10,227 research outputs found

    How Millennial Generation Entrepreneurs Use Mentors to Improve Business Performance

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    Successful small businesses are critical to the success of the global economy, but they continue to fail at high rates. Mentoring is a technique proven to improve the performance of new entrepreneurs and their businesses. Building on the conceptual framework of adult learning theory, the purpose of this multiple case study was to explore how millennial generation small business owners participating in the Futurpreneur mentoring program used mentors to improve the performance of their small businesses. Data included semistructured interviews with 6 successful participants of the mentoring program, experience profiles of these participants, and public information about Futurpreneur. The intent was to examine the phenomenon from a Canadian perspective, drawing from unique perspectives of program participants previously identified as success stories. Manual coding, cross case comparison, and thematic analysis revealed a variety of salient themes. Themes supported the tenets of adult learning theory and existing literature on mentoring. The primary themes that emerged were (a) Futurepreneur mentors played common roles in successful mentoring relationships and (b) there are common conditions for building healthy mentoring relationships within the Futurepreneur program. Implications for positive social change include improving how entrepreneurs select and learn from mentors, how mentors approach mentoring relationships, and how mentoring organizations design mentoring programs for millennial generation entrepreneurs

    Visibility and the Policing of Public Space

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    From studies of ā€˜panopticā€™ CCTV surveillance to accounts of undercover police officers, it is often mooted that visibility and invisibility are central to the policing of public space. However, there has been no comprehensive and critical assessment of this axiom. Drawing on the practices of a variety of policing providers and regulators, and the work of geographers, criminologists and other social scientists, this paper examines how and why visibility underpins the policing of public space. We begin by considering the ways in which policing bodies and technologies seek to render themselves selectively visible and invisible in the landscape. The paper then moves on to explore the ways in which policing agents attempt to make ā€˜incongruousā€™ bodies, behaviours and signs variously visible and invisible in public space. We then offer a sympathetic critique of these accounts, arguing that more attention is needed in understanding: (i) how other senses such as touch, smell and sound are socially constructed as in and out-of-place and ā€˜policedā€™ accordingly; and (ii) how the policing of undesirable bodies and practices is not simply about quantitative crime reduction, but conducted through qualitative, embodied performance. The paper concludes by pinpointing key areas for future research

    Kenyon Collegian - September 22, 1994

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    https://digital.kenyon.edu/collegian/1464/thumbnail.jp

    Information Outlook, July/August 2018

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    Volume 22, Issue 4https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_io_2018/1003/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, March 18, 1996

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    Volume 106, Issue 37https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/8822/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, September 21, 2006

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    Volume 127, Issue 15https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/10273/thumbnail.jp

    Internet of Things for Environmental Sustainability and Climate Change

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    Our world is vulnerable to climate change risks such as glacier retreat, rising temperatures, more variable and intense weather events (e.g., floods, droughts, and frosts), deteriorating mountain ecosystems, soil degradation, and increasing water scarcity. However, there are big gaps in our understanding of changes in regional climate and how these changes will impact human and natural systems, making it difficult to anticipate, plan, and adapt to the coming changes. The IoT paradigm in this area can enhance our understanding of regional climate by using technology solutions, while providing the dynamic climate elements based on integrated environmental sensing and communications that is necessary to support climate change impacts assessments in each of the related areas (e.g., environmental quality and monitoring, sustainable energy, agricultural systems, cultural preservation, and sustainable mining). In the IoT in Environmental Sustainability and Climate Change chapter, a framework for informed creation, interpretation and use of climate change projections and for continued innovations in climate and environmental science driven by key societal and economic stakeholders is presented. In addition, the IoT cyberinfrastructure to support the development of continued innovations in climate and environmental science is discussed

    Architecture and Applications of IoT Devices in Socially Relevant Fields

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    Number of IoT enabled devices are being tried and introduced every year and there is a healthy competition among researched and businesses to capitalize the space created by IoT, as these devices have a great market potential. Depending on the type of task involved and sensitive nature of data that the device handles, various IoT architectures, communication protocols and components are chosen and their performance is evaluated. This paper reviews such IoT enabled devices based on their architecture, communication protocols and functions in few key socially relevant fields like health care, farming, firefighting, women/individual safety/call for help/harm alert, home surveillance and mapping as these fields involve majority of the general public. It can be seen, to one's amazement, that already significant number of devices are being reported on these fields and their performance is promising. This paper also outlines the challenges involved in each of these fields that require solutions to make these devices reliableComment: 1
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