Understanding your own role and responsibilities in Lifelong Learning. My role in lifelong learning is to ensure my knowledge‚ skills and ability to deliver the required information is as up to date and relevant to my learners as is possible to ensure I am always providing appropriate information in a professional manner. A particularly important aspect or remaining up to date is ensuring my knowledge of legislation‚ regulatory requirements and codes of practice are all up to date‚ primarily
Premium Law Occupational safety and health Data Protection Act 1998
Analyse and evaluate your roles‚ responsibilities and relationships in Lifelong Learning For the past 25 years I have primarily been a mother – active in all aspects of my children’s lives and promoting a good and sound education – key aspects in their upbringing has been to ensure that they have all been treated equally‚ and that their opinions and preferences have been valued no matter how diverse. Returning to study in 2006 I attained qualifications in Interior Design - I then continued
Premium Learning Education Lifelong learning
The good teacher is more than a lecturer - the twelve roles of the teacher The good teacher is more than a lecturer the twelve roles of the teacher AMEE Medical Education Guide No 20 This AMEE Education Guide was first published in Medical Teacher: Harden R M and Crosby J R (2000). AMEE Education Guide No 20: The good teacher is more than a lecturer – the twelve roles of the teacher. Medical Teacher 22(4): 334-347. The Authors R M Harden is Director of the Centre for Medical Education
Premium Education
Dual Relationships and Boundaries Paper Donna Lee‚ Rachelle Jones‚ and Jamie Owens Psych 545 March 14‚ 2011 Dr. Marc Miller Dual Relationships and Boundaries Paper Most major professional codes of ethics have a policy or rule against dual relationships (Gottlieb‚ 1993). Dual relationships exist when a professional acts at the same time or sequentially in two roles (Gottlieb‚ 1993). Through the course of this paper‚ the concept of dual relationships will be examined. Ethical issues with dual
Premium Psychology Interpersonal relationship
Role of Higher Educational Institutions in Corporate Social Responsibility By Ms. Susan Abraham Assistant Professor‚ SCMS School of Technology and Management‚ SCMS Campus‚ Muttom‚ Aluva ’ 683106 Email: susan2112@gmail.com Phone: 9495114276 Abstract Higher educational institutions in India have been contributing to the knowledge base of our country. They have been enrolling students at the rate of 10 percent in the year 2007. Privatisation of these institutions has brought in
Premium Education Higher education Curriculum
organizational culture was revealed. It is my intent to utilize the concepts of boundaries and authority from the BART model to describe how management made a mistake by taking the idea of “fun” too far. Boundaries Observable boundaries are defined by Alderfer as the physical‚ spatial‚ and temporal divisions that differentiate a group from other groups (McCollom‚ 1995). The following quote illustrates an observable boundary: “For example‚ teams have dress-up days where employees must come dressed
Premium Attachment theory
Unit 301 Understanding roles‚ responsibilities and relationships in education and training Task A As a teacher in the learning environment I feel it is very important to meet the requirements and needs of the Students. It is the teacher’s responsibility to ensure that the Students feel that they can express themselves and self realise their true potential. The single most important attribute of a good teacher is that they are approachable in all aspects of the training. You are responsible
Premium Education
Anna Hazare From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia | This article may require copy editing for grammar‚ style‚ cohesion‚ tone‚ or spelling. You can assist by editing it. (August 2011) | | This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia ’s quality standards. (Consider using more specific clean up instructions.) Please improve this article if you can. The talk page may contain suggestions. (August 2011) | Anna Hazare | Anna Hazare in Nanded‚ Maharastra | Born | Kisan Hazare 15
Premium Maharashtra Lok Sabha Government of India
Explain virtue ethics – Virtue ethics is agent-centred not act centred. The theory is that practicing virtuous behaviour will lead to become a virtuous person and contributing to a virtuous society. A virtue is habitually doing what was right – being good requires practice of a certain kind of behaviour. This is different from very other ethical theories because it looks at the characteristics of a person (agent-centred) rather than the actual act (act centred). There are a few scholars that
Premium Ethics Virtue Virtue ethics
De La Salle University Medical Center Case Protocol: COMPARISON OF THE POSTOPERATIVE ANALGESIC EFFECTS OF INTRATHECAL MORPHINE AND TRAMADOL IN PATIENTS AGED 18-50 YEARS OLD AFTER LOWER ABDOMINAL SURGERY AT DE LA SALLE UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER‚ A RETROSPECTIVE COHORT STUDY Submitted to the Department of Anesthesiology De La Salle University Medical Center In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements
Premium Morphine Opioid Anesthesia