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Ethik und ihre Bedeutung als Eckpfeiler einer Vision und eine der wichtigsten treibenden Kräfte in einer Organisation gewinnt ihren Stellenwert zurück. Dieses Buch beleuchtet diese Bausteine der Organisationsentwicklung im Sinne der Human Resources nach dem KISS-Prinzip, Keep it short and simple („Gestalte es kurz und einfach“). Teil 1 gibt eine konzentrierte Darstellung der Idee der Personalentwicklung in der Organisationsentwicklung und deren Nutzen. Teil 2 dieser Organisationsentwicklungsfibel "HR" ist ein Lesebuch für Interessierte. Hier können Sie viel über die Themen Coaching, Führung, Verantwortung, Unternehmenskultur und Erfolg lesen. In Teil 3 stehen Seminare, Workshops und Vorträge im Mittelpunkt. Teil 4 ist dem Thema „Betriebliche Gesundheitsförderung (BGF)“ gewidmet - es ist wahrscheinlich das Thema des dritten Jahrtausends.
Vols. for 1874-76 include also "Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science."
Homework, tests, quizzes, class notes, and reports. Ugh! You may not love to study, but if you want to go places someday, there's no way around it. Study Smart Junior is the story of how young Babette learns to study better in order to realizer her dream of becoming a fashion designer for Felton Jack, a 300-pound rock mega-star with a weakness for bologna sandwiches. In the course of several exciting adventures, she and her friends learn how to: *Make a school schedule *Take better notes *Read to remember *Prioritize homework assignments *Become better at taking tests
How can you be "French, bourgeois and Jewish" at the same time? ... And Compagnie is the first major text to pose such a question clearly and the first great novel of the twentieth century to offer an answer.
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You Must be Very Intelligent is the author’s account of studying for a PhD in a modern, successful university. Part-memoir and part-exposé, this book is highly entertaining and unusually revealing about the dubious morality and desperate behaviour which underpins competition in twenty-first century academia. This witty, warts-and-all account of Bodewits ́ years as a PhD student in the august University of Edinburgh is full of success and failure, passion and pathos, insight, farce and warm-hearted disillusionment. She describes a world of collaboration and backstabbing; nefarious financing and wasted genius; cosmopolitan dreamers and discoveries that might just change the world... Is this a smart people’s world or a drip can of weird species? Modern academia is certainly darker and stranger than one might suspect... This book will put a wry, knowing smile on the faces of former researchers. And it is a cautionary parable for innocents who still believe that lofty academia is erected upon moral high ground...