22 research outputs found

    A report generation extension for an open source human resource management system

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    The rapid development of business enterprise software has greatly revolutionized how business is being done nowadays. However, most solutions are expensive and are more suited for large organizations, which poses a challenge for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) to catch up in terms of operational excellence.Fortunately, initiatives for the development of free and open source software for various business processes continuously flourish with the help of academic Information Technology (IT) institutions, as well as organizations that support the Open Source movement.This phenomenon effectively empowers SMEs to achieve efficiency in various activities, and promotes financial sustainability.This study features the implementation of a free and open source Human Resource Management System (HRMS) called Orange HRM.It includes customization efforts to address the needs of some SMEs in the Philippines. It also discusses the cooperation between the academe and SMEs to promote sustainability in this project.Furthermore, it explains how scrum methodology was utilized in developing an extension for producing needed reports pertaining to work output, time sheet related information, and leaves.Various intranet and cloud-based approaches are also discussed. Opinions of employees, HR practitioners, and business owners who used the software are also summarized.Finally, recommendations and learning points are explained for future implementers

    Daily Eastern News: September 14, 1976

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    https://thekeep.eiu.edu/den_1976_sep/1008/thumbnail.jp

    Daily Eastern News: September 14, 1976

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    https://thekeep.eiu.edu/den_1976_sep/1008/thumbnail.jp

    11th SC@RUG 2014 proceedings:Student Colloquium 2013-2014

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    11th SC@RUG 2014 proceedings:Student Colloquium 2013-2014

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    11th SC@RUG 2014 proceedings:Student Colloquium 2013-2014

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    11th SC@RUG 2014 proceedings:Student Colloquium 2013-2014

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    11th SC@RUG 2014 proceedings:Student Colloquium 2013-2014

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    11th SC@RUG 2014 proceedings:Student Colloquium 2013-2014

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    Battles with Words: Literate and Linguistic Resistance in Multi-Ethnic U.S. Literature and Everyday Life

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    Battles with Words analyzes the role of multi-ethnic U.S. literature as an alternative form of cultural production which critiques and challenges U.S. linguistic and literate hegemony and homogeneity. The texts comprising this field continually emphasize the ways in which words, through language and literacy, become tools of power and action used by the ethnically marginalized to negotiate everyday advantages for themselves and challenge the linguistic and cultural domination of Anglo America. Through their critiques of the culture of English-only monolingualism that has continued to dominate the national landscape of the U.S. throughout the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, these authors indicate their concern with the ways language intersects with and impacts literature, as well as their interest in using literature to explore and critique the relationship between language, literacy, race, ethnicity, and citizenship in the U.S. Using seven contemporary multi-ethnic U.S. novels, I examine how these novels portray language and literacy as weapons of the dominant which maintain and reproduce racist, classist systems of power and bureaucracy and as tools for those who are positioned as ethnically, linguistically, and nationally unauthorized, subjugated, and illegitimate to resist their subordination and disenfranchisement. By examining these works through a rhetorical lens, my analyses attempt to elucidate what is (un)said, (un)speakable, and (un)recorded when subordinates confront authorities in various public and private contexts including classrooms, social services offices, immigration stations, neighborhoods, and homes. The high-stakes literate and linguistic exchanges these works portray offer a multitude of perspectives from which to consider the seemingly mundane, ordinary ways in which language and literacy are used by the marginalized and the powerful as they negotiate various everyday contexts and encounters. While these novels reveal the many problematic uses of literacy and language in power struggles in the U.S., especially as they relate to race, ethnicity, and citizenship, they also suggest alternative ways that language and literacy might be used less hierarchically and more democratically in everyday life, offering models for transforming bureaucratic, institutional, and social encounters. These alternative models should interest not only literary scholars, but also those in the fields of composition, pedagogy, language, literacy and education
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