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Webový portál skladových zásob / Web Portal of the Goods StoreObrátil, Tomáš January 2008 (has links)
This master thesis presents ZZM spol. s r.o.`s web portal of good store, which should improve availability of goods and sevices to ZZM`s customers and make a good way to evaluation of taking and runing the goods in a separate regions managing by ZZM. Project make use of PHP and MySQL technology. Application includes technology for autentization, security and session for following behaviour and obtaining information about customers. For better decision making aggregated data will be present in OLAP technology. Web portal will be independent application communicating with actual internal system of firm ZZM based on communication protocol PDK version 6.
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Assessment of Pseudo-Continuous Arterial Spin Labeling (pCASL) Inter-Session Reliability in the Quantification of Cerebral PerfusionAwad, Mohammad Ahmad 17 June 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Web Conference vs. Webcast: The Perceived Effectiveness of Training Sessions at a Southeastern Community CollegeJones, Jenny Bailey 06 May 2017 (has links)
Professional development is a lifelong learning process and technology has provided and will continue to provide new and different delivery methods. Regardless of the delivery method, the intention of professional development is to increase teacher knowledge, which in turn, increases student achievement. At a southeastern community college, meaningful professional development and technology training became a service requested by faculty and staff. The college identified the need to provide in-service training that could fit within their employees’ schedules and incorporate the college’s existing infrastructure. This need grew into the creation of virtual training sessions hosted by the eLearning department of the college. The virtual training sessions were conducted initially as a synchronous live web conference and recorded for later use as an asynchronous recorded webcast. Specifically, 7 research questions were developed determine if live web conference or recorded webcast training sessions were an effective delivery method of training, if the sessions were having an impact on professional learning, and if there were factors that were affecting participation in the sessions. The primary mode of data collection was though a survey instrument designed by the researcher. Results of the statistical analysis showed that faculty are participating in the sessions beyond minimum requirements, with the highest participation in recorded webcasts. The training program studied was very effective as indicated by high session attendance, high levels of information usage and moderate to high ability of participants being able to utilize the information gained from the sessions. Participants valued the elements of the live sessions including interaction and the ability to clarify information without delay. Several barriers raised for attending the live sessions included the following: lack of time, presentation speed, and lack of topic detail. Participants indicated the appreciated elements of a recorded webcast included the following: convenience, ease of use, and flexibility. Participants did not raise many barriers for attendance in recorded webcasts, although lack of time and repetitive topics were mentioned. The valued characteristics of both live web conference and recorded webcast mirrored the valued elements of the both individual delivery methods. The study concludes with implications and recommendations for further research.
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How can one practice in an effective manner and in a way that will cultivate improvement and enjoyment in one’s work?Aldren, Benjamin January 2021 (has links)
In this thesis, I will discuss what good, effective practicing is. The project is of course self-directed, I am my own test subject, however it is my hope that the research conducted in this will be useful to other musicians too.I will write about why we practice, our motivation for doing so, practice for performance, simulating nerves, efficiency and the effect meditation has on practice quality. / <p>Master Exam Concert</p><p>KMH- Kungasalen 11.30 </p><p></p><p> </p><p>Rossini- thema e variazioni</p><p>Alban Berg- vier stücke</p><p>Brahms- sonata in Eb </p><p></p><p>Ben Aldren- klarinett</p><p>Erik Lanninger- piano. Concert recording 52.24</p><p></p><p></p>
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Virtual Walk-In Single Session Therapy: A Multiple-Case Study of Parents' Self-EfficacyRenauld, Julia-Chrissoula 10 August 2022 (has links)
Various community-based mental health and family agencies offer walk-in counselling services, where clients are provided with immediate access to a single session of brief therapy without appointments or referrals. Several studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of single-session therapy (SST) delivered within walk-in counselling clinics. This type of service delivery model has been found to be helpful for parents, who experience decreased hopelessness and psychological distress by increasing their confidence about their parenting. The purpose of this multiple case study was to investigate how parents perceived their parenting self-efficacy over time following a virtual single-session therapy at a children's mental health centre. Additionally, this study explored how parents perceived their overall experience utilizing this type of service delivery model. Eight mothers participated in a retrospective individual interview. Findings indicate that virtual SST provided parents with greater parental knowledge and concrete collaborative problem-solving strategies that improved parent-child interactions. Further, the emotional support received at the SST reduced parents' distress while increasing hopefulness in the parenting role. In addition, parents valued the accessibility and convenience of the virtual option. Overall, the findings of this study provide evidence that virtual SST can be beneficial for parents and can foster parental self-efficacy.
