32,153 research outputs found
Social Relevance in Lowenfeldās Creative and Mental Growth
For the sake of this panel presentation, I am defining social relevance to mean that aspect of an art education textbook which fosters a growth relationship between the student and his or her social and physical environment. Ten Minutes is not much time to deal with this, either in depth or detail. This entire panel could be spent discussing the varieties of social growth in Lowenfeld\u27s Creative and Mental Growth. I\u27m sure each of the panelists could say the same about the books they are covering
Mahler Measure of "Almost" Reciprocal Polynomials
Here we give a lower bound of the Mahler measure on a set of polynomials that
are "almost" reciprocal. Here "almost" reciprocal means that the outermost
coefficients of each polynomial mirror each other in proportion, while this
pattern breaks down for the innermost coefficients
Teaching and learning about controversial science issues
The overarching Nature of Science (NoS) strand in our revised science curriculum presents teachers of science with a number of challenges. One of them is the āParticipating and Contributingā achievement aim with its focus on controversial science issues (CSI). This article reports on a new classroom model for exploring controversial science issues with students that was trialled in New Zealand science classrooms, writes Dr. Kathy Saunders, the University of Waikato
The number of k-tons in the coupon collector problem
Consider the coupon collector problem where each box of a brand of cereal
contains a coupon and there are n different types of coupons. Suppose that the
probability of a box containing a coupon of a specific type is and that
we keep buying boxes until we collect at least coupons of each type. For
call a certain coupon a -ton if we see it times by the time we
have seen copies of all of the coupons. Here we determine the asymptotic
distribution of the number of -tons after we have collected copies of
each coupon for any in a restricted range, given any fixed . We also
determine the asymptotic joint probability distribution over such values of
and the total number of coupons collected
everybody doing what everybody else is doing
The title is drawn from economist Abjihit V. Bannerjeeās 1992 study āA Simple Model of Herd Behaviourā, in which he notes āThere are innumerable social and economic situations in which we are influenced in our decision making by what others around us are doing. Perhaps the commonest examples are from everyday life: we often decide on what stores and restaurants to patronize or what schools to attend on the basis of how popular they seem to be. ā¦ We set up a model in which paying heed to what everyone else is doing is rational because their decisions may reflect information that they have and we do not.ā Such herd behaviour may arise through an information cascade which, as David Easley and Jon Kleinberg note in their book Networks, Crowds, and Markets: Reasoning about a Highly Connected World, āhas the potential to occur when people make decisions sequentially, with later people watching the actions of earlier people, and from these actions inferring something about what the earlier people know.ā In everyone doing what everyone else is doing, players make selections from a series of actions, judging what to do in response to choices made by others around them.
First performed: Plus Minus Ensemble, Material, City University Experimental Music Group, Performance Space, City University, London, 08.04.14
Introduction: what is Wandelweiser?
The introduction to a special issue of 'Contemporary Music Review' on Wandelweiser
Rebecca Saunders, Still
Programme notes created for BBC Radio 3's UK premiere of 'Still' which was broadcast live from the Barbican, London on 10 February 2012
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