2,492 search results

Forensic science and fingerprints
Health, Sports & Psychology

Forensic science and fingerprints

...human fingers has ridges which form patterns that are unique to an individual. Question 2 What do forensic scientists mean by 'individualisation'? Answer Individualisation is the process of unambiguously connecting a single individual or object to a crime scene. The use of fingerprints in the identification of criminals is the most frequently applied technique in forensic...
Level 1: Introductory 10 hrs
An introduction to crime and criminology
Society, Politics & Law

An introduction to crime and criminology

...human trafficking deaths in custody prison studies and prison abolitionism immigration detention social housing and homelessness expressions of crime and ‘the criminal’ in popular culture. In the next section you will explore some of the areas in which some of the criminologists who work at The Open University specialise in...An introduction to crime and criminology:...
Supporting children’s learning in primary education today
Education & Development

Supporting children’s learning in primary education today

...human rights and fundamental freedoms, and for the principles enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations. c. The development of respect for the child’s parents, his or her own cultural identity, language and values, for the national values of the country in which the child is living, the country from which he or she may originate, and for civilizations different...
Learning from major cyber security incidents
Digital & Computing

Learning from major cyber security incidents

...humans or a machine (this document is an example of plaintext). ‘Plaintext’ is a historic term predating computers, when encryption was only used for hardcopy text; nowadays it is associated with many formats including music, movies and computer programs. Ciphertext is the encrypted data. A cipher is the mathematics (or algorithm) responsible for turning plaintext...
Succeed with learning Badge icon
Education & Development

Succeed with learning

...Resources Centre’ and that it was filled with dozens of brightly lit computers. My instructor (I still could not remember his name) led me over to one corner. ‘Here’s your group,’ he said. And he started to introduce me to a dozen people. ‘This is Avril, this is Jade, this is Zoë, this is Steve …’ I was feeling worse and worse. I had forgotten the...
Level 1: Introductory 24 hrs
Starting with psychology
Health, Sports & Psychology

Starting with psychology

...humans is ourselves (Boring, 1950, p. 56). Humans are a puzzle, one that is complex, subtle and multi-layered, and it gets even more complicated as we evolve over time and change within different contexts. When answering the question 'what makes us who we are?' psychologists put forward a range of explanations about why people feel, think and behave the way they do. Just...
Level 1: Introductory 5 hrs
Leadership for inclusion: what can you do?
Education & Development

Leadership for inclusion: what can you do?

...resources. It is also possible to engage in these processes in informal ways, which is probably something that teachers have been doing down the ages. Watch these two videos and as you do so consider the table which lays out challenges and strategies identified in a study of teacher collaboration in joint lesson planning (Yuan & Zhang, 2016). [CHATTER] KARL WIEDEGREEN...
Bill Hare - Stories of Change
Nature & Environment

Bill Hare - Stories of Change

...resources, they need finance, they need expertise. For these countries they will want to know this deal will deliver to us maybe not enough but enough to get moving, the resources, the technology, expertise that we need to start dealing with the problem and that will need to be real and deliverable for them to say, ‘Actually, this works for us.’ RH: Let me talk to you...