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2022 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-54
Author(s):  
Sendi Wijaya

People these days tend to avoid their attention from child’s psychosocial development while it holds serious role for the psyhcological and social development of children to find their true identity in the future. According to Erik Erikson, there are 8 stages of phsychosocial development of human starts when a human being is born to the final stage which is at 65 years old above. In this theory, Erikson emphasizes that every stage holds its importance and that they relate each other. Which means the first stage affects the next stage and so forth. This research is aimed to analyze Erikson’s 8 stages development of psychosocial on school-age children and how parents and teachers should respond and provide suitable treatment for these children.The methodology in this research is literature research where author collects the information about 8 stages psychosocial development from journal, books, reviews, or previous research. From this research, author finds that parents must give proper and suitable parenting style for their child especially during their school periods where child needs support, motivation and stimulus either from parents or teachers or their surroundings through intensive communication. For addition, through this research too, author finds that the ability for teachers to understand these 8 stages will give them the sight to provide more chances for the children to grow well and find their true identity. From this research, we can conclude that either teachers and parents need to cooperatively work together to provides proper and suitable treatment for children’s psychosocial development according to Erikson’s 8 stages development.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 269-275
Author(s):  
Rajendran L.

A Scientometric study was performed on 235 research articles published in the Indian Journal of Veterinary and Animal Sciences Research (IJVASR). For the current analysis, six volumes of the journal totalling 30 issues from 2016 to 2020 were considered. The amounts of contributions, authorship patterns, author productivity, average article length, and average keyword density have all been examined. Only 20 of the 235 contributions were single-authored, while the rest were multi-authored, with an average degree of collaboration of 0.91 and a week of collaboration between the writers. The increasing tendency of co-authored publications was highlighted by the pattern of co-authorship. According to the research, author productivity is 0.26.


2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 139-155
Author(s):  
Galina G. Kolomiets

The article presents philosophical views on music in the context of the transformations of the worldview from Antiquity to the Modern Time. In this research author also mentions the contemporary issues, and uses her own philosophical concept of the music, which can be described as following: the value of music as a substance and the way of the valuable interaction of a person with the world affirm the essence of musical being, in which the invariable principle of Harmony, the principle of Chaos-Form movement, is preserved (see "The Value of the Music: Philosophical Aspect"). Music expresses the fluid essence of the world and changes of being in space and time. Philosophy of music as a field of philosophical knowledge considers music from ontological-epistemological and phenomenological-axiological prospectives, as something more than just a form of art. It explores the deep, ultimate foundations of the existence of music as such and the philosophical and aesthetic foundations of musical art. Since ancient times music has been a representation of the world in the human conscience and served as the harmonic equivalent of cosmological philosophy, mathematics, astronomy, and astrophysics (Pythagoras, Plato, Aristotle, Aristoxenus, Porphyry et als.). The scientific view on music was enriched in the Modern Time by the expanded view on the cosmo-sound space reflected in musical art, which at the same time transforms the mathematical ideas of geometricity, squareness etc. The tendency to create integral world music in the musical practice of the XX-XXI centuries explains the attempt of mankind to present music by modern methods of composing musical art as an expression of fear towards the secret Harmony of universal existence, and, on the other hand - as a form of search for salvation and mental balance, intuitively reflecting what is happening in natural science, which more and more points to the abyss of unknowable universe, and the unstable place of man in the world.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 142-157
Author(s):  
Yogi Sugiarto Maulana ◽  
Erna Maulina ◽  
Nenden Kostini ◽  
Tetty Herawati

Financial literacy has been widely discussed in various countries with a wide range of subject areas, focuses, and loci. The purpose of this paper is to map the trends of scientific publications and map the network of authors on financial literacy, especially in the MSME sector. We have developed bibliometric analysis through VOSviewer software, supplemented by literature reviews. A total of 126 articles were obtained from Scopus related to the topics "financial literacy" and "micro small medium enterprise". We present trends in financial literacy research, author productivity, and journals, as well as detailing the network of co-authorships who have researched and published in the scientific domain. The results of the study are known that 1) The application of financial literacy in MSMEs only appeared in 2010 and experienced a significant upward trend. 2) Penulis most productive comes from china, where there are 2 authors each produce 3 articles. 3) Co-authorship has not been established between writers in each country and between countries. 4) Indonesia contributes financial literacy publications in MSMEs the most compared to other countries, with the number of publications as many as 34 articles. Lastly, the mapping provides an overview of which countries and writers are concentric and collaborate with each other on the topic of financial literacy in MSMEs. 


