• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 4778
  • 309
  • 202
  • 189
  • 170
  • 160
  • 160
  • 160
  • 160
  • 160
  • 158
  • 51
  • 42
  • 27
  • 24
  • Tagged with
  • 6720
  • 6720
  • 1547
  • 1494
  • 1469
  • 1417
  • 1236
  • 1233
  • 1022
  • 965
  • 907
  • 903
  • 895
  • 797
  • 530
  • 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.
191

Seeking convergence : workplace identity in the conflicting discourses of the industrial training environment of the 90s : a case study approach

Virgona, Crina January 2002 (has links)
Abstract not available
192

Barriers to strategy implementation : a case study of Air New Zealand

Tan, Yii Teang Unknown Date (has links)
The ability to implement strategies successfully is important to any organisation. Despite the importance of the implementation process within strategic management, this is an area of study often overshadowed by a focus on the strategy formulation process. This thesis concentrates on the strategy implementation process, investigating barriers to strategy implementation. A research framework called the Organisational Minefield was developed to represent the importance of the implementation process to organisations. In contrary to most studies available in strategic management, this research included participants from all levels of the organisation.To identify barriers to strategy implementation, a case study of Air New Zealand was conducted. This involved focussed interviews with 28 participants from the Network and Revenue Management Department of Air New Zealand. Other sources of data such as research articles and secondary company data sources were also used. The findings revealed that: participants from different levels of the organisation have unique perceptions of the implementation process; implementation variables could become roadblocks that undermine the implementation process; these barriers can be overcome if managers are perceptive to the organisation's current situation; and the Organisational Minefield framework presented verified the significance of the role of barriers in the implementation process. The findings add two additional barriers to implementation, namely leadership and power. It was also discovered that the participants acknowledged that these two barriers will impede or enhance the success of Air New Zealand. This was backed by the level of commitment and loyalty shown by the participants, which brought Air New Zealand one step closer to unravelling the mysteries of the implementation process.
193

A case study of how upper-division physics students use visualization while solving electrostatics problems

Browne, Kerry P. 01 August 2001 (has links)
Presented here is a case study of the problem-solving behaviors of upper-division undergraduate physics majors. This study explores the role of visual representations in students' problem solving and provides a foundation for investigating how students' use of visualization changes in the upper-division physics major. Three independent studies were conducted on similar samples of students. At the time of these studies, all of the subjects were junior physics majors participating in the Paradigms in Physics curriculum at Oregon State University. In the first study, we found that while all students had high scores on the Purdue Spatial Visualization Test, the correlation between test scores and their grades in physics was not statistically significant. In the second study (N=5) and the third study (N=15), we conducted think-aloud interviews in which students solved electrostatics problems. Based on the interviews in the third study, we develop a model that describes the process by which students construct knowledge while solving the interview problems. We then use this model as a framework to propose hypotheses about students' problem-solving behavior. In addition, we identify several difficulties students have with the concepts of electric field and flux. In particular, we describe student difficulties that arise from confusing the vector and field line representations of electric field. Finally, we suggest some teaching strategies that may help to assuage the student difficulties we observed. / Graduation date: 2002
194

M & A motives, integration and Benefit Analysis - A Case Study of A Company

Hsieh, Chih-Chang 22 August 2011 (has links)
Abstract In Taiwan, there are many types of real estate business model, due to the threshold of its public offering higher than other industries, making the business case often built using a model of a company's business, so companies can not sustainable. In addition, the cost of land continued to improve and build the company purchased the land fund for improvement, using the pattern of joint ventures to cash flow can not meet the high, so the construction company should consider other business model. This research will use case study method will be A company as the case study, the merger into the real estate industry over the past two years, in order to have acquired companies to achieve sustainable development the idea of public companies, this study will focus on merger¡¦s motivation, the subject matter of the filter acquisition, merger integration process and the synergy of the merger case analysis. Based on interviews and case study, this study proposes the following management implications. First, the success of mergers and acquisitions, the acquirer of the personality traits of its M & A decision-making process. Second, a critical success factor in this case, including: targeted, no time pressure, set the merger conditions, actively funding and personnel issues. Third, the merger synergies in the case show the business model into a public company and increase the convenience of obtaining funds, but also enhances the growth force of the future development of enterprises. Keywords: mergers and acquisitions, synergy, case studies
195

