good behaviour
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2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 2435-2444
Author(s):  
Fakhrurrazi Fakhrurrazi ◽  
Hasan Asari ◽  
Erawadi Erawadi

Dayah sustainably transmits religious, intellectual, and spiritual traditions (Islamic Boarding Schools). Several Dayah Salafiyah in Langsa City, for example, are also involved in implementing and developing strategies for the cultivation of such religious cultures. To conduct a deeper examination, this phenomenological study examined the involvement, implementation, and strategies used in those Dayahs. Observations were used to collect data. Meanwhile, the data were organized using Miles and Huberman's qualitative data analysis framework. The findings indicated that religious activities based on religious culture at the Dayah Salafiyah in Langsa City were always developed in collaboration with the dayah's leaders, teungku dayah, santri, and community. To begin, the dayah's leader serves as a facilitator, motivator, and mediator in the students' and community's religious activities and a controller of the dayah's activities. Additionally, it is critical to remember that the most fundamental form of salafiyah dayah implementation promotes good behaviour. To ensure that the religious culture development program is carried out as planned, salafiyah education incorporates religious culture into all aspects of its operations. This strategy for religious culture development is carried out by establishing policies, habituation, and student awareness, exemplary behaviour, discipline, and civilization. The dayah's leaders have absolute authority to monitor and evaluate all efforts made by teachers and students to foster a strong religious culture in the school.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
الشيخ يوسف بابكر

الدعاء و أثره في تزكية النفوس Blesses to Allah who created us to be among those who supplicate their God desirably , concealledly , frighteningly and publicly .1 sum up the themes of the research in the following points: 1. Researching in spiritual studies will never expire as it derives its strength from the zikr (the holy Quran), referring to the verse ( wc have revealled yhe zikr and it will be surely preserved by us) 2. Supplication is a spiritual value which constitutes the core of all religious ceremonies ,so ,all the whorshippings are initiated on it. 3. Sastisfaction is obtained by benefiting of supplication ,it can purify our souls and help in bringing -up descendents in good behaviour. 4. Values of modesty and submission to Allah are extracted from supplication . 5. Promoting all favoured virtues with exploiting the rituals of supplication, to approach the aim of purifying souls and endorsing Alla,s fate and decree both good and evil


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann-Marie Kennedy ◽  
Martin K.J. Waiguny ◽  
Maree Alice Lockie

Purpose This paper seeks to explore the functions of Christmas mythemes for children’s consumption culture development. In addition, the purpose of this study is to provide an insight on the development of Central European Children into customers and how mythemes are associated with the wishing behaviour. Design/methodology/approach Levi-Strauss’ (1955) structural analysis was used to uncover the mythemes of the Christmas story for Austrian children. These mythemes then informed a thematic analysis of 283 Austrian children’s Christmas letters. Campbell’s (1970) functions of myths were used to reflect on the findings. Findings The Christmas mythemes uncovered were found to encourage materialism by linking self-enhancement (good acquirement) with self-transcendent (good behaviour) values. The role of myths to relieve the tension between the incongruent values of collective/other-oriented and materialistic values is expanded upon. Such sanctification of selfish good acquisition is aided by the mythemes related especially to the Christkind and baby Jesus. Instead, marketers should use Christmas mythemes which emphasise family and collective/other-centred values. Originality/value By first uncovering the “mythemes” related to Christmas, the authors contribute to the academic understanding of Christmas, going beyond origin or single myth understandings and acknowledging the multifaceted components of Christmas. The second contribution is in exploring mytheme’s representation in children’s Christmas letters and reflecting on their functions. This differs from previous literature because it looks at one of the main cultural vehicles for Christmas socialisation and its intersection with the mythemes that feed children’s consumption culture formation. Through the authors’ presentation of a conceptual framework that links mytheme functions with proximal processes using a socioecological viewpoint, the authors demonstrate the guidance of mythemes in children’s development. The third contribution is a reflection on the potential ethical implications for children’s formation of their consumer culture based on the functions of the mythemes. Furthermore, the authors add to the existing body of research by investigating a Central European context.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charalampos Symeonidis ◽  
Ioannis Mademlis ◽  
Ioannis Pitas ◽  
Nikos Nikolaidis

Non-maximum suppression (NMS) is a post-processing step in almost every visual object detector. NMS aims to prune the number of overlapping detected candidate regions-of-interest (ROIs) on an image, in order to assign a single and spatially accurate detection to each object. The default NMS algorithm (GreedyNMS) is fairly simple and suffers from severe drawbacks, due to its need for manual tuning. A typical case of failure with high application relevance is pedestrian/person detection in dense human crowds, where GreedyNMS doesn't provide accurate results. This paper proposes an efficient deep neural architecture for NMS in the person detection scenario, by capturing relations of neighbouring ROIs and aiming to ideally assign precisely one detection per person. The presented Seq2Seq-NMS architecture assumes a sequence-to-sequence formulation of the NMS problem, exploits the Multihead Scale-Dot Product Attention mechanism and jointly processes both geometric and visual properties of the input candidate ROIs. Thorough experimental evaluation on three public person detection datasets shows favourable results against competing methods, with acceptable inference runtime requirements and good behaviour for large numbers of raw candidate ROIs per image.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charalampos Symeonidis ◽  
Ioannis Mademlis ◽  
Ioannis Pitas ◽  
Nikos Nikolaidis

Non-maximum suppression (NMS) is a post-processing step in almost every visual object detector. NMS aims to prune the number of overlapping detected candidate regions-of-interest (ROIs) on an image, in order to assign a single and spatially accurate detection to each object. The default NMS algorithm (GreedyNMS) is fairly simple and suffers from severe drawbacks, due to its need for manual tuning. A typical case of failure with high application relevance is pedestrian/person detection in dense human crowds, where GreedyNMS doesn't provide accurate results. This paper proposes an efficient deep neural architecture for NMS in the person detection scenario, by capturing relations of neighbouring ROIs and aiming to ideally assign precisely one detection per person. The presented Seq2Seq-NMS architecture assumes a sequence-to-sequence formulation of the NMS problem, exploits the Multihead Scale-Dot Product Attention mechanism and jointly processes both geometric and visual properties of the input candidate ROIs. Thorough experimental evaluation on three public person detection datasets shows favourable results against competing methods, with acceptable inference runtime requirements and good behaviour for large numbers of raw candidate ROIs per image.


