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Factors influencing the success of ethanol production for use in liquid transport fuels in South AfricaChetty, Thamaraveni 06 April 2010 (has links)
Against the backdrop of rising fuel prices and increasing demand for transport fuels, coupled with government’s imperative to reduce high unemployment levels by developing the agricultural sector to support a bio-fuels sector, it was considered necessary to conduct research to determine the factors that would influence the success of bio-ethanol production for use in liquid transport fuels. The literature review highlighted five key factors that were developed into research questions to establish whether these factors are relevant to the South African context and which are considered more important. The research was conducted using a combination of face-to-face interviews and telephonic interviews to gather opinions from 16 subject matter experts in the field of bio-fuels. A questionnaire was used to drill down into each of the factors individually, to determine the importance of that factor as it relates to bio-ethanol production. The findings reveal that the absence of clear and sound government policy poses the biggest hindrance to the establishment of the industry. Furthermore, that agricultural development is a major factor for the success of bio-ethanol production as the industry is dependant on the availability of competitive feed stocks in order to be sustainable. Finally, that job creation is the motivating factor for the establishment of the industry since it addresses a government imperative to reduce unemployment levels in South Africa. / Dissertation (MBA)--University of Pretoria, 2007. / Gordon Institute of Business Science (GIBS) / unrestricted
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The negative impact of learning in English on the cognitive development of second language learners of EnglishNtshangase, Nelisiwe Dolly January 2011 (has links)
A study submitted to the Faculty of Arts in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in the Department of General Linguistics at the University of Zululand, South Africa, 2011. / This study focuses on the negative impact of English on the cognitive development of
second language learners of English. The study was conducted in Empangeni District
(Ngwelezane Ward) in KwaZulu-Natal. The negative impact of English on the
cognitive development of second language learners of English was identified as the
main cause of the high failure rate, especially at matric level. Second language
learners of English in rural and some township schools end up unemployed and not in
tertiary institutions as most teachers are not adequately trained to detect, explain,
diagnose and try to remedy the problems these learners encounter when they are
taught in English.
This study highlights the negative impact of learning in English on the cognitive
development of second language learners of English that result on the high failure rate
in rural and some township schools. Challenges facing the different stakeholders that
are affected by this problem are outlined. Suggestions towards alleviating the negative
impact of English on the cognitive development of second language learners of
English are also provided.
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Nutritive value of fresh sugarcane pith and alkali-treated diffused sugarcane pith for ruminants.James, Lionel Augustus. January 1969 (has links)
No description available.
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Digestible, metabolizable, and net energy values of alkali-treated straw for ruminants.Javed, Abdul Hamid. January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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An economic analysis of the use of sugarcane feed for milk production on small-scale farms in Trinidad.Conrad, Robert George. January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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Effect of type of carbohydrate in sugarcane simulated diets on rumen metabolismPathirana, Kumarasiri K. January 1978 (has links)
Note:
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Nutritive studies on the basic cereal grains,: studies on the individual reactions of pullets fed rations containing a relatively large quantity of a single cereal grain.Riseman, Henry Frank 01 January 1936 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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A Contrastive Study of the Speech Act of Refusal; Iranian ESL Learners and Native English Speaking AmericansKazemi Zadeh Gol, Narges 14 June 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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THE VOCABULARY OF EXTENSIVE READING: A CORPUS ANALYSIS OF GRADED READERSKramer, Brandon, 0000-0003-3910-0810 08 1900 (has links)
The importance of input on language learning cannot be overstated. One method of providing input to learners at a level that is appropriate for them is called extensive reading, in which learners read an abundance of texts. In practice, for learners of English as a second or foreign language, these texts are often books that have been written and classified into a particular difficulty level, called graded readers. Previous studies of the language in these texts have been limited in size and scope, often including books from a single publisher or series. However, if these books are meant to serve as the primary source of input for students in extensive reading programs, it is important to not only better understand the language in them, but to understand how the books within different series and made by different publishers compare with one another. Therefore, in this study I investigated the single- and multiword expressions present in graded readers for three purposes.First, I wished to better understand the difficulty of the texts by analyzing the vocabulary within them and learning how much vocabulary knowledge is required to reach 95% and 98% lexical coverage thresholds. Second, I wished to investigate the multi-word expressions (MWE) present in graded readers to better understand what MWEs students are exposed to when reading these books. Third, I investigated how the use of MWEs differs between graded readers at each level of text difficulty, as defined by reading levels defined by the Extensive Reading Foundation (ERF).