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Implementation And Evaluation Of A Classroom-based Approach To Expectancy Challenge For Reducing Alcohol Use Among First-year CoSivasithamparam, Janani 01 January 2008 (has links)
There is a pervasive belief in the United States that the college experience typically includes frequent social activities characterized by widespread alcohol use. Unfortunately, awareness of the hundreds of deaths and wide variety of other harms experienced by college students as a result of alcohol use is much less pervasive. In an effort to increase awareness of the negative impact of alcohol use on college campuses, the NIAAA commissioned a panel composed of scientists and college presidents to document alcohol-related harms and identify strategies that have been found to be effective in reducing risky alcohol use based on empirical evidence. The final report of this expert panel was released as a "Call to Action" for institutions nationwide in an effort to increase understanding of the severity and prevalence of risky alcohol use, and to provide descriptions of programs that were considered effective based on empirical evidence. Unfortunately, there were very few strategies found to be effective, and one of the effective approaches could only be implemented in specialized laboratories operated by scientists with expertise in expectancy challenge. Due to the severity and pervasiveness of the college alcohol problem and the limited number of strategies deemed effective, there is clearly a pressing need to develop and validate an expectancy challenge method that could be implemented by any institution without being limited by the need for a specialized laboratory and highly trained personnel. Achievement of these goals was the focus of the present project. To this end, an expectancy challenge curriculum designed for delivery in a college classroom was developed based on a laboratory delivered protocol previously found to be effective in reducing alcohol use among college students, and a classroom delivered curriculum previously found to be effective with high school students. The newly developed college classroom curriculum was implemented in a single session with groups of students during their regular class time in their usual classroom. Measures of alcohol use and associated harms were completed anonymously by each participant before completing the curriculum and for the month following completion of the curriculum. Analyses indicated significant reductions in alcohol consumption among males and females in comparison to students who were randomly assigned to a wait-list control condition. Unfortunately, significant reductions in alcohol-related harms were not found. The time periods for baseline and follow-up were only one month each, and that limitation in the number of opportunities to experience harms limits the likelihood of demonstrating a significant reduction in harms as well. Overall, this project represents an important advance in the development of alcohol use reduction strategies that are theory-based and effective in reducing alcohol use based on empirical evidence. In addition, the curriculum that was developed and validated in this project represents the first expectancy challenge method that can be readily implemented at any institution willing to devote one hour to reducing their students' risk for a long list of negative consequences associated with alcohol use on college campuses. Motivation and a typical classroom are all that is needed.
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Advocating for a More Democratic ProcessA critical analysis of codesign plenary sessions within a public project developmentLalonde, Simon January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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A context-aware application mobility approachJohansson, Dan January 2012 (has links)
Over the last two decades, mobile computing has gone from being a mere vision to becoming a reality, ubiquitously present in our everyday lives. There are different types of mobility, from user and terminal mobility, to mobility of services and sessions. This thesis is mainly about application mobility { the ability for an application to migrate between different host devices during its execution. The aim of this thesis work is to explore and advance the area of application mobility. The thesis approaches this goal through focusing on three research issues: Architectural considerations for application mobility; Context-awareness support and application adaptability; and Concept exploration.The contributions of this thesis include the identification of requirements for application mobility and a proposal for a decentralized, global scale architecture for application mobility, building on the peer-to-peer paradigm. Several prototypes of systems allowing application mobility are deployed, manifesting concepts such as decentralized system layout, context-awareness, context quality and global scope. Evaluations are both quantitative and qualitative. Other contributions of this thesis are the design and evaluation of a framework building on cloud and peer-to-peer technology to enable mobile sessions and an exploration of the concept of application mobility. / Sense Smart City, MOSA - mobil och öppen tjänste-access, NIMO - Nordic Interaction and Mobility Research Platform
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The Use of Per Session Clinical Assessment With Clients In a Mental Health Delivery System: An Investigation Into How Clinical Mental Health Counseling Practicum Students and Practicum Instructors Use Routine Client Progress FeedbackYates, Chad M. 24 April 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Session Impact and Alliance in Internet Based PsychotherapyReynolds, D'Arcy James 23 July 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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