THE TIDINGS of the Baltic State Fishing Fleet Academy: Psychological and pedagogical sciences (Theory and methods of professional education)

2020 ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (11) ◽  
pp. 124
Author(s):  
Daina Znotiņa ◽  
Maris Igavens

Very often youth faces many difficulties when trying to enter the labour market. It is because of lack of experience, insufficient vocational education, inadequacy between professional education and requirements for specialists in the job market. It is necessary that students get competencies and skills needed for the labour market and increase their employment possibilities. Rezekne Academy of Technologies implemented a project, where one of the objectives was integration of problem-based learning (PBL) into study processes. The aim of the research study is to investigate problem-based learning experiences among students and lecturers. Research methods – the monographic method, the analysis and survey methods. Problem-based learning is much more exciting for students and faculty than traditional learning, but it is also more time consuming and expertise intensive.


2021 ◽  
pp. 42-83
Author(s):  
Andrea Mariani

The article presents the social role of Jesuit pharmacies in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth based on the sources of religious provenance and inventories of Jesuit colleges drawn up as a result of the dissolution of the Society of Jesus in 1773. In the first part, the author analyzes the ecclesiastical and secular legislation and its impact on the activities of Jesuit pharmacies. Canon law did not forbid clergymen to deal with medicine, but only limited the possibility of obtaining academic education in this field and conducting surgical procedures. By adopting these rules, Jesuit legislation placed the main emphasis on superiors’ control over the finances of pharmacies and limited the sale of drugs to protect the order from being accused of unfair competition by the townspeople. In the context of state pharmaceutical law, the privilege of June 30, 1662, which allowed for the liberation of journeymen by Jesuit pharmacists, was of great importance. In this way, a path of professional education in the field of pharmacy under the management of the Society, an alternative to the guild system, was created. The second part of the article discusses the social factors that favoured the establishment of monastic pharmacies. Particularly noteworthy is the uneven distribution of Jesuit pharmacies in the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. While in Royal Prussia the Jesuits did not run pharmacies to avoid conflicts with the Protestant bourgeoisie, in the eastern borderlands of the Polish-Lithuanian state, Jesuit pharmacies were often the only institutions of this type. The third part of the work presents the financial situation of Jesuit pharmacies. They had significant income, but also required considerable investments related to the purchase of raw materials and equipment in the Baltic ports. The fourth part of the article concerns the social scope of the activity of Jesuit pharmacists, who not only provided medicines to the poor, but also treated nobles, magnates and high church dignitaries. Not being obliged by guild regulations, apart from preparing medicines, they also diagnosed them, performed minor surgical procedures and assisted women during childbirth. The last part of the article discusses drugs and raw materials in terms of their availability to the broadly understood clientele. The offer of Jesuit pharmacies included both cheap products derived from the local flora, intended for the treatment of the poor, and expensive raw materials from abroad. Moreover, among the medical matter there were preparations for women and infants, as well as for people suffering from syphilis. In the end, the author emphasizes the centrality of pharmacies in the Jesuit pastoral strategy. Thanks to their high level, pharmacies not only corresponded to the ideal of mercy, but also contributed to gaining the favour and trust of representatives of social elites. In this context, the dissolution of the Society is an important turning point not only in cultural and religious life, but also in the history of medicine and pharmacy in the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.


Author(s):  
Piotr Nowaczyk

After its accession to the EU, Poland became subject to the regulations of the Common Fishery Policy and as a result Polish sea fishing underwent restructuring on an unprecedented scale. The changes included the fishing fleet and the fishing seaports. An intensive process of reducing Polish fishing fleet, whose potential was too large in relation to the continually decreasing fish resources in the Baltic Sea, began in 2004. As a significant number of fishing vessels were removed from service, the pressure on fishing for species endangered with overfishing diminished, while the fishing quotas for individual fishing vessels increased. A negative consequence of these changes were reductions in employment in the fishing sector, however, only a few fishermen lost their jobs permanently. Ports and harbors, which had been neglected in terms of the investments made, were modernized owing to EU funding. The decapitalized infrastructure was modernized, and the mooring conditions for vessels stopping at seaports improved. Necessary equipment and objects were provided for fishing structures, which contributed to the improvement in the conditions of transshipment, storage, and distribution of sea fishing. The assessment of Poland’s hitherto ten-year membership in the EU and its effects on Polish sea fishing should be positive. Polish sea fishing sector required changes. European integration only accelerated the restructuring process while simultaneously mitigating its negative effects. The continuation of the positive trend of changes in the national sea fishing is to be expected.


2019 ◽  
Vol 118 (810) ◽  
pp. 282-284
Author(s):  
Kevin M. F. Platt
Keyword(s):  

Many ethnic Russians in the Baltic state are still excluded from full citizenship and tend to be susceptible to Moscow's influence through cross-border media.


Author(s):  
Frank Wadsworth ◽  
Brenda Swartz ◽  
Jerry Wheat

The corruption studied here includes illegal, immoral, or dishonest acts that undermine economic and government activities.  This gray area of economic activity is often referred to as the “underground economy,” and the number of individuals and the amounts of money involved can only be ascertained by educated guesses.  Corruption is used to mean a state of progressive putrefaction; on a large scale corruption curtails a country’s ability to grow efficiently and effectively.  The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and the World Bank have developed a methodology to study transition economies.  Through one-on-one interviews the Business Environment and Enterprise Performance Survey (BEEPS II 2002) gathered information from business owners and managers on a variety of topics in 23 transition economies.  This paper uses the BEEPS data to examine the perceptions of corruption in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland.


2008 ◽  
Vol 48 ◽  
Author(s):  
Svetlana Danilenko

This work discusses the application of R/S analysis to financial markets. The most of the work is devoted to the calculation of Hurst parameter. The Hurst parameters of the Baltic state shares indices are presented.


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