1,185 search results

Networked practitioner: open or closed practice?
Education & Development

Networked practitioner: open or closed practice?

...c. Openness can assist with increasing an academic’s network. d. Openness can aid with reciprocity. The correct answer is a. a. This is the correct response. Martin Weller says that publishing openly is unlikely to increase an academic author’s income...Networked practitioner: open or closed practice?: 2.2 Risks of an open approach - Technology-enhanced learning has...
Literacy, social justice and inclusive practice
Education & Development

Literacy, social justice and inclusive practice

...C, Wallace, J., Herschbach, M., Johnson, C, Raikes, B., Warren, K., Nikoli, M. and Poulson, H. (2006) ‘Negotiating displacement spaces: exploring teachers’ stories about learning and diversity’, Curriculum Inquiry, vol. 1, no. 35, pp. 35–62. Draper, R. J., Broomhead, P., Petersen Jensen, A. and Nokes, J. D. (2012) ‘(Re)imagining literacy and teacher preparation...
Systems modelling
Science, Maths & Technology

Systems modelling

...C choose features of that situation which are important to the stakeholders D identify possible linkages or relationships between these features E choose a suitable way to describe those relationships F test whether the chosen features and relationships are agreed by the stakeholders to be appropriate G modify B–E if the test in F suggests that inappropriate choices...
Level 1: Introductory 4 hrs
Learning from sport burnout and overtraining Badge icon
Health, Sports & Psychology

Learning from sport burnout and overtraining

...c, 3 = a Discussion The symptoms of emotional and physical exhaustion are as you would expect and include feeling ‘tired’, ‘drained’ or having ‘fatigue’. Likewise, symptoms of a reduced sense of accomplishment are as you would expect, but notice how performing below standards is also linked with a likely sources of stress in ‘negative self-evaluation’....
Children and violence: an introductory, international and interdisciplinary approach
Society, Politics & Law

Children and violence: an introductory, international and interdisciplinary approach

...of Australia and North America, existed in a wilful, amoral and cruel state. C. Staniland Wake, an anthropologist writing in 1878, drew close parallels between children and ‘native peoples’, claiming that both were characterized by an innate viciousness towards others that glorified in violence for violence's sake. He wrote of a ‘cruelty so noticeable among children, so much so indeed, that it may be described as ......
A tour of the cell
Science, Maths & Technology

A tour of the cell

...Fractionation of cellular components. (a) Homogenisation. (b) Differential sedimentation. (c) Density gradient centrifugation. See text for details. The subcellular components can then be recovered by centrifugation. The cell homogenate is dispensed into centrifuge tubes which are placed into a rotating holder (known as a rotor) that fits into the centrifuge. As the rotor turns, particles suspended in the homogenate migrate ......
Level 2: Intermediate 12 hrs
Napoleonic paintings
History & The Arts

Napoleonic paintings

...C. (1997) Napoleon and History Painting: Antoine-Jean Gros's ‘La Bataille d'Eylau’, Oxford, Oxford University Press. Shelton, A.C. (1999) ‘The critical reception of Ingres's portraits (1822–1855)’, in G. Tinterow and P. Conisbee (eds) Portraits by Ingres: Image of an Epoch, New York, The Metropolitan Museum, pp.496–521. Siegfried, S. (1980) ‘The politics of...
Level 2: Intermediate 16 hrs
Making sense of mental health problems
Health, Sports & Psychology

Making sense of mental health problems

...c. 55% d. 45% The correct answer is a. Answer According to Insel’s figures, 75% of mental disorders have become established by the age of 24. Select the answer for Question 2 here What is the main reason for Thomas Insel drawing attention to psychiatric disorders? Because he has a personal interest Because they are easy to treat Because their treatment lags behind...