Author(s):  
Deborah Paul ◽  
Joe Miller ◽  
Michael Webster

Recent global events reinforce the need for local to global coalitions to address a variety of socio-environmental challenges such as the current COVID-19 pandemic (Cook et al. 2020) and biodiversity loss in general. Scientists reviewing data and fitness for current and future use note urgent necessary changes needed in data collection, specimen collection and preservation, infrastructure, human capacity, and standards-of-practice (Raven and Miller 2020, Morrison et al. 2017, Cook et al. 2020). Multi-faceted research questions often require cross-disciplinary collaboration. A recent paper analyzed conservation and disease mitigation research author networks and discovered that certain disciplines do not work together unless the research has outcomes that serve all groups involved (Kading and Kingston 2020). This research reinforces the finding that common goals offer a powerful way to build effective cross-disciplinary networks, speed up collaboration, and more effectively take on complex research. To move toward a Digital Extended Specimen (DES), the alliance for biodiversity knowledge is engaging in community building. The above summary when coupled with conversations from our alliance-led online consultations reinforces known threads and reveals some emerging themes about partnerships and collaborations. Our group continues to work on defining what a Digital Specimen is (or is not) and then communicating that succinctly to the worldwide community. At the same time we recognize the need for an extensible digital specimen object, we note the need for an extensible network. We note that groups need to and are motivated to solve local issues (as in for their town, or their country or continent). So, looking for and selecting common threads across these regional scales will be key to realizing and motivating effective partnerships and networks. Foremost, this includes expanding participation beyond Europe and North America. We recognize the need to form new partnerships to expand our network and learn from our new partners. For example, the Digital Humanities community would like to talk about the intersection of the humanities, social sciences, biology, and collections that can help each other to do better research. With this talk, and through participation in TDWG2021, we seek to share information and insights gathered so far about next steps and about building and sustaining the network we need to realize a biodiversity data commons and get input from those who participate in our session.


2021 ◽  
pp. 109-111
Author(s):  
V.I. Khairullin ◽  

Discussed is the problem of market relationships within higher school and in particular a notion from the sphere of paid-for education services, that is, a notion of soft commodification, under which the results of theoretical investigation are turned by the author of the investigation into a teaching material that may become a successful produce for the education market. This work is based on a wish to give a practical turn to fundamental research and even use the results of research in purely practical teaching activity. The practical tinge should be searched at advanced levels of an “educational institution — student” economic relationships, when the above dual combination embraces actors such as “research”, “author”, “textbook”, so that it looks as follows: “educational institution — author — research — author — textbook — student”. It is emphasized that the highest achievement as well as a thing of deserved pride for a scholar is his/her ability to make the results of his/her research understandable for students. This is what the author calls for, when he points out that a skill for transforming theory into a teaching material is highly valuable at present. This is an ability to distribute one’s work in the academic space in such a way that it fills in both its scholarly and educational parts and simultaneously enters the education market. The author offers an example of turning research results into a teaching matter. A sample textbook is based on the investigation of justice.


Author(s):  
Volodymyr Nazarenko ◽  
Andrii Martyn

This article introduces a comprehensive study of the food processing and agricultural companies in three large cities and their regions. The research is focused on data from Kyiv, Lviv, and Kharkiv., incl their suburban areas. General demographic information, as well as major economic and social parameters, were analyzed for specific years: from 1995 to 2020 (2019 in some cases). In the context of the research work, three major industry areas were picked, grain and bread, milk and dairy products, meat, and poultry production. The author constructed company profile data for the given industry areas for each of the research cities. On the given research author noted current challenges that large cities face about food supply and production.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 67-71
Author(s):  
E. G. Alexandrova ◽  

The article deals with complex situation surrounding the widespread use of unmanned aerial vehicles. It points out the issue of the increasing number of UAV-related crimes. The author analyzes the development and growing availability of unmanned aerial vehicles, exposes a number of crimes that have potential for the employment of UAVs, and examines current countermeasures for illicit use of such devices. As a result of the research, author concludes that new ways of investigation of such crimes should be developed, as effective methods of prevention of unlawful use of UAVs currently are not available.


2021 ◽  
Vol 334 ◽  
pp. 01036
Author(s):  
Artur Petrov

This article presents approaches to estimate orderliness of transport service of large city by means of city passenger public transport (CPPT). An article considers entropic analysis method as main analytical instrument of orderliness of transportation process. Author presents cause-and-effect chain of formation of results of transportation process by CPPT and process of informational transformation during transportation. An article gives an example of calculation of relative entropy of transportation process by CPPT in Tyumen during March-September 2020. Additional attention was paid to changes of orderliness of transport service during the acute phase of pandemic COVID-19 (April-June 2020). It was established that relative entropy of transportation process decreased during acute phase of pandemic COVID-19 in comparison to periods of sustainable functioning of CPPT system. Respectively orderliness of transportation process increased at the same time. This fact can be explained by structural changes of volume of transported passengers (total volume of traffic – volume of transportation of preferential passengers – volume of transportation of senior citizens). By the results of research author made conclusions and gave recommendations on possible increasing of orderliness of CPPT transportation process.


Author(s):  
Mai Hoang Anh

This research focus on current situation of university spin-off company in public university in Vietnam to analysis the reason of limitation and propose some proposal to develop the university spin-off company. In the scope of this research, author focus on the university spin-off company in famous university in Hanoi to find out the problems of this model. Beside the secondary data, author used indepth interview with experts who are the leaders of these univerisy to deeply understand the problem of these model. The interview results and the previous research, author indicates ten objective reasons and two subjective reasons of government-based organization. Some policies proposal and strategy for developing university spin-off company in public university.


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