INTRODUCTION The Financial Detective‚ 1996 is a case study that tests one’s financial analytical ability. Given the company’s description of its strategic and operating profile in a particular industry‚ the analysts should examine and match a particular set of common size financial data and ratios to a company’s description. In short‚ the financial practitioner must exercise due care in examining the details and fine prints of the company’s strategic and operating description‚ employing the lesson
Premium Balance sheet Financial ratios Inventory
[The Financial Detective 2005 Introduction Each industry is distinctive. One might be unique in its high fixed assets; other would be differentiated of its increasing intangible assets and many other financial footprints that each industry leaves on its balance sheet. Nonetheless‚ industries are distinguished furthermore; fingers of one hand are not the same as said. Businesses in the same industry can be characterized differently according to their strategic plan and capital structure. The following
Premium Balance sheet Generally Accepted Accounting Principles Income statement
Part 1 : Examine and analyze the financial ratios for eight pairs of unidentified companies and match the description of the company with the financial profile derived from the financial ratios. Beer Company D has higher current ratio and quick ratio which is higher 2.43x and 2.3x respectively. This was because Company D had higher cash and short term investment which was 55.6% while Company C only has 1.4%. It proves that Company D is financially conservative and it matches with the second described
Premium Financial ratios Balance sheet Financial ratio
The Financial Detective 2005 Beer Beer Company 1 is a “national brewer of mass-market consumer beers sold under a variety of brand names” (pg. 120). As one might expect‚ this national company has “an extensive network of breweries and distribution systems and owns some beer-related businesses” (pg. 120). It also owns several major theme parks. Beer Company 2 is a brewer of “seasonal and year-round beers with smaller production volume and higher prices” that “outsources most of its brewing activity”
Premium Asset Balance sheet Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
Paula Mason Social Learning Theory on Jerome Bruner Jerome Bruner (1915 - ) Constructivism & Discovery Learning In studying the work of Jerome Bruner‚ it is described that the psychologist “has set in motion innovations for which there may have been theoretical bases for some time.”1 Bruner discusses and describes educational purposes which involve the acquisition and development of “intellectual skills‚ and stressed culture’s effect on a person’s
Premium Educational psychology Psychology Constructivism
Trends Biomater. Artif. Organs‚ 25(2)‚ 86-90 (2011) http://www.sbaoi.org Platelet-Rich Plasma: A Novel Bioengineering Concept Palwinder Kaur‚ Puneet‚ Varun Dahiya1 Department of Prosthodontics‚ Swami Devi Dyal Dental College & Hospital‚ Barwala‚ Distt. Panchkula. Haryana 1 Department of Periodontics‚ D J Dental College‚ Modinagar. Corresponding author: Dr. Palwinder Kaur‚ e-mail: soniya.bagri@gmail.com Received 19 August 2010; Accepted 12 January 2011; Available online 4 May 2011 A promising
Premium Dental implant Oral and maxillofacial surgery Wound healing
Jean Piaget and Jerome Bruner are two theorists who have both had an effect on education over the past century. The process of teaching and learning used by mathematics teachers has been greatly contributed to by Piaget and Bruner. Constructivism is based on the ideas formed by Piaget and Bruner‚ “a theory that views the child as creating knowledge by acting on experience gained from the world and then finding meaning in it.” (Sperry-Smith‚ Van De Walle‚ Karp and Bay-Williams‚ 2012‚ p.10). Jean
Premium Theory of cognitive development Developmental psychology Jean Piaget
BRIEF HISTORY Jerome Bruner was born in New York City on October 1‚ 1915. He attended and received his B.A. from Duke University in 1937 and his Ph.D from Harvard University in 1941. As an American psychologist‚ he has contributed greatly to cognitive psychology and the cognitive learning theory in educational psychology‚ as well as to history and the general philosophy of education. He was on the faculty in the Department of Psychology at Harvard University from 1952 – 1972. He published his
Premium Educational psychology Psychology Learning
http://holmesismyfriend.blogspot.ca/2015/01/thesixelementsofdetectivefiction.html http://gaslight.mtroyal.ca/vandine.htm 1. The detective must be memorable 1. The detective must be memorable. Fictional detectives have to be both clever and a bit out of the ordinary that sets them apart from the crowd. 2. The crime must be significant. Detective novels are constructed around crimes that are worth the detective’s and the reader’s time and efforts to solve. 3. The criminal must be a worthy opponent
Premium Detective fiction Crime fiction
sometimes years covering these kinds of cases; however‚ most of the media’s coverage is based on the victim and their backstory. What seems to be left out of the news report is how the officer is handled by his own department following the devastating event. In this case regarding Detective Casey‚ it is as simple as his department failing him‚ in their lack of communication and empathy. Question One The important concerns of this case are highlighted by Detective Casey’s department failing him when
Premium