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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.
181

A Perspective-Dependent View on the True Self

Zhang, Yiyue January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
182

Perspective as a Communication Tool: Third-Person (vs. First-Person) Imagery Facilitates Analytical (vs. Dynamic) Language Style

Le, Phuong Quynh January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
183

A Study of Electronic Service Quality on Fitness Firms: A Customer Perspective

Vivekanandan, Sivas 14 August 2015 (has links)
Electronic service quality (ESQ) and customer orientation (CO) have become key tools to succeed in the competitive marketplace. Thus, the purpose of this research was to study how CO as perceived by the customers impacts their perception about the firm’s ESQ and to study the impact of this perceived ESQ on the outcomes at the customer level. There has been minimal research conducted on the components of ESQ in the fitness industry. Therefore, this research was focused on fitness firms wherein the participants for this study were the everyday gym goers. A quantitative survey was conducted in order to collect the data, and regression analysis was used to test the validity of the proposed model. The findings showed that there is a positive relationship between perceived CO and perceived ESQ, and a positive relationship between perceived ESQ and customer level outcomes such as customer satisfaction, customer trust and word-of-mouth.
184

Medieval topics : perception, rhetoric and representation in the Middle Ages

Fluck, Katherine January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
185

Science text: Facilitating access to physiology through cognition-based reading intervention

Wesso, Iona January 1995 (has links)
Philosophiae Doctor - PhD / Reading and understanding science text is the principal means by which students at tertiary level access scientific information and attain scientific literacy. However, understanding and learning from science texts require cognitive processing abilities which students mayor may not have. If students fail to understand scientific text, their acquisition of subject knowledge and expertise will be impeded and they will fail to develop into thinking and independent learners, so crucial for academic progress and achievement. A major assumption in this study is thus that in order to increase access to science subjects there is a need to explicitly teach the thinking abilities involved in learning science from text. A review of the literature showed that while reading to learn from scientific text poses special challenges to students faced with this unfamiliar genre, little is known about reading (and thinking) for science learning. A synthesis of current research which describes the neglected interface between science learning, science reading and cognition is given in the literature review of this study. This synthesis highlights, in particular, the parallel developments in research into science learning and reading; the lack of integration of research in these areas; the absence of investigations on science reading located within the cognitive domain; and the absence of research into reading as it affects cognition and cognition as it affects reading in subject-specific areas such as physiology Possibilities for improving students' cognitive performance in reading to learn through intervention were considered from a cognitive perspective. From this perspective, students' observable intellectual performance can be attributed to their underlying knowledge, behaviour, and thought processes. Accordingly, the mental processes involved in comprehending scientific concepts from text and the cognitive processes which the students bring to the learning situation become highly relevant to efforts to improve cognitive skills for learning science Key questions which were identified to serve as a basis for intervention included: a) What cognitive abilities are needed for competent reading comprehension as demanded by physiology text?; b) How adequate is the cognitive repertoire of students in dealing with physiology text? With regard to these questions a catalogue of cognitive functions as formulated by Feuerstein et al (1980) was identified as optimally suited for establishing the cognitive match between reading tasks and students. Micro-analyses of the cognitive demands of students' textbook material and the cognitive make-up of second-year university students revealed a profound mismatch between students and their learning material. Students lacked both comprehension fostering and comprehension monitoring abilities appropriate to the demands of the learning task. The explication of the cognitive requirements which physiology text demands served as a basis for systematically designing instruction whereby appropriate intellectual performance for scientific comprehension from text may be attained Subsequent intervention was based on the explicit teaching of thinking abilities within the context of domain-specific (physiology) knowledge. An instructional framework was developed that integrated cognitive learning theories and instructional prescriptions to achieve an effective learning environment and improve students' cognitive abilities to employ and extend their knowledge. The objective was that the instructional model and resultant instructional methods would ensure that students learn not only the desired kinds of knowledge by conceptual change, but also the thought processes embedded and required by reading scientific material for appropriate conceptual change to take place. Micro-analysis of the cognitive processes intrinsic to understanding physiology text illuminated cognitive demands such as, for example, the ability to: transform linearly presented material into structural patterns which illuminate physiological relationships; analyse conceptually dense text rich in "paradoxical jargon"; activate and retrieve extensive amounts of topic-specific and subject-specific prior knowledge; to visualise events; and contextualise concepts by establishing an application for it. Within the above instructional setting, the study shows that the notion of explicitly teaching the cognitive processes intrinsic to physiology text is possible. By translating the cognitive processes into cognitive strategies such as assessing the situation, planning, processing, organisation, elaboration, monitoring and reflective responses, the heuristic approach effectively served to guide students through various phases of learning from text. Systematic and deliberate methods of thought that would enhance students problem-solving and thinking abilities were taught. One very successful strategy for learning from physiology text was the ability to reorganise the linearly presented information into a different text structure by means of the construction of graphic organisers. The latter allowed students to read systematically, establish relationships between concepts, identify important ideas, summarise passages, readily retrieve information from memory, go beyond the given textual information and very effectively monitor and evaluate their understanding In addition to teaching appropriate cognitive strategies as demanded by physiology text, this programme also facilitated an awareness of expository text conventions, the nature of physiological understanding, the value of active strategic involvement in constructing knowledge and the value of metacognitive awareness. Also, since the intervention was executed within the context of physiology content, the acquisition of content-specific information took place quite readily. This overcame the problem of transfer, so often experienced with "content-free" programmes. In conclusion, this study makes specific recommendations to improve science education. Inparticular, the notion of teaching the appropriate cognitive behaviour and thought processes as demanded by academic tasks such as reading to learn physiology seems to be a particularly fruitful area into which science educational research should develop and be encouraged.
186