A collection of case studies for verification of reservoir simulators

Li, Xue, active 2012 03 February 2014 (has links)
A variety of oil recovery improvement techniques has been developed and applied to the productive life of an oil reservoir. Reservoir simulators have a definitely established role in helping to identify the opportunity and select the most suitable techniques to optimum improvement in reservoir productivity. This is significantly important for those reservoirs whose operating and development costs are relatively expensive, because numerical modeling helps simulate the increased oil productivity process and evaluates the performance without undertaking trials in field. Moreover, rapid development in modeling provides engineers diverse choices. Hence the need for complete and comprehensive case studies is increasing. This study will show the different characteristics of in-house (UTCOMP and GPAS) and commercial simulators and also can validate implementation and development of models in the future. The purpose of this thesis is to present a series of case studies with analytical solutions, in addition to a series of more complicated field cases studies with no exact solution, to verify and test the functionality and efficiency of various simulators. These case studies are performed with three reservoir simulators, including UTCOMP, GPAS, and CMG. UTCOMP and GPAS were both developed at the Center for Petroleum and Geosystem Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin and CMG is a commercial reservoir simulator developed by Computer Modelling Group Ltd. These simulators are first applied to twenty case studies with exact solutions. The simulation results are compared with exact solutions to examine the mathematical formulations and ensure the correctness of program coding. Then, ten more complicated field-scale case studies are performed. These case studies vary in difficulty and complexity, often featuring heterogeneity, larger number of components and wells, and very fine gridblocks. / text
196

Surviving with conflicting institutional demands: a case study of government-run non-governmentalorganizations in China

Zhang, Yinxian., 张尹霰. January 2013 (has links)
To understand what makes organizations alike, neo-institutional scholars explore institutional demands and argue that organizations become isomorphic because specific legitimacy demands in their institutional environments require organizations to comply with given rules and norms. But, what if the institutional demands in the given environment conflict with one another? In response to this question, extant literature recognizes the existence of conflicting institutional demands and studies organizational responses to such demands. However, prior studies on conflicting demands tend to explore organizations with a single identity in a specific field. In extension, this study pays attention to organizations that possess conflicting identities across different sectors. Applying an ethnographic approach, this study takes an in-depth look at government-run non-governmental organization (GONGO) and addresses three research questions: first, how does an organization with conflicting identities come into being? Second, what conflicting demands does such organization encounter? Third, how does such an organization respond to those demands? This study collects data through three months of fieldwork in two GONGOs located in Beijing and Guiyang. The findings illustrate three types of institutional contexts where conflicting demands can arise. This classification is based on two variables, which are the complexity of an organization’s identities, and the multiplicity of fields where dominant actors occur. The S-S, M-S and M-M types are therefore identified in this framework. Beyond this, the nature and features of conflicting demands faced by GONGOs are also explored in these types. Additionally, this study introduces inter-organizational power dynamics between dominant actors into its analysis of organizational responses. Given the inter-organizational politics, GONGOs develop four strategies to cope with conflicting demands. These strategies include dilatoriness, negotiation, replacement, and exploitation. The conditions under which particular strategy is more likely to be adopted are also discussed. In sum, this study hopes to shed light on conflicting institutional demands encountered by organizations with conflicting identities and draw attention to inter-organizational politics in institutional environments. Empirically, this study hopes to better understand the special organization creature—GONGOs—and its implications on globalization in China. / published_or_final_version / Sociology / Master / Master of Philosophy
197

The caring beliefs of three teacher educators

Pape, Dianne Rush 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
198

Response to varying amounts of time in reading intervention for students demonstrating insufficient response to intervention

Wanzek, Jeanne Ann 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
199

Attributes of an effective elementary bilingual education program: an examination of administrator, teacher, and parent perceptions

Miller, Timothy James 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
200

"They don't even know what Vietnam is!": the production of space through hybrid place-making and performativity in an urban public elementary school

Nguyễn, Thu Sương Thị 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text

Page generated in 0.0752 seconds