4,895 research outputs found
Macroeconomics after Keynes: a reconsideration of the general theory
This reassessment of J. M. Keynes's The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money results from the author's experience in using Keynes's book as the core of her macroeconomics courses for undergraduates. It is intended to encourage others to bring the General Theory back into mainstream teaching, because it "gives a far richer understanding of the structure of macroeconomic interactions and methods of analysing them than much of what has been written since.
Using Communications to Promote Training within the Non-Profit Sector
The influence of a non-profit organization is often subdued by the lack of skills, knowledge, and capability of the workers and volunteers that flood their sector. This is due to a lack of training and development of both potential and current employees (Riddoch, 2009). Untrained workers often feel undervalued and unengaged, which leads to dissatisfaction in the workplace. In addition, employees who are incompetent cause a decrease in efficiency and productivity, which necessitates the hiring of extra workers, costing additional time and money for the organization. Untrained employees can also reflect poorly on the overall organization, causing a lack of public trust and impairing potential donations. However, training involves spending a great deal of time, money, and effort, and non-profit organizations often do not have these resources readily available. In order for an organization to be composed of educated and skilled staff who are dedicated to their mission, both the individual employees and the organization as a whole must understand and believe in the benefit of training and development. This concept must be promoted to both employees and organizations in order to add value and advance both the individual’s career and the mission of the organization
Regulation and differences in financial institutions
First paragraph: Some regulation of financial markets is accepted even in these dirigiste times and even by those neoclassical economists who find it a struggle to explain why the market for money is different from the market for peanuts
Metrology of Complex Refractive Index for Solids in the Terahertz Regime Using Frequency Domain Spectroscopy
Frequency domain spectroscopy allows an experimenter to establish optical
properties of solids in a wide frequency band including the technically
challenging 10 THz region, and in other bands enables metrological comparison
between competing techniques. We advance a method for extracting the optical
properties of high-index solids using only transmission-mode frequency domain
spectroscopy of plane-parallel Fabry-Perot optical flats. We show that
different data processing techniques yield different kinds of systematic error,
and that some commonly used techniques have inherent systematic errors which
are underappreciated. We use model datasets to cross-compare algorithms in
isolation from experimental errors, and propose a new algorithm which has
qualitatively different systematic errors to its competitors. We show that our
proposal is more robust to experimental non-idealities such as noise or
apodization, and extract the complex refractive index spectrum of crystalline
silicon as a practical example. Finally, we advance the idea that algorithms
are complementary rather than competitive, and should be used together as part
of a toolbox for better metrology.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, 4 appendice
Classroom research as teacher-researcher
In the field of education, research projects that involve both the researcher and teacher being the same person are common today, as attested by the significant number of teacher-researcher studies. One issue confronting the dual role of teacher-researcher is the nature of interaction between the underlying goals that come with each of these roles. There are some researchers who express concern that the combination of these goals within the teacher-researcher may compromise either or both of the work of teaching and research in an unproductive way. This paper is an account of my adventure in attempting to fulfil both teaching and research goals in my work as teacher-researcher in a year 7 (Secondary One) geometry class in Singapore. My experience is then re-interpreted in the context of the ongoing conflicting-versus-complementary talk on the interaction between teacher/researcher ‘selves’. A model is proposed to account for the seemingly opposite sides of the camp as reported in the literature on this issue.<br /
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