2021 ◽  
Vol 29 ((S2)) ◽  
pp. 43-67
Author(s):  
Safrina Safrina

Nowadays, companies are not only required to provide information on financial accountability but also about corporate performance related to environmental and social activities to promote shareholder values and sustainable practices. In Indonesia, corporate social and environmental responsibility is an emerging and relatively new concept in terms of practices, economic and political aspects. This paper aims to investigate the performance of the social and environmental responsibility of three limited liability state-owned companies in Indonesia and covering the company’s reports, namely annual report, CSR report, and sustainability report. The study concluded that there is a significant relation between CSR activities, social and environmental protection on Indonesian limited liability state-owned companies, both in relation to legal obligation, as well as relating to company’s commitment to show environmentally good behaviour through CSR activities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 42
Author(s):  
Isabel Méndez-Fernández ◽  
Silvia Lorenzo-Freire ◽  
Ángel Manuel González-Rueda

In this work we study a routing and scheduling problem for a home care business. The problem is composed of two conflicting objectives, therefore we study it as a bi-objective one. We obtain the Pareto frontier for small size instances using the AUGMECON2 method and, for bigger cases, we developed an heuristic algorithm. We also obtained some preliminary results that show the algorithm has good behaviour.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (21) ◽  
pp. 9780
Author(s):  
José Luis Díaz-López ◽  
Manuel Cabrera ◽  
José Ramón Marcobal ◽  
Francisco Agrela ◽  
Julia Rosales

The application of new materials for soil stabilisation is a growing field of study in recent years. In this work, the effect of two types of silica-based nanomaterials combined with binders (quicklime and cement) are studied to stabilise soils and form structural layers for rural and low volume roads. The physical and chemical properties of the materials have been determined, as well as the mechanical behaviour of the stabilised soil. Three hybrid stabilised soil sections have been designed using a multilayer elastic model, executed at full scale and measuring the evolution of their properties in the medium to short term. The results show that the application of silica-based nanomaterials and two types of binders on the tread layers provide high structural stability and good behaviour of the sections.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 47-59
Author(s):  
Joanne O’Keeffe ◽  
Allen Thurston ◽  
Frank Kee ◽  
Liam O'Hare ◽  
Katrina Lloyd

This article presents the findings of an exploratory randomised controlled trial of the PAX Good Behaviour Game (PAX GBG) in Northern Ireland. The PAX GBG is an evidence‐based universal prevention programme designed to improve mental health by increasing self‐regulation, academic engagement, and decreasing disruptive behaviour in children. The study was designed in line with the Medical Research Council guidance on the development of complex interventions and is based on the Medical Research Council framework, more specifically within a Phase 2 exploratory trial. The study used a cluster randomised controlled trial design with a total of 15 schools (19 classes) randomised to intervention and control. This article reports specifically on the outcome of self‐regulation with 355 elementary school pupils in year 3 (age M = 7.40, SD = 0.30). Participating schools in the trial were located in areas of socio‐economic disadvantage. The teachers in the intervention group received training in the delivery of the PAX GBG and implemented the PAX GBG intervention for 12 weeks. A range of pre‐ and post‐test measures, including child reported behaviours, were undertaken. After the 12 weeks of implementation, this exploratory trial provided some evidence that the PAX GBG may help improve self‐regulation (d = .42) in participating pupils, while the findings suggest that it may offer a feasible mental health prevention and early intervention approach for Northern Ireland classrooms. However, a larger definitive trial would be needed to verify the findings in this study.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 70-75
Author(s):  
Ahmad Dhamiri Ramainor ◽  
Intan Munirah Azizol ◽  
Nurjehan Mohamed Ibrahim ◽  
Aspalilah Alias

Dentistry is a client dependent field. Other than the dentist’s skills, the dentist’s appearance has been observed to affect the patient’s perception of the clinician. This research was conducted to assess patient’s perception of the dentist’s appearance based on the dentist’s attire, gender and age. A total number of 492 Malay respondents were involved in this study. A set of questionnaires was randomly distributed via google forms. This questionnaire consisted of three sections, including socio-demographic details of the respondents, patient’s perception towards dentist’s attire and patient’s perception towards dentist’s gender and age. The result showed that respondents consisted of 78% female and 22% male. The highest percentage of participants was in the age group of 18-30 (85.6%), while the lowest percentage of respondents came from the age group of 49-60 (5.3%).  The majority of respondents (51%) preferred a dentist who wears a white coat followed by a dentist in scrub (38.2%) and a dentist dressed in formal attires (9.3%). Only 1.4% of respondents selected a dentist who wears casual attire. Participants also prefer dentist in the age group of 41-60 years old, while participants had no preference toward dentist’s gender. A final open-ended question showed respondents also preferred to see dentists with acceptable dental appearance, good behaviour and established qualification. In conclusion, a dentist’s appearance is important to secure a promising interpretation of the patient towards the dentist.


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