At some point almost every parent faces the decision to use either a commercial daycare facility or an at home daycare. Some families are lucky enough to be able to have one of the parents stay at home or have a close family friend or family member that can provide childcare. Other family’s children must be cared for outside of the home. Commercial daycare and at home childcare represent two different ways of providing childcare. However‚ they share similarities and differences that will be evident
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Revision questions 1. Define the term “consumer rationality” and outline the conditions that must be fulfilled for consumer rationality 2. Using indifference curves derive the demand curve for a normal good. 3. With the help of a diagram distinguish between the income effect and substitution effect of change in the price of a normal good. 4. Using an illustration‚ explain the concept of market equilibrium
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These are the key points in Learning Guide 1: The children and young people’s workforce is large and diverse. Its composition raises some important questions about who works with children and in what sort of organisations. Policy and legislation increasingly vary across the UK as devolution becomes more firmly established. It is important to understand the context most relevant to you‚ but valuable learning can also be drawn from comparing developments in different contexts and countries. Developing
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EXERCISE Question 1 a) Two point of charges of opposite sign and same magnitude 3.5 μC are separated by a distance of 5 cm. Find (i) the magnitude and direction of the electric field strength‚ E at the midpoint between the charges. (ii) the magnitude and direction of the force F on an electron placed at the midpoint. Answer: i) E net = 1.008x108 N/C toward the –ve charge ii) F net = 1.6128x10-11 N toward +ve charge
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F40 BMA Tutorial 4 1. A man is driving at 120 km/h along a straight road and he looks to the side for 2.0 s‚ how far does he travel during this inattentive period? [66.7 m] 2. A horse canters away from its trainer in a straight line‚ moving 160 m away in 17.0 s. It then turns abruptly and gallops halfway back in 6.8 s. Calculate (a) its average speed and (b) its average velocity for the entire trip‚ using “away from the trainer” as the positive direction. [10.1 m/s; 3.36 m/s]
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Perfect competition Learning outcomes You should be able to: Describe the assumed characteristics of perfect competition: a large number of firms; a homogeneous product‚ freedom of entry and exit (no barriers to entry or exit); perfect information and perfect resource mobility (factors of production can move easily in and out of the market) Explain‚ using a diagram‚ the shape of the perfectly competitive firm’s average revenue and marginal revenue curves‚ indicating that the assumptions of perfect
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PART 2: AGREEMENT A. Offer and acceptance Offer * Objective approach: offer must normally be interpreted in the sense in which it would reasonably be understood by an ordinary person‚ even though the offeror’s actual meaning was otherwise. * Definition: indication by one person to another of his or her willingness to enter into a contract with that person on certain terms. The ‘offer’ must indicate a willingness by the offeror to be bound without further negotiation as to the terms of
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However…. The 1st amendment gives the mass media right to report crime news‚ including information and visual images that could prejudice an entire community against someone who has not yet stood trial and is still presumes innocent by the law. “Remedies” for the fair trial/free press problem The remedy: CAUTIONING POLICE‚ PRESEECUTERS‚ ETC. not to give information about a trial to the news media The problem: gags can be challenged by gagged on grounds that it interferes with 1st amendment
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Ultrasounds are sentimental moments that are shared between parents. Well if you bring doritos along your ultrasound it could turn into a unforgettable experience. This commercial is a funny and entertaining‚ and will get the attention of any mother or person who have experienced an ultrasound. Doritos brand wanted to give people something funny that could be remembered anytime you see a dorito chip. In a short amount of time this ad gets you to think about the chip and want to go out and “crunch”
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These Snickers commercials usually have a overly emotional character who does not match with the current situation occurring around them. A friend of the character then says "Eat a snickers!" in order to sooth the character and as the character takes a bite of the snickers. The friend ask the classic line we all know "Better?" Then the scene cuts back to the previously emotional character who is now back to his/her normal self. The now normal character replies with "Better". The commercial then becomes
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