Chapter 2: The classical approaches (scientific management‚ administrative principles‚ and bureaucratic organization) share a common assumption: people at work act in a rational manner that is primarily driven by economic concerns. Scientific Management: in 1911‚ Fredrick W. Taylor published The Principles of Scientific Management‚ in which he made the following statement: “The principle object of management should be to secure maximum prosperity for the employer‚ coupled with the maximum prosperity
Premium Management Leadership
Hyugen’s principle Every point on an advancing wave front provides a new point of source for the wave Predicts reflection‚ refraction und diffraction Maxwell’s equations All related equations and observations to electricity and magnetism into 4 little equations The electromagnetic spectrum The product of wavelength and frequency is speed is the speed of the wave: Photon Relationship between frequency and photon energy Planck’s Assumption:
Premium Quantum mechanics Photon Light
Chapter 9 GE trying to gain China’s market (power-generating technologies to jet engines) China has policies requiring 100% of the technology used to produced the products‚ in order to allow GE to access de market Ch 9: Trouble can find American Exporters at home Optical Associates fined for shipping to a nuclear facility in India. Laws regulating exports have to do with risk of giving information to the wrong entities. McDonalds and other U.S. Franchisors find foreign growth is Golden
Premium Multinational corporation South Korea Motivation
Chapter 9:Romantic Relationships (research on homosexual relationships can help distinguish between sex and status) I. RELATIONSHIP DEVELOPMENT a. Characteristics Desired in a Mate * Women seek men that are attractive‚ educated‚ good financial status and good work ethic * Both men and women look for physical attractiveness and healthy as moist important for a sexual partner b. Evidence * Men desire physical attractiveness in a partner
Premium Gender role Gender Marriage
Chapter 4 Q1. What is a IT Infrastructure (5 points)? : provides platform for supporting all information systems in the business (page 117) List and explain (1-2 sentences) the five infrastructure components (17 points). IT Infrastruture: consist of the shared information technology resoures that provide the platform for the firm’s specific information system applications. Computer hardware- consistes of technology for computer processing ‚ data storage‚ input‚ and output Computer
Premium Computer Computer software Computer program
CHAPTER 1 pgs.‚ 5‚ 6‚ 7‚ 8‚ 9‚10‚ 12‚ 16‚ 21-29 Managers and resource allocation decisions – Effective managers are those who choose the right organizational goals to pursue and have the skills to utilize resources efficiently. Organization’s strategy – cluster of decisions concerning what organizational goals to pursue‚ what actions to take‚ and how to use resources to achieve these goals Levels of management (e.g.‚ top‚ middle‚ first-line) and management functions - First-line manager – often
Premium Management Marketing Education
Anatomy & Physiology I Course Review for Final Review: 1. The Levels of Organization: Chemical Level: atoms (elements) >>>> molecules (two or more chemicals together) Cellular Lever: individualized (specialized cells) Tissue Level: tissues (groups of cells and materials surrounding them) Organs Level: different tissues that join together as a structure for a specific function System Level: related organs with a common/synergistic function Organism Level: a living
Premium Muscle Neuron Skeletal muscle
Study guide for exam 4 Funding Policies 1. What are the three funding policies? Annual (severable service contracts)– O&M & MILPER‚ 12 months‚ expenses‚ total amount Incremental – RDT&E (only in fiscal year) rationing Full Funding – Procurement and MILCON (12 month funded delivery period)‚ MS B‚ comptrollers fund PROC programs (“investments”) 2. What is a Full Funding Policy? Year to Year Maximum Separate Independent 3. Does the full funding policy require total procurement
Premium Process control
Part I: Bonding A) Group # and Valence Electrons -is used to describe the column in which an element is in. i.e.‚ Lithium is in group 1. *Group number tells you how many valence electrons a specific element has. i.e.‚ Aluminum has 3 valence electrons. B) Ionic Bonding -Ionic bonds form F.U.’s (formula units) -A bond between a metal and a non metal -Occurs when an atom has lost or gained an electron **BRING YOUR ION SHEET FOR NAMING** C) Covalent Bonding -Covalent bonds form molecules
Free Atom Chemical bond Ideal gas law
Evolutionary Psychology: Learning‚ Biology and the Brain Hegel—thesis (consciousness mind) anti thesis (beh) synthesis (cog/beh) Taste Aversion: powerful disinclination toward eating or drinking certain substances. Easily learned—sometimes after a single exposure—are highly resistant to extinction and demonstrate biological constraints What are 3 characteristics of taste aversion that classical conditioning doesn’t explain very well? 1. Conditioning results from the repeated pairing
Premium Classical conditioning Psychology Cerebrum