1,353 research outputs found

    E-Learning for Teachers and Trainers : Innovative Practices, Skills and Competences

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    Reproduction is authorised provided the source is acknowledged.Final Published versio

    Information to fight the flab: findings from the Net.Weight study

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    The purpose of the paper is to examine information use and information literacy in the context of weight management. It reports on a two-year study funded by the Department of Health known informally as the Net.Weight Study. Net.Weight examined the potential for increased, innovative and effective uses of information and communication technologies (ICTs) to support the self management of weight. The research was conducted in the city of Brighton & Hove by an inter-disciplinary team from the University of Brighton. The paper gives a brief overview of the various methods used in the study as a whole but discusses one strand, the user survey, in more detail. The survey gathered data on people’s information and ICT use around weight management. The design of the survey questionnaire required the adaptation of existing literacy assessment instruments and this process is described in this paper. The findings show that people use a wide range of information sources for information and support around weight management. The most useful sources are slimming groups, food packaging, friends and family, magazines, TV and health books, thus representing a variety of media, formal and informal, and including human sources. The internet was reported to be a useful source for around half the survey respondents and is most often used for information about diet and exercise. A majority of respondents described themselves as active information seekers and confident about their information skills. They are less confident about internet information than information generally and even less confident about using the internet to support weight management activities. The concept of literacies, particularly around information and health, provide a framework for examining the Net.Weight findings. The findings are discussed in terms of their implications for health information policy and for those interested in applying information literacy theory to health. The role of healthcare practitioners in weight management information is addressed, as is the need for targeted rather than generic health information. It is suggested that the work done in the education sector to increase awareness of information literacy and improve skills could provide a useful model of good practice in a health context. However, the evidence provided by the Net.Weight study suggests that for such an approach to be relevant it needs to reflect the complexity of health information processes in everyday lives

    A Resource-Based Analysis of Outsourcing: Evidence from Case Studies

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    The central role that information technology plays in the management of companies, the massive investments that are required, and a preoccupation for rationalization explain in good part the renewed interest in the strategies used for information systems sourcing. In-house provision is often seen as the best way to provide an organization with IT services that are well adapted to support its business activities while preserving its trademark processes and know-how. On the other hand, critics argue that a better solution is to outsource those IT activities to specialists, thus permitting the company to focus on its core business. The choice of a sourcing mode has an impact on the ability of the firm to implement its systems and ultimately to compete in its field of business. In order to better understand under what conditions a firm should choose one sourcing mode over another, we argue that it is necessary to analyze the interactions between a firm's competencies and the strategic value of those competencies. This is investigated using evidence from 21 information system projects. The0501n findings were that the best predictor of success and failure, by far, is the fit between the governance mode and the position of the project in the value/availability matrix. Another interesting finding is that no sourcing mode per se seems to lead to successful outcomes. It is always a matter of selecting the appropriate mode for each situation. De plus en plus, les technologies de l'information sont au centre des prĂ©occupations des gestionnaires. Elles commandent des investissements massifs et peuvent ĂȘtre gĂ©rĂ©es de diverses maniĂšres. Traditionnellement, une gestion interne Ă©tait favorisĂ©e pour fournir Ă  l'organisation des services sur mesure et pour protĂ©ger des pratiques uniques, permettant Ă  l'organisation de se diffĂ©rencier. Les dĂ©tracteurs de cette approche soutiennent que l'impartition est un meilleur choix. L'impartition permet Ă  la firme de se concentrer sur ses compĂ©tences de bases tout en lui donnant accĂšs Ă  des spĂ©cialistes de pointe. Pour mieux comprendre le lien entre les compĂ©tences de la firme et l'impartition, 21 projets sont Ă©tudiĂ©s. Les rĂ©sultats indiquent que le meilleur prĂ©dicteur de succĂšs est l'adĂ©quation entre le mode de gestion et le profil de compĂ©tences de la firme.Outsourcing of IT, resource-based theory, IT resources, Impartition, approche centrĂ©e sur les resources, Ă©tude de cas

    A Research Agenda for OER: discussion highlights

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    This report summarises a UNESCO-IIEP OER Community discussion conducted in March and April 2006 to brainstorm a research agenda for Open Educational Resources. Over 500 participants from around the world provided a rich diversity of perspectives. Topics discussed included existing OER initiatives, current levels of use, collaborative authoring, technology, learning from other open initiatives, quality assurance, dissemination and access. Participants put forward over 100 questions

    Scaling Success: Lessons from Adaptation Pilots in the Rainfed Regions of India

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    "Scaling Success" examines how agricultural communities are adapting to the challenges posed by climate change through the lens of India's rainfed agriculture regions. Rainfed agriculture currently occupies 58 percent of India's cultivated land and accounts for up to 40 percent of its total food production. However, these regions face potential production losses of more than $200 billion USD in rice, wheat, and maize by 2050 due to the effects of climate change. Unless action is taken soon at a large scale, farmers will see sharp decreases in revenue and yields.Rainfed regions across the globe have been an important focus for the first generation of adaptation projects, but to date, few have achieved a scale that can be truly transformational. Drawing on lessons learnt from 21 case studies of rainfed agriculture interventions, the report provides guidance on how to design, fund and support adaptation projects that can achieve scale
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