Elements of Art 1. Line Jagged‚ organic‚ scribble‚ vertical‚ horizontal‚ diagonal‚ zigzag‚ curved‚ length (long/short)‚ width (wide/thin)‚ broken‚ rough‚ bold‚ thin‚ stark (sharpened)‚ harsh‚ defined‚ tapered (broken line)‚ straight‚ spiral‚ converging (coming together)‚ diverging (coming apart)‚ parallel‚ aggressive‚ varied‚ clean. 2. Colour Bright‚ bold‚ cool‚ warm‚ light‚ dark‚ vividness‚ vibrant (bold)‚ dull‚ rich‚ secondary (colours that are made using 2 primary colours)‚ primary (can’t make
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Communication is Key! Understanding Behavior & Family Dynamics April 24‚ 2013 . Any problem‚ big or small‚ within a family‚ always seems to start with bad communication. Someone isn ’t listening.- Emma Thompson Communication is the foundation of successful parenting which is necessary to build a healthy parent child relationship. Authoritative parenting
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Ally Nizamov Q: “What is the most important thing you learned in your journey in life? Explain.” Life is a journey‚ and regardless of which paths you decide to take‚ you’ll find yourself learning something new every step of the way. When you take your very first steps as a baby‚ you’re learning. When you discover the moral behind a story that you’ve read‚ you’re learning. When you look at yourself in the mirror and realize that you’re not the same person you used to be‚ you are learning.
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Ben Smith Dual Credit 2332 - N1 9/8/14 Mrs. Garrett Communication is the Key The story of Rebecca revolves around characters who live at a beautiful estate called Manderley. They are seemingly happy on the outside‚ but their lives are deteriorating on the inside. Their lack of communication originates from different circumstances‚ but the outcome is the same. The narrator‚ Mrs. de Winter‚ only sees things from her perspective and fails to consider others’ positions. Mr. de Winter‚ Maxim‚ communicates
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Aristotle’s Six Elements of Drama Use the six elements to analyze any play you read. 1. Plot. We will consider whether plays are episodic‚ climactic‚ and cyclical‚ what makes it so. A. What is the point of attack? 2. Character. We are considering stock‚ archetypal or complex characters 3. Thought. Please identify the value system that infuses the play. 4. Diction. Is the language high-flown or mundane? What is the result? 5. Music. Please consider the rise and fall of action
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Key Points Chapter 1: Key to success – recurring cash flows Chapter 2: Key to success for Entrepreneurs – persistence! Chapter 3: Key to success for BP- it Explains 1) Management‚ 2) Management‚ 3) CF Executive Summary – the most important section Include ROI and NPV (IRR?) Ratio analyses Chapter 4: Key point – must use the same accounting method Key point: Successful entrepreneurs know their cash position at all times. Chapter 5: Liquidity – the most important ratios Key point – Entrepreneurs
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made of the Logical Framework. In this course we revisit the topic to be able to position it within the overall framework of M&E principles. This topic provides an overview of the Logical Framework approach. It then provides insights into the concepts and the logical relationships between the key parameters in project monitoring and evaluation. It finally provides a an opportunity for the students to be able to link the theory with practice through engagement in developing a typical Logframe
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Rear Window DIRECTOR: Alfred Hitchcock YEAR OF PRODUCTION: 1954 COUNTRY: USA LANGUAGE: English Week 1: Discuss the relationship between spectators and cinema in relation to the film style of Rear Window by Alfred Hitchcock. Stam‚ Robert and Roberta Pearson‚ “Hitchcock’s Rear Window: Reflexivity and the Critique of Voyeurism‚” in Deutelbaum and Poague‚ eds‚ A Hitchcock Reader‚ 2nd ed‚ Chichester‚ UK. & Malden‚ MA: Wiley-Blackwell‚ 2009. Alfred Hitchcock’s “Rear
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Sarah’s Key is a historical fiction novel that ties two stories into one. The novel is about Sarah Starzynski‚ a young Jewish girl in Paris during 1942. She is rounded up with thousands of other Jews in the Velodrome d’Hiver. Sarah is faced with the challenges of surviving and saving herself and possibly her younger brother. Julia Jarmond is an American journalist married to a French man in Paris during 2002. Julia is doing research on the Velodrome d’Hiver roundup and finds a picture of a young
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The Case Method 1 An Approach to Case Analysis This brief contains two case analysis approaches: (I) a general approach and‚ (II) an approach that focuses on the strategic aspects of case analysis. OPTION I: A General Approach to Case Analysis What is a Case Study? A case study is a description of an actual administrative situation involving a decision to be made or a problem to be solved. It can be a real situation that actually happened just as described‚ or may included portions that
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