Rum för barn / Room for children

van de Meulebrouck, Tanja January 2018 (has links)
Nästa år kommer Barnkonventionen med största sannolikhet att bli lag i Sverige. I artikel tre och tolv framgår att barnens bästa ska komma i första   rummet i alla åtgärder som rör barnet. Vad som är barnens bästa måste avgöras i varje enskilt fall och hänsyn ska tas till barnets egna erfarenheter och åsikter. I mitt projekt har jag valt att   utgå från detta scenario och ställer mig frågan hur jag som arkitekt kan förhålla mig till barnets eget perspektiv då jag ritar ett arkitekturförslag. Jag har valt att fokusera på förskolan som program av den anledningen att   de flesta barn i Sverige berörs av dessa miljöer. / Next year will United Nations Children Convention with a high probability become established as a law in Sweden. Article three and twelve states that the best of the child will be first priority in all actions regarding the   child. What decides is the best for the child have to be accessed in each case and regards will be taken according to the child's own will and   experiences. In my project I have chosen to act out of this scenario and ask myself the question how I as an architect can produce an architectural proposition with regards from the children's own perspective.
187

Room of children / Rum för barn

van de Meulebrouck, Tanja January 2018 (has links)
Next year will United Nations Children Convention with a high probability become established as a law in Sweden. Article three and twelve states that the best of the child will be first priority in all actions regarding the child. What decides is the best for the child have to be accessed in each case and regards will be taken according to the child's own will and   experiences. In my project I have chosen to act out of this scenario and ask myself the question how I as an architect can produce an architectural proposition with regards from the children's own perspective. / Nästa år kommer Barnkonventionen med största sannolikhet att bli lag i Sverige. I artikel tre och tolv framgår att barnens bästa ska komma i första rummet i alla åtgärder som rör barnet. Vad som är barnens bästa måste avgöras i varje enskilt fall och hänsyn ska tas till barnets egna erfarenheter och åsikter. I mitt projekt har jag valt att utgå från detta scenario och ställer mig frågan hur jag som arkitekt kan förhålla mig till barnets eget perspektiv då jag ritar ett arkitekturförslag. Jag har valt att fokusera på förskolan som program av den anledningen att de flesta barn i Sverige berörs av dessa miljöer.
188

Cognitive complexity and time perspective in hybrid organizations

Perlmutter, Sybil. January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
189

Basketball Player Perspective and Shoe Material Appeal

Chen, Hao 10 October 2014 (has links)
No description available.
190

Visual Imagery Perspective and Conceptual Processing of Core Affect

Hsing, Courtney Kelly 19 May 2015 (has links)
No description available.

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