scholarly journals Study on the Promoting Mechanism of Teachers' Ethics Internalization in Universities

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chang Shan

On the basis of clarifying the teachers' Ethics internalization theory, this paper analyzes the typical dilemma in teachers' Ethics internalization . To resolve these problems, this paper construct an overall framework, including security mechanism, normative mechanism, education mechanism, evaluation mechanism and supervision mechanism, which the external conditions are used to constantly strengthen the moral needs of the subject,then enhance the consciousness of moral internalization, improve the effectiveness of teachers' moral construction.

2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaydeep Mukherjee

Case method has been a popular pedagogy in management education. It is a preferred evaluation tool which is inherently subjective in nature. This article compares the results of case-based evaluation in marketing discipline, in announced and unannounced settings, for full-time and part-time management programmes and discusses its implications. The data were collected from the formal evaluation made by a faculty of an Association of MBAs (AMBA) accredited management institute of India. The results suggests that for full-time residential MBA programmes, use of relative marks for grading each component of the evaluation is likely to be a more robust evaluation mechanism than using just the marks or using the consolidated marks for final grading. However, neither surprise quiz nor announced quiz provide any robust and unbiased method of evaluating the performance of the students of part-time non-residential MBA programme as the result are also dependent on variables like work and family, which are extraneous to the student’s interest and proficiency in the subject.


1914 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 371-386
Author(s):  
W. H. Parker

The present paper is written with no pretence at finality, and consequently some excuse is due for its publication at the present time. The author was induced to write it since the results so far obtained by him do not seem to agree, in all points, with the work previously done on the subject, and tend to show that there is much scope for future work both on this matter and also on a matter of much greater general importance, namely, on the influence of external conditions on a quantitative character.


1993 ◽  
Vol 341 (1297) ◽  
pp. 341-342 ◽  

Stepping back from the topic of the meeting, I should like to begin by addressing the role of palaeoclimate studies in the subject of climate and its prediction. I do not believe that it is only by looking at the past that one can see into the future. However, I do believe that studies of past climates have an important role to play. To perform climate modelling and to compare the data from models with observations, one must have a conceptual framework. Important elements in this framework are the roles of continents, mountains, solar input and atmospheric composition. It must include notions of rapid change. For example, the response to increasing atmospheric CO2 may be very slow until a certain critical point when it becomes very rapid: the ‘Joker in the pack’. The possibility of multiple equilibria, more than one possible climate for the same external conditions, must be recognized. The average situation is essentially irrelevant in a system that spends almost all of its time in either of two equilibra.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tianxing Ma ◽  
Darrel Dsouza ◽  
Matthew Signorelli ◽  
Krysten Ryerson ◽  
Michael Loewenberg ◽  
...  

<p>The deformation of sessile droplets and capillary bridging in a parallel-plate capacitor under DC fields has been the subject of several scientific studies. Coaxially located droplets on opposing electrodes experience an attraction in the presence of an electric field. Application of a suitably large field will lead to either the droplets forming a liquid bridge or oscillation between bridged and de-bridged (i.e. droplet) states. We explored the bridging behavior of a variety of liquids in air. Among the liquids and droplet geometries that could form a stable field-induced bridge, only a limited set could reversibly make and break the capillary bridge by switching the electric field on and off. The ability to form a switchable liquid bridge is a function of both the liquid’s properties, including surface tension, electric conductivity, and dielectric constant, and external conditions such as electrode separation, droplet volume.</p>


Author(s):  
Paul Bernier

It has been disputed whether an externalist conception of the individuation of intentional states, such as beliefs and desires, is compatible with self-knowledge, that is, the claim that one's judgments about one's intentional states are non-evidential, non-inferential, and authoritative. I want to argue that these theses are indeed incompatible, notwithstanding an important objection to this incompatibility claim. The worry has been raised that if externalism is true, then for a subject to know, say, that he or she believes that p, the subject would need to know, on the basis of some evidence, the external conditions which determine the belief's content. Thus, externalism would be incompatible with self-knowledge. But many philosophers have accepted an objection suggesting that this worry is mistaken because in order to have a belief one need not know the metaphysical conditions determining its content, even if they are externalist. And thus, the subject's reflexive judgment about the belief would not need to rest on evidence about those external conditions. But this objection rests on a crucial assumption according to which mental content is reflexively transparent in the sense that a subject could not judge that she or he has an intentional state and be mistaken about the content of her or his state, even if the content is externally determined. My main purpose is not reflexively transparent on the assumption of externalism and, thus, self-knowledge and externalism are incompatible.


