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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.
71

Intermediate text representations in the writing process : their relationship with writing strategy

Thomson, Kenneth January 2000 (has links)
A survey of two hundred and fourteen undergraduates explored the inter-relationship between the writing strategy adopted, the intermediate text representations created, the methods used to create them, the processes performed on them, and their function in the writing process. The sequence of intermediate text representations created was elicited as a progression through a six box grid where each box represented a different type of intermediate text representation that may have been created. This method was found to be valid and a wide variety of routes through the grid were identified that displayed stability, efficacy, and utility in describing writing behaviour. Five stable writing strategies were elicited from a cluster analysis of the undergraduates' responses to a series of questions on their writing behaviour. A fresh sample of forty-nine undergraduates was able to readily identify from the cluster descriptions the strategy they had adopted to complete a similar writing task, and the writing strategies displayed similarities with those identified in other studies. A relationship was found between the adopted writing strategy and the sequence of intermediate text representations created. The intermediate text representations were created by a variety of methods and served a variety of functions including: collecting information, determining the scope of the task, establishing gaps in knowledge, reducing the cognitive load during planning, developing and expanding ideas, organising ideas, summarising points, facilitates translation, and facilitating collaborative writing. A relationship was found between the sequence of intermediate text representations created, and both the reported method of creating an intermediate text representation and the function it served in the writing process. The results have implications for future research on the writing process and for teachers of writing concerned with raising the standard of undergraduate writing. Six recommendations are made regarding the direction and scope of future research.
72

The effectiveness of the Bahrain vocational technical education system in meeting the labour market demands : the case of automobile technicians

Budawas, Bader A. A. January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
73

The FASB Conceptual Framework project 1973-1985 : an analysis

Gore, Pelham January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
74

Food hygiene in public eating places : a comparative study of public and professional perceptions in the Wealden district of East Sussex

Leach, Jeremy Charles January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
75

What has happened to named nursing? : perceptions of the named nurse system

Humphreys, Ann Josephine January 2002 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to explore the previously little researched area of the implementation of the Named Nurse Standard in hospital settings. The Standard formed part of the Government's programme of health service reforms that aimed to enhance the patient experience by having an identified nurse in charge of their care from admission to discharge. Quantitative and qualitative methods were used to identify whether nursing work was organised to facilitate the named nurse concept and the patient's perception of who delivered their care. A case study approach in surgical wards in two NHS trusts enabled comparison of clinical settings with a high adherence to the Standard's criteria and wards with a low adherence. The areas selected for comparison were the methods of organising nursing work, nurses' perceptions of the Named Nurse Standard and the patient's experience of the named nurse role. The results show that, although levels of patient satisfaction were high, this was not associated with care from a named nurse. There was no significant difference between the methods of organising nursing work on the wards in the two adherence categories. Furthermore, the Named Nurse Standard was not fully implemented on any of the wards sampled. The main recommendation of this study is that innovations in nursing practice should be evaluated in a pilot study before being introduced nationally. Areas recommended for future research in the organisation of nursing work include day case units and discharge planning.
76

Corporate lobbying behaviour in the ASB standard-setting process

Georgiou, George January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
77

Accounting issues in international joint ventures in the People's Republic of China

Tang, Qingliang January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
78

Financial consequences of IAS adoption : the case of Jordan

Al-Shiab, Mohammad January 2003 (has links)
Past studies have recognised that a country's accounting system, including disclosure requirements and practice, does not develop in a vacuum but is shaped by a number of influences. Although several studies have been undertaken to identify factors affecting disclosure in various countries including Jordan, disclosure in compliance with all related and relevant International Accounting Standards (IAS), factors influencing disclosure in compliance with IAS and the financial consequences of increased disclosure in compliance with IAS have not been explored. This research therefore has looked at the development of disclosure in compliance with all related and relevant IAS, the factors influencing disclosure in compliance with IAS and the financial consequences of increased disclosure in compliance with IAS in Jordan. The investigation concentrated on the empirical analysis of- 1) The impact of IAS adoption on the Jordanian Industrial Companies (JIC) listed on Amman Stock Exchange (ASE) extent of disclosure over the period 1995-2000, and: 2) The impact of five company-specific factors (company size, audit firm, industry type, profitability, and capital structure) on the extent of disclosure in compliance with IAS of JIC overt he period 1995-2000, and: 3) The financial consequences of adopting IAS, more specifically the impact of adopting IAS on systematic risk, unsystematic risk, risk premium, cost of equity capital, and share price volatility of JIC listed on ASE over the period 1996-2000. The development of accounting reporting and regulations in Jordan in connection with the country economy development was reviewed by highlighting the reasons forced toward adopting the IAS through the Companies Act and Amman Stock Exchange requirements. Such a review provides relevant background to the issue to be investigated in this study. A survey of accounts of 50 JIC over the period 1995-2000 was undertaken to investigate the influence of the IAS on the extent of disclosure in Jordan. In this investigation, the selected companies' extent of disclosure in compliance with the IAS over the years was examined by conducting both parametric and nonparametric tests. The impact of company-specific factors, on the other hand, was assessed by looking at the association between selected factors and the extent of disclosure in compliance with IAS in the annual reports of all JIC that met the criteria required over six differenty ears (1995,1996,1997,1998,1999a, nd2 000). Both univariate (parametric and non-parametric statistics) and multivariate( multiple regression) analyses were carried out in testing the significance of the association. As far as the financial consequences are concerned, the study investigated the impact of adopting the IAS on the JIC systematic risk, unsystematic risk, risk premium, cost of equity capital, and share price volatility over five different years (1996,1997,1998,1999, and 2000). For such an investigation, the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) and the Market Model were employed. In this investigation, the selected companies' systematic risk, cost of equity capital, and share price volatility over the years was examined by conducting both parametric and non-parametric tests. The selected companies' unsystematic risk, however, was investigated by conducting the F-test. In addition, clearly it could be argued that the change in the cost of equity capital as a financial consequence of adopting the IAS might be influenced by other factors, namely: business risk and financial risk. Multivariate (multiple regression) analyses were carried out, therefore, in testing the significance of the association between the cost of equity capital and the extent of disclosure in compliance with IAS after controlling for the variables business risk and financial risk. The study results revealed that although the adoption for the IAS started in the year 1998, the significant change in the extent of disclosure started before that year. As a consequence, it can be seen that there was a drift up in the extent of disclosure regarding the mandatory action in 1998 for implementing the IAS and not a jump up as was expected to be seen. The study has found that JIC were not fully adopting the IAS. Chosen company specific factors, therefore, were tested for possible explanation of the variation in the extent of disclosure in compliance with IAS. The results revealed that there were considerable variations in the extent of disclosure by JIC for each of the six years covered in this study. Company size and, to a lesser extent, audit firm and industry type appear to be the best explanatory variables in explaining differences in the extent of disclosure in compliance with IAS among JIC included in this study over the period 1995-2000 suggesting that JIC have been influenced by company-specific factors. Regarding the financial consequences of adopting the IAS, however, the systematic risk and cost of equity capital, to some extent, was found to be significantly influenced by the extent of disclosure in compliance with IAS of JIC. Such an influence is described as a'cumulative' influence. Whereas, it has not been found that unsystematic risk, and share price volatility was significantly influenced by the adoption of IAS.
79

Strategic performance measurement in organizations :

MingChinda, Noppadol. Unknown Date (has links)
Thesis (DBA(DoctorateofBusinessAdministration))--University of South Australia, 2004.
80

The management of under-performance in a public sector organisation :

Turner, John Bruce. Unknown Date (has links)
Thesis (M Ed)--University of South Australia, [1997?]

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