• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 6
  • 3
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 16
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 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.
1

A critical study of the poetry of John Oldham.

Mills, Richard Ian. January 1970 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.) -- University of Adelaide, Department of English Language and Literature, 1971.
2

The industrial ecosystem an environmental and social history of the early industrial revolution in Oldham, England, 1750-1820 /

Osborn, Matthew T. January 1997 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, Santa Cruz, 1997. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 394-401).
3

Så kan arbetsegenskaper påverka de anställdas arbetstillfredsställelse inom en svensk matgrossist

Garpetun, Robert January 2008 (has links)
<p>It exists today a widespread interest for employee satisfaction, much effort are used in companies to achieve job satisfaction within their employees. One theory that has received a great deal of publicity is Hackman & Oldhams Job characteristics model which addresses the </p><p>question of how companies can provide job satisfaction through organizational change. The foundation of the theory is that five core job characteristics are responsible for creating job satisfaction. The purpose of this paper is to study these characteristics through the employees and their boss and to determine how they believe these characteristics to affect employee satisfaction. The paper focuses on a company located in a branch widely known for low employee satisfaction. Through interviews with both employees and their boss certain </p><p>discrepancies has emerged. One of these discrepancies concern a job characteristic which in </p><p>the theory is acknowledged for having a big impact on employee satisfaction, however </p><p>employees rated this characteristic to be of very little importance for overall employee </p><p>satisfaction. Another discrepancy was found when the boss was to give his take on how to </p><p>create employee satisfaction. Both the theory and the employees rated one characteristic to be </p><p>of high importance for overall employee satisfaction, this view was not shared by the boss </p><p>which drastically downplayed the importance of that job characteristic on overall employee </p><p>satisfaction.</p>
4

Så kan arbetsegenskaper påverka de anställdas arbetstillfredsställelse inom en svensk matgrossist

Garpetun, Robert January 2008 (has links)
It exists today a widespread interest for employee satisfaction, much effort are used in companies to achieve job satisfaction within their employees. One theory that has received a great deal of publicity is Hackman & Oldhams Job characteristics model which addresses the question of how companies can provide job satisfaction through organizational change. The foundation of the theory is that five core job characteristics are responsible for creating job satisfaction. The purpose of this paper is to study these characteristics through the employees and their boss and to determine how they believe these characteristics to affect employee satisfaction. The paper focuses on a company located in a branch widely known for low employee satisfaction. Through interviews with both employees and their boss certain discrepancies has emerged. One of these discrepancies concern a job characteristic which in the theory is acknowledged for having a big impact on employee satisfaction, however employees rated this characteristic to be of very little importance for overall employee satisfaction. Another discrepancy was found when the boss was to give his take on how to create employee satisfaction. Both the theory and the employees rated one characteristic to be of high importance for overall employee satisfaction, this view was not shared by the boss which drastically downplayed the importance of that job characteristic on overall employee satisfaction.
5

Generalizing approaches in John Oldham's Satyrs upon the Jesuits

Taylor, Myron Leamon January 1972 (has links)
The general purpose of the study was to describe the present status of personnel administrators in selected Ohio school districts.
6

Ethik in Oekumene und Mission Das Problem d. Mittleren Axiome bei J.H. Oldham u. in d. christl. Sozialethik.

Kosmahl, Hans-Joachim. January 1900 (has links)
Originally presented as the author's thesis, Basel, under title: Die Darstellung der sozialethischen Theologie J.H. Oldhams als Theologie der Mittleren Axiome und ihre Diskussion und Verwendbarkeit innerhalb der christlichen Sozialethik. / Bibliography: p. 180-183.
7

Joseph Houldsworth Oldham : his thought and its development

Martin, Warham Lance January 1967 (has links)
This thesis will trace the development of the thought of Joseph Houldsworth Oldham. The thesis will describe the development of the thought of one of the fathers of the modern ecumenical movement. A review of the theses written in Great Britain and North America since the Second World War reveals no study of Oldham's thought. Although biographies have been written about most of Oldham's contemporaries in the modern ecumenical movement – Mott, Brent, Söderblom, Temple, Paton – no biography has been written about Oldham. Therefore the necessity of this thesis is to tell the untold story of Joseph Houldsworth Oldham: His Thought and Its Development. The author has selected Oldham's published works as the basis of this study. Oldham's unpublished papers and correspondence – much of it now gathered in boxes at Edinburgh House in London and at the World Council of Churches in Geneva – are not discussed in this thesis. This body of unpublished material could provide the basis for another study on Oldham. The author planned originally to tell the story of the thought and the life of J.H. Oldham. This intention shortly proved to be beyond the bounds of one thesis. This thesis does not, therefore, discuss in detail the story of Oldham's life. Information about his life has generally been placed in the footnotes where it forms the setting for the development of his thought. Oldham published prolifically from 1898 to 1963. The volume and variety of his writings during this sixty-five year period was not, however, immediately apparent to the author. Although the catalogue of the British Museum lists Oldham's books and a few of his pamphlets, it scarcely hints at his total output. Part of the task of this thesis, therefore, was the compilation of a bibliography of Oldham's published works.
8