Author(s):  
Laura Hengehold

The critique of the subject in late twentieth-century continental philosophy is associated primarily with the work of Foucault, Derrida, Lacan and Deleuze. Driven by philosophical, political and therapeutic concerns, these thinkers question the subject’s ability to declare itself self-evidently independent of the external conditions of its own possibility, such as the language in which it expresses clear and distinct ideas, the body whose deceptions it fears, and the historical or cultural conditions in which it perceives reason or tyranny. Moreover, they fear that the ethical price of such insistence upon absolute self-possession is the exclusion and oppression of social groups whose supposed irrationality or savagery represent the self’s own rejected possibilities for change and discovery. Their work draws upon Marxist, Freudian and Nietzschean insights concerning the dependence of consciousness upon its material conditions, unconscious roots, or constituting ‘outside’. However, their use of these influences is guided by a common fidelity to Kant’s search for the ‘conditions of possibility’ underlying subjective experience, as well as his scepticism regarding our capacity to know the self and its motivations as objects ‘in themselves’.


1920 ◽  
Vol 39 ◽  
pp. 18-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. S. Patterson ◽  
K. L. Moudgill

But a few years ago the diverse phenomena of optical activity, such as the changes of rotation which occur with alteration of temperature, of colour of light, of solvent, or of concentration in a solvent, appeared, in spite of the great accumulation of relative data, to be practically independent of each other, and gave very little hope of satisfactory generalisation. Quite recently, however, the possibility of bringing into one scheme all these different branches of the subject has become more than a mere aspiration, and the progress which has been made by several investigators reveals clearly the existence of a deep-seated and farreaching regularity underlying the remarkable sensitiveness to external conditions of the phenomena in question.


Author(s):  
Stanislav Rozhko ◽  

Emergency response has all the main features of a project − uniqueness, limited time and limited resources, that makes it possible to apply the project management methodology to the development and implementation of measures to counter these situations.This study has formed a theoretical basis in the form of relevant conceptual models and patterns for effective time management in emergency response projects.The object of this study is the time and consequences of emergency response projects; the subject of the study is the tools of minimizing losses from an emergency by determining the necessary time parameters for the counteraction project.The structure of the life cycle is identified and the main time parameters of the considered category of projects are established. Regularities have been obtained in the form of formulas and graphical models that characterize the dependence of the consequences (loses) of emergency situations on the project time and external conditions. This allows taking into account the negativeimpact of changes in the external environment to adjust the intensity of works of the project.The main factors influencing the time parameters of the projects under consideration are established and the specificity of their influence is characterized, taking into account the interdependence. The influence of the availability of resources on time and, as a result, on the consequences (loses) of an emergency is determined. A tool is proposed based on a graphical model for establishing the required amount of resources to ensure the minimum permissible consequences, taking into account the influence of resources on the time parameters of the project.The results obtained make it possible to determine the values of the time parameters of the emergency response project, that should not be exceeded in order to minimize the consequences (loses) of an emergency.


Author(s):  
V.P. Dimitrov ◽  
◽  
L.V. Borisova ◽  
I.N. Nurutdinova

The article deals with the analysis and presentation of fuzzy expert information about the external conditions in which the combine harvester operates. The subject area "Technological adjustment of the harvester" is investigated. Based on the information received from 4 experts, external factors essential for the cleaning process are identified, their linguistic description is given, linguistic variables are introduced, membership functions are constructed, and consistency characteristics are calculated. A fuzzy expert knowledge base has been created for the acquisition and adjustment of knowledge of an intelligent decision support system for an operator in the field.


2021 ◽  
Vol 321 ◽  
pp. 04018
Author(s):  
Marek Borowski ◽  
Klaudia Zwolińska ◽  
Marcin Czerwiński

Ventilation plays an important role in providing comfortable conditions for users and is also one of the most energy-consuming systems in the building. Due to successive regulations aimed at reducing the energy load of buildings towards zero-energy buildings, energy recovery systems in air handling units have become an indispensable element. The high effectiveness of the entire system guarantees a reduction in energy demand. At very low or very high external temperatures, appropriate comfort conditions are provided by additional heaters or coolers. The subject of the paper is a ventilation system in a hotel located in southern Poland. The building is a faithful reconstruction of the historical saltworks adapted for the needs of the hotel. The air handling unit equipped with a rotary exchanger supplies air to hotel rooms located on two floors. The analysis includes the effectiveness of the air-handling unit operation under various external conditions, as well as the temperature changes during heat exchange. The results show the actual operation of the air-handling unit, which is particularly important in terms of reducing the energy consumption of the hotel.


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