the trainer

Seguy, Emmanuel 22 January 2018 (has links)
Notre recherche vise à expliquer et comprendre la manière dont 3 formateurs chevronnés parviennent, à travers le développement de leur activité, à "absorber" des prescriptions issues d’un nouveau paradigme de professionnalisation, à l’origine d’une discontinuité culturelle. Comment dans ce contexte, parviennent-ils à mettre en place un nouveau dispositif, le "tutorat partagé" entre l’ESPE et les établissements scolaires, considéré comme un des piliers de cette nouvelle réforme et de la formation en alternance ?En reposant sur une méthodologie interventionniste, les résultats de cette recherche montrent la nécessité, pour ces trois formateurs expérimentés, de faire appel à leur expérience afin de trouver les compromis nécessaires leur permettant d’être efficaces « malgré tout ». Nous montrons comment ils dégagent un certain nombre d’implications au niveau de la formation, notamment en passant par une phase de transition professionnelle, correspondant à un usage débutant du genre formateur leur permettant une plus grande maîtrise de la situation et l’obtention d’un confort relatif. Prendre au sérieux la permanence du changement à l’œuvre dans les prescriptions adressées aux formateurs, nous conduira à dégager des conditions d’un accompagnement plus efficient propres à les aider à traverser des périodes de transition complexes. C’est à travers la création d’un milieu de travail "extra-ordinaire" sur le travail ordinaire que nous visons à faire des différentes pratiques de "tutorat partagé", fondé sur l’inter-métier de formateurs aux statuts différents, un objet de controverses professionnelles afin d’accroître les ressources mobilisables et le pouvoir d’agir des intéressés. / Our research aims at explaining and at including how three experienced trainers, through the development of their activity, succeed in "absorbing" prescriptions arising from a new paradigm of professionalisation, at the origin of a cultural discontinuity. How do they manage to set a new device, the "shared tutoring" between the ESPE and the schools, in this context, considered as one of the pillars of this new reform and of work-linked training courses ?Based on an interventionist methodology, the results of this research show the need, for these three experienced trainers, to use their experience to find compromises necessary to be effective "despite everything". We show how they have a number of training implications, in particular through a professional transition phase, corresponding to a beginner use of the trainer type, allowing them a greater control of the situation and the procurement of a relative comfort. Taking into account the permanence of the change in work in the prescriptions addressed to the trainers will lead us to identify the conditions of a more efficient support capable of helping them through complex transition periods. It is through the creation of an “extraordinary” work environment on the ordinary work that we aim to make various practices of "shared tutoring", based on inter-trade of the different trainers, an object of professional controversies in order to increase the mobilizable resources and the power to act of the interested parties.
4

An evaluation of community participation in the integrated development planning (IDP) process : a case study of Umzumbe Municipality in the province of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa

Khawula, Bhekuyise Mhawukelwa Sixtus January 2016 (has links)
Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the Master’s Degree in Public Management, Department of Public Management & Economics, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2016. / In order to eradicate the legacy of the apartheid past, the South African democratic government adopted a development approach to local government. This necessitated a commitment on the part of local government, through the Integrated Development Plan (IDP), to facilitating community participation by finding ways to meet economic, social and material needs, as well as improving quality of life. The IDP can only be well received and implemented if there is an effective public participation process to ensure that the needs and aspirations of the people are met. This research focused primarily on evaluating community participation in the IDP process through the use of the case study of Umzumbe Municipality in the KwaZulu-Natal province. Furthermore, the research answers the following questions: to what extent do communities participate in the IDP process?; what were the challenges facing communities with regard to participation in the IDP process?; and what was the role of ward councillors and ward committees in promoting community participation in the IDP process? In order to answer these questions, an empirical study was conducted using quantitative research methodology. The case study approach was used in this study in order to obtain detailed views of respondents and issues relating to the objectives of the study. Using the quantitative research methodology, the study employed a questionnaire to collect information linked to community participation. Three hundred and ninety respondents from ten wards in the local municipality were randomly sampled. In addition, ten ward councillors were requested to participate in the study in order to explore the factors influencing community participation in the study area. The questionnaires were developed and approved by the Durban University of Technology’s ethics committee before the commencement of the study. Data was then collected. The results of the study, conclusions and recommendations are provided in a way that will enable the reader to draw his or her own conclusions on the value of this study. The study was worth undertaking since the challenges of community participation for local economic development and the IDP enhance service delivery. The results of the study should expand the knowledge base of rural community participation in the IDP process in Umzumbe Municipality. The findings of this study should benefit the municipality by highlighting the challenges of community involvement in the IDP process. The envisaged outcome of this study is the development of a theoretical framework for rural community participation in the IDP process in local government. Findings from the study point to the profusion of poor or non-participation of the community in the IDP process. The study shows sour relationship between ward councillors, ward committee members and community members. Based on the findings of the study, the following recommendations have been made: upgrade levels of education/capacity development for ward councillors, ward committee members and community members; poverty alleviation and economic development to create employment; encourage youth and adults to engage in public forums; encourage the involvement of all stakeholders in the identification of development initiatives; co-ordination and information sharing sessions; and systems of monitoring and evaluation should be put in place to monitor community participation in the IDP process, with guidelines for the implementation of community participation initiatives. / M

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