Geologists and the British Raj, 1870-1910

Tolman, Aja B. 01 May 2016 (has links)
The Geological Survey of India (GSI) was a government institution that was created to map the geography and mineral resources of colonial India. British geologists Thomas Oldham and Valentine Ball used the GSI in order to affect policy changes regarding museum ownership, environmental conservation, and railroad construction. All of these policies were intended to impose order on the landscape and streamline the resource extraction process. Their goal was to enrich the British Empire. An Indian geologist named Pramatha Nath Bose, who also worked for the GSI for a time, also worked to enact policy changes regarding education and production. But instead of trying to make the British Empire stronger, he wanted to push it out of India. He left the GSI since he found it too restrictive, and, together with other Indians, restructured geological education at the university level and set up a successful steel manufacturing mill. Both the British geologists and Bose helped lay the economic foundation of India's independence. The GSI gave geologists power in some situations, but in others it restricted the advancement of the field.
9

Internship design and its impact on intrinsic motivation and student career choice

Stansbie, Paul January 2012 (has links)
This study examines the role experiential education, in the form of internships, plays in the professional development of Hospitality and Tourism Management students. Through an appraisal of the literature, it outlines the many benefits available to direct and indirect stakeholders through the facilitation of a structured, work based learning experience. In particular, it analyses the internship through an evaluation of job design by applying both Hackman and Oldham’s (1975a) Job Characteristics Model (JCM) and developing a proposed intern’s version of that model. The outcomes demonstrate that dimensions of the work undertaken do contribute significantly to an individual’s satisfaction and intrinsic motivation with the proposed intern’s model offering improved R2 coefficients, over the original JCM, by using different predictive variables. The study further sub-divides the sample by examining the findings by cohort and emphasis area. This affords the opportunity to identify specific recommendations on internship design that provides maximum utility to the student participant and the facilitators of the work experience. To this end, the results offer a series of recommended job dimensions for various service industry destinations including the need for increased task significance and feedback from agents for tourism students, opportunities for an autonomous work environment for event planners, exposure to a variety of skills for lodging professionals and feedback from the job for food and beverage students. By designing internships in this way, opportunities for enriched work are created for students at the case-study university. The study also examines the role classroom education plays in underpinning the internship experience and finds that while this assists students in observing many of the topics and theories discussed in a theoretical setting, the experiential component of the learning enhances their education through the development of new skills and competencies not previously taught. Overall, this study offers a unique contribution to the existing body of knowledge on experiential education and its impact on worker/job satisfaction and intrinsic motivation.
10

Punk aesthetics in independent "new folk", 1990-2008.

Encarnacao, John January 2009 (has links)
Various commentators on punk (e.g. Laing 1985, Frith 1986, Goshert 2000, Reynolds 2005, Webb 2007) have remarked upon an essence or attitude which is much more central to it than any aspects of musical style. Through the analysis of specific recordings as texts, this study aims to deliver on this idea by suggesting that there is an entire generation of musicians working in the independent sphere creating music that combines resonances of folk music with demonstrable punk aesthetics. Given that the cultural formations of folk and punk share many rhetorics of authenticity – inclusivity, community, anti-establishment ideals and, to paraphrase Bannister (2006: xxvi) ‘technological dystopianism’ – it is perhaps not surprising that some successors of punk and hardcore, particularly in the U.S., would turn to folk after the commercialisation of grunge in the early 1990s. But beyond this, a historical survey of the roots of new folk leads us to the conclusion that the desire for spontaneity rather than perfection, for recorded artefacts which affirm music as a participatory process rather than a product to be consumed, is at least as old as recording technology itself. The ‘new folk’ of the last two decades often mythologises a pre-industrial past, even as it draws upon comparatively recent oppositional approaches to the recording as artefact that range from those of Bob Dylan to obscure outsider artists and lo-fi indie rockers. This study offers a survey of new folk which is overdue – to date, new folk has been virtually ignored by the academic literature. It considers the tangled lineages that inform this indie genre, in the process suggesting new aspects of the history of rock music which stretch all the way back to Depression-era recordings in the shape of Harry Smith’s Anthology of American Folk Music. At the same time, it attempts to steer a middle course between cultural studies approaches to popular music which at times fail to directly address music at all, and musicological approaches which are at times in danger of abstracting minutae until the broader frame is completely lost. By concentrating on three aspects of the recordings in question - vocal approach, a broad consideration of sound (inclusive of production values and timbre), and structure as it pertains to both individual pieces and albums – this work hopes to offer a fresh way of reading popular music texts which deals specifically with the music without losing sight of its broader function and context.

Page generated in 0.0378 seconds