In order to address these problems, I utilized a large corpus of 1,872 graded readers containing 16,448,662 tokens. Using this corpus, I calculated the coverage figures for all texts within each level to determine the vocabulary required to reach 95 and 98% levels of coverage. These coverage figures were calculated using two kinds of lists, frequency- and difficulty-based, each meant to represent learner word knowledge. The frequency-based lists were the New General Service List (New GSL; Brezina & Gablasova, 2015), another list by the same name, which I refer to as the NGSL (Browne, 2014), and Nation’s BNC/COCA list (2020) based on the British National Corpus (BNC) and the Corpus of Contemporary American English (COCA). The difficulty-based list was the Scale of English Word Knowledge–Japanese (SEWK-J), a word list designed to estimate vocabulary difficulty for Japanese learners of English (Mizumoto et al., 2021; Pinchbeck, 2019).
The results of the single-word analyses showed that graded readers start to be become available at the minimum 95% threshold of known vocabulary of around the 1,700 rank in the lemma-based New GSL, the 1,250 rank for the flemma-based NGSL, and the first 1,000-word level for the level-6 word family-based BNC/COCA lists (based on the 25th percentiles for ERF level 1 using those lists). Studying beyond those ranks and levels should give students access to a wide range of graded readers, both at the 95% and 98% coverage thresholds, unless using the New GSL, which was much more limited in its ability to provide coverage. The median rank needed for sufficient coverage rises with each ERF level, no matter what list is used. There is also considerable overlap between levels, allowing learners to move between levels easily, as far as lexical requirements are concerned. These findings indicate that ERF levels incrementally guide learners towards more and more authentic language and texts. Similarly, the SEWK-J provides coverage of the majority of books, making it suitable for comparing a wide range of books together under the same framework. Differences between ERF levels in the SEWK-J ranks required to reach 95% and 98% were more less noticeable than those for the pedagogically focused frequency-based lists.
Next, I investigated the degree to which publisher-declared headword counts are representative of the number of headwords in each graded reader. Using the headword ranges provided by publishers tends to overestimate the number of word types needed for 95% coverage, except at the lowest ERF level. If 98% coverage is expected, then a general trend towards underestimation was found at the lowest ERF levels.
Following up on these single-word analyses, I then investigated the MWEs within the graded reader corpus to produce a list of the most frequent MWEs, which I compared with a large comparison corpus, the COCA. These results indicated that graded readers are a good source of 2-, 3-, 4-, and 5-grams, with more occurring in graded readers than the COCA.
Next, I examined the degree to which the most useful MWEs were included, defined as being MWEs in the Phrasal Expressions List (PHRASE) (Martinez & Schmitt, 2012) list and Phrasal Verbs Pedagogical List (PHaVE) (Garnier & Schmitt, 2015). Graded readers tended to include the most pedagogically important MWEs and phrasal verbs at all ERF levels. Those PHRASE and PHaVE list items that were most common in the large reference corpora used in their creation were also found to be most common in the GRC, suggesting that graded readers are a good source of comprehensible input using these forms.
Finally, using studies of L2 speaking and writing at different levels of proficiency as a guide (Siyanova-Chanturia & Spina, 2020; Tavakoli & Uchihara, 2020), I conducted an exploratory investigation into whether MWE usage in graded readers follows similar trajectories as graded reader difficulty levels increase. It was found that 2-grams that are infrequent and strongly associated in unsimplified text tend to become more common as ERF levels increase. / Applied Linguistics
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Mental Imagery as a Substitute for Parallel Sensory Input in the Field of SLAMacBride, Claire Ann, MacBride 14 December 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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