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Study of enrolments and financing of provincial technical and vocational training in Alberta , 1956-1965Campbell, Donald Leslie January 1968 (has links)
Cybernation is a term used in a new context to identify a new era. It is a term that is associated with technical development and productivity. The implications that cybernation bring with it are twofold for the discipline of education. The first task that falls to education is the development of understanding and the identification of values that will enable mankind to benefit from his surroundings. Secondly, men must be trained to work the new machines. It is in connection with the second task of education that this thesis addresses itself. In Alberta, government-directed institutions of training have developed over the years in order to train apprentices, technicians and to provide other vocational training programmes. An outline of the development of each of these levels of training is presented including a tabulation of the number of people who participated in the different levels of training. The summary that is made herein of the number of people trained is in response to the question: What number of people are being trained and what is the per capita cost? The question is not unique to Alberta. It is suspected, however, that answers are not readily available and a review of the literature bears this out.
Technical and vocational training has a history of nearly fifty years in Alberta. The gradual development of facilities through periods of economic crisis, pressures from enrolment, and Federal financial assistance is outlined before the detailed examination of enrolments and costs is presented for the decade commencing in 1956. The number of apprentices in training in 1956 was 2,195. By the year 1965 the number had increased to 4,572. In relative terms the increase was from 1.9 per one thousand population to 3.1. A similar increase was evident in the training of technicians. In 1956 the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology trained 303 technicians. By 1965 the number of technicians in training had increased to 1,701. Of this number, 950 were trained at the new Northern Alberta Institute of Technology. The relative change as measured per one thousand population was from 0.26 to 1.1. The number of persons in other vocational training and non-technical training programmes also increased. The enrolment of 2,379 in 1956 increased to 4,976 in 1965. The relative numbers in training increased from 2.1 per one thousand population to 3.4.
An examination of the financing of apprenticeship, technical, and vocational training reveals that an expenditure by the Province in 1956 of $241.35 was required to train each apprentice. However, the net cost to the Province after reimbursements and adjustments, was $148.63 for each apprentice. In 1965 these figures had increased to $328.39 and $191.88 respectively. The expenditure and cost of training each technician in 1956 was $903.71 and $721.43 increasing to $1,464.25 and $750.75 by 1965. In 1965 the expenditure on each technician at the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology was $1,989.13 and the cost $1,062.70. For other vocational trainees the expenditure made by the Province in 1956 amounted to $143.18 and the cost amounted to $98.35. This had changed by 1965 to a Provincial expenditure of $388.72 and a net cost of $116.82.
The capital expenditure in the form of site, construction, furnishings and equipment for students at all levels of training, over the ten-year period 1956 to 1965, was $241.01. The capital cost was $93.06.
The completion of this study for Alberta creates the need for comparisons. The reference points for enrolments and for costs have been established herein, but these must mark the beginning and not the end. / Education, Faculty of / Educational Studies (EDST), Department of / Graduate
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In the presence of mine enemies : anti-semitism in the Alberta Social Credit PartyStingel, Janine January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
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Farm apprentice to agricultural proletarian : the hired hand in Alberta, 1880-1930Danysk, Cecilia, 1945- January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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Behavior of cumulus turrets in Alberta storms.Balshaw, Michael William January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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Landscape of myths and elsewhereness : West Edmonton MallHopkins, Jeffrey January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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An evaluation of the stated student outcomes of the Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) programUibel, Barbara Marie 11 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the stated student outcomes of the Drug Abuse Resistance Education (D.A.R.E.) program including decreases in positive attitudes toward the use of abusable psychotropics and decreases in the self-reported use of the abusable psychotropics. A multivariate quasi-experimental (pre-test, post-test, post-test) design was used and data were collected measuring student demographics, reported drug use, and drug-related attitudes. Participants were 522 grade five and six students from 44 classrooms. Results indicated that the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program had little lasting effect on drug-related attitudes and reported drug use. The findings are stratified by evaluated risk of substance abuse to determine whether there was a differential effect of the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program on subgroups delineated by risk for abusable psychotropic use. Recommendations are made in relation to the findings of this study with regard to pedagogy, programming and possible factors that inform the decisions about abusable psychotropics among this population.
Although these findings represent conditions and views at the time of data collection and reflected in the initial literature review, they remain relevant as the issues and motivations that inform the decisions that young people make with regard to the use of abusable psychotropics, as reflected in the second literature review, continues to be an area of significant concern. The matter of devising and implementing timely, effective programming to address the complex problem of abusable psychotropic use by young people remains a relevant issue. / Special Education
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Multi-scale habitat selection by mountain caribou in West Central AlbertaSzkorupa, Tara. January 2002 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Alberta, 2002. / Title from p.1 of PDF file. Includes bibliographical references (p. 90-92).
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Microphysical measurements in Alberta thunderstormsMcLeod, J. C. (James Carr) January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
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The McDougall-Segur conglomerate.Anderson, Francis David. January 1951 (has links)
Since the beginning of geological investigation of the Rocky Mountain Geosyncline (1) in southwest Alberta and in southeast British Columbia, the problem of the origin of the lower cretaceous sediments has repeatedly arisen. [...]
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The continuity of hail production in Alberta storms.Williams, Geoffrey Neville. January 1963 (has links)
A study was made in Alberta of the pattern of hailfall from four swath-giving storms, in order to determine whether or not, within the borders of the swath, there existed local hail-free regions. [...]
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