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The individually completed activity moduleGoodwin, Cliff January 1979 (has links)
The major work involved is the debugging procedure on the Varian Model V-21003 electromagnet, power supply and spectrometer and the design and construction of supporting structure to house the various pieces of apparatus which were required to complete the system.Equipment which was not immediately available was then designed and constructed, with the final step being the testing. of the entire system for its integrity.Adjustments to each component was then carried out to obtain the best signal possible, noting the various changes caused by the condition and setting of each section of the system.
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Industrial arts curriculum project for the Thomas Butcher Children's School of Kansas Teachers College, Emporia, KansasAshbaugh, Norman Ray January 1972 (has links)
This study was concerned with developing an innovative program for the Thomas Butcher Children's School of Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia, Kansas.A survey was made of the known innovative programs, with an in-depth comparison of similarities and dissimilarities of the three most notorious programs: The Industrial Arts Curriculum Project, The American Industries Project, and The Maryland Plan, and of the three most recent books directed toward elementary industrial arts: Teaching Elementary Industrial Art, Teaching Children About Technology, and Elementary School Industrial Arts, relative to rationale, objectives, and structure.The suggested program began with a definition of Industrial Arts for elementary education, followed by the rationale, objectives and structure. Communications was to receive the major emphasis at the Kindergarten level; transportation at the first grade level; shelter at the second grade level; clothing at the third and fourth grade level; and foods at the fifth and sixth grade level, although each could not be limited to any one grade level. Units under each category were followed by room preparation, minimal tool list, and material media suggestions.
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The development of text material, visual aids, and exercises for teaching electrical discharge machining at secondary and post secondary levelWilliams, George V. January 1975 (has links)
This creative project has simplified technical information concerning electrical discharge machining so that it may be better understood by secondary vocational and post-secondary students. The material has been collected from sources including manufacturers of electrical discharge machines, industrial personnel, industrial educators from vocational schools and universities, and technical papers from trade magazines. It has been written for the secondary vocational student at a reading level that he should be able to comprehend.Included in the text are drawings which can be used to make transparencies, exercises that can be adapted to the different types of EDM machines, and a glossary of EDM terms.
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The effects of posture, time, and attitude on the ideational fluency of student draftsmenFerris, Michael H. January 1971 (has links)
The purpose of the study was to determine the effects of body posture, task time, and attitudes toward drawing and problem-solving on the ideational fluency of two experimental groups and one control group of student draftsmen. The drawings produced were assessed on the basis of the quantity and quality of ideas generated during a specific drawing task.Five major questions were under investigation. Hypotheses were developed to determine whether significant differences existed (1) in the quantity or quality of ideational fluency between the three groups; (2) in the groups' attitudes toward drawing and problem-solving or their background experiences in art and teaching; (3) between the judges' responses to a series of fifteen bipolar scales which were used to assess judge strategies; (4) between the rate of idea generation for' any group; (5) in the interaction between time interval and posture for any group. Drawings produced for a forty-five minute task session and responses to a two-part questionnaire designed for the study provided the data. A team of five expert judges individually rated the quantity and quality of production of a seven-point scale and responded to the drawings via fifteen bipolar scales of the semantic differential type.A random sample of fifty-seven subjects was drawn from a population of seventy-three students enrolled in three sections of a personal development course in art for non-art elementary education majors. Sections were randomly assigned to experimental and control groups.The statistical treatments employed were: (1) One-way analyses of variance were computed to determine whether variances were in effect for (a) the groups' responses to the questionnaire, (b) groups' quantitative production, and (c) groups' qualitative production. (2) A two-way analysis of variance was computed to determine whether any variances occurred between the groups' production rates for nine time intervals and to test interaction between interval and group. (3) T tests for unequal means were used to determine which between group comparison(s) contributed to differences obtained for (a) quantity and (b) quality of production. (4) Multiple regressions were computed for each judge's quantity and quality ratings with the samples' responses to the questionnaire. (b) Pearson product-moment correlations were obtained for each judge's quantity and quality ratings with his responses to scales of the semantic differential.Significant differences in both the quantity and quality of ideation were found between the groups. The effects of posture and task time, and the interaction effects of time and posture were significant. These effects were confounded, apparently by teacher factors that were not detectable through the questionnaire. The draftsmen rated high on the quantity measure were, for the most part, not the same draftsmen as were rated high on quality.The multiple regression analyses indicated the following factors have significant predictive value for the quantity of ideation: (1) exposure to art programs at the senior high level and exposure to certain college-level art courses; (2) an approach to problem-solving that is neither chaotic nor doggedly systematic; (3) an indication that the draftsman does not react irritably to persons who are more ideationally fluent. These factors had significant predictive value for the quality of ideational fluency: (1) the draftsman's indication that his approach to problem-solving is relaxed and systematic, is not aided by isolated meditation but rather by involvement in other activity; (2) an indication that it is unwise or unproductive to plunge oneself into problem situations; (3) an indication that the draftsman would react both with admiration and irritability to someone more ideationally fluent.
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Manipulative participation in the study of elementary industrial artsGunther, Theresa Charlotte, January 1931 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Columbia University, 1931. / Vita. Published also as Teachers college, Columbia university. Contributions to education, no. 490. Bibliography: p. 58.
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The benefits of elementary-school technology education to children /Foster, Patrick N. January 1997 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 1997. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 197-210). Also available on the Internet.
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Facilities planning for industrial arts teacher training program at the City College of The City University of New York.Kist, Kevin William. January 1970 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Teachers College, Columbia University. / Typescript; issued also on microfilm. Sponsor: Joseph Shannon. Dissertation Committee: William Mahoney. Includes bibliographical references.
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An analysis of southeast Wisconsin's secondary technology education teachers' perceptions on aligning technology education programs with Gateway Technical College's manufacturing and engineering occupational programsAlbrecht, Bryan D. January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ed. Spec.)--University of Wisconsin--Stout, 2007. / Field study. Includes bibliographical references.
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The benefits of elementary-school technology education to childrenFoster, Patrick N. January 1997 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 1997. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 197-210). Also available on the Internet.
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Manipulative participation in the study of elementary industrial artsGunther, Theresa Charlotte, January 1931 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Columbia University, 1931. / Vita. Published also as Teachers college, Columbia university. Contributions to education, no. 490. Bibliography: p. 58.
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