Reflective Practice- ‘a set of abilities and skills‚ to indicate the taking of a critical stance‚ an orientation to problem solving or state of mind.’ (Moon 1999 cited on www.ukle.ac.uk 2009) Continual Personal and Professional Development- ‘maintaining‚ improving and broadening relevant knowledge and skills in your subject specialism and your teaching and training‚ so that it has a positive impact on practice and the learner development. (www.ifl.ac.uk 2009) Methodology Whilst preparing this
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environment 2. The causes of variation and its biological importance. 3. Mean temperatures are rising in many parts of the world. The rising temperatures may result in physiological and ecological effects on living organisms. Describe and explain these effects. 4. Cells are easy to distinguish by their shape. How are the shapes of cells related to their function? 5. Enzymes and their importance in plants and animals 6. The process of osmosis and its importance to living organisms. 7. How microscopes have contributed
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Evaluate the relative contribution of nature and nurture to human psychological functioning. Illustrate you answer with reference to material from at least two chapters from book 2. The debate concerning the contribution of nature and nurture to human psychological functioning is one of the longest running and most controversial within psychology. The question is what elements of human behaviour can be explained in terms of physical being and what can be explained in terms of social environment
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The Basic Mechanisms of Homeostasis Overview of homeostasis The term homeostasis was first coined by Walter Cannon in 1929 to literally mean ‘steady state’. It describes the dynamic equilibrium by which internal constancy is maintained within set limits by regulation and control. There are many examples of homeostatic control throughout the human body and in other living organisms‚ such as pH‚ pressure‚ and temperature. A concept important to homeostasis is the process of feedback circuits;
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Glucose homeostasis The fed state Presentation copyright © 2007 David A Bender The central nervous system is very largely reliant on glucose as its metabolic fuel; it cannot oxidise fatty acids (but can metabolise ketone bodies in prolonged starvation) glycogen Red blood cells are absolutely reliant on glucose; they have no mitochondria and form ATP only by anaerobic glycolysis triacyglycerol protein glucose triacylglycerol in VLDL triacylglycerol in chylomicrons amino
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Unit 5 Assignment 1 Cabling Factors and Tools Discussion Week 5 Flexibility What type of install is the cable going into? Is everything in a fixed position? If you have an install where items are moved around without being disconnected‚ using highly flexible cable is necessary. Cables in these scenarios need to be flexible to meet those demands of mobility‚ and also for the life of the wire so that it does not crack‚ break‚ fray or short. We had a job at a university where we moved flat panels
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Unit 3: Topologies and Ethernet Standards Kaplan University Professor Nelson Stewart The unit five seminar was mainly focused on Topologies. The professor first addresses that issues with Visio or Toolwire must be directed to Tech Support. A large part of the seminar in the beginning was the best option for troubleshoot access with the Toolwire program since of course no one like dealing with Tech Support. The discussion then turned to how the Toolwire program came around and how the students
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over language‚ cultural‚ racial and national differences. At the beginning I will describe the requirements of the professional code of ethics for interpreters. Later I will explain the meaning of confidentiality and impartiality. I will also evaluate the techniques for revision of word-banks and glossaries‚ as well as the sources of information for regular and reliable professional development. The essential role of Community Interpreter is to enable direct communication for two or more
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Task 5 Reading P5 – Skimming is when you look through something quickly to see what it contains. M3 – Skimming is used in a uniformed public service police force to skim through records and witness testimonies. D2 – Advantage: It saves time. Disadvantage: You may miss some important information out. P5 – Scanning is when you are looking for a particular bit of information. This is when you don’t have the time to read the whole document. M3 – Scanning can be used in the police force when
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This lab connects to the biology course through the unit of homeostasis‚ specifically the lesson on sensations. Sensation is the conscious awareness of the stimulus. Additionally‚ a reception receives the stimulus. For the visual response of the lab‚ the photoreceptors (contain light-absorbing visual pigments) are the cones since the subject is present in light (colour). The cones detect and then covert the stimulus into an action potential. The eye obtains the physical stimulus in the form of light
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