Worksheet — Summary of identified misstatements Entity Period ended 335 Page 1 of 2 Objective: To document misstatements identified during the audit and to evaluate: - The effect of identified misstatements on the audit. - The effect of uncorrected misstatements‚ if any‚ on the financial statements. Performance materiality Insignificant misstatements under $ need not be recorded below. Amount of over (under) misstatement in the financial statements Circumstances of occurrence
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PHYSICS UNIT 2 Physics P2 for GCSE Additional Science or GCSE Physics AQA GCSE Science PHYSICS 2 Unit P2.1 Forces and their effects Appreciate that forces can cause changes to the shape or motion of an object. Not only can objects can move in a straight line at a constant speed but they can also change their speed and/ or direction (accelerate or decelerate). Be able to use/produce graphs can help us to describe the movement of an object. These may be distance-time graphs or velocity-time graphs
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UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS International General Certificate of Secondary Education MARK SCHEME for the October/November 2010 question paper for the guidance of teachers 0625 PHYSICS 0625/32 Paper 3 (Extended Theory)‚ maximum raw mark 80 This mark scheme is published as an aid to teachers and candidates‚ to indicate the requirements of the examination. It shows the basis on which Examiners were instructed to award marks. It does not indicate the details of the discussions
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Interpreting Causal Uncertainty with Individual’s Initial Interactions Many studies have been conducted to examine why people feel the way they do towards events or situations they perceive as not their stereotypical “norm” or feeling uncertain as to why someone did what they did. In a study by Gifford Weary and John A. Edwards (1994)‚ they define this uncertainty about one’s inability to comprehend or identify causal relationships or causal conditions in society as causal uncertainty (CU). Whether
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Course Syllabus – Queens College PSYCHOLOGY 213W – Spring 2015 Experimental Psychology (4 Credits) Class Number 61865 Time/location: Tues - 9:10-12:00 PM meeting in Razran 312 Fri - 9:10-12:00 PM meeting in Razran 312 Instructor: Sara Bauer E-mail: sara.bauer@qc.cuny.edu Office: Science Building A315 Office Hours: Tuesday‚ 12-1pm Course Description: This is a laboratory
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4s and the reaction time while someone is distracting the member is 0.5s‚ and lastly graph matching. 1. Introduction All of us have the ability to move. Knowing how to describe motion is an important first step in understanding the underlying physics that governs changes in motion. We see changes in motion all the time‚ as we go to work or school‚ participate in sports or even wander around our homes. If we never changed our own motion‚ we would never make it out of bed in the morning. The study
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supports‚ meter stick‚ protractor‚ 20-N spring scales. Objective: During this lab‚ you will investigate the relationship between the angle of an applied force and the magnitude of one component. You will compare your actual force with the theoretical force and provide a computer generated data table that calculates the theoretical values. You will graph your actual and theoretical values and provide a complete table of % errors for your results. Your paragraph will discuss all the questions below in depth
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Introductory Physics I Elementary Mechanics by Robert G. Brown Duke University Physics Department Durham‚ NC 27708-0305 rgb@phy.duke.edu Copyright Notice Copyright Robert G. Brown 1993‚ 2007‚ 2013 Notice This physics textbook is designed to support my personal teaching activities at Duke University‚ in particular teaching its Physics 141/142‚ 151/152‚ or 161/162 series (Introductory Physics for life science majors‚ engineers‚ or potential physics majors‚ respectively). It is freely
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Hoo Sze Yen Form 4 Experiments Physics SPM 2008 CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION TO PHYSICS 1.1 PENDULUM Hypothesis: The longer the length of a simple pendulum‚ the longer the period of oscillation. Aim of the experiment: To investigate how the period of a simple pendulum varies with its length. Variables: Manipulated: The length of the pendulum‚ l Responding: The period of the pendulum‚ T Constant: The mass of the pendulum bob‚ gravitational acceleration Apparatus/Materials: Pendulum bob‚ length
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Mapua Institute of Technology Department of Physics VILLAFLOR‚ KIM MICHAELA B. EMG/3 PHY11-2L/B4 2009100103 GROUP NO.5 504 DATE OF PERFORMANCE: MAY 3‚2013 DATE OF SUBMISSION: MAY 10‚2013 INSTRUCTOR Analysis: The work done by the fan cart is not constant. Because the work is directly proportional to the displacement given a constant force while power is indirectly proportional to work. Therefore we can conclude that power is also directly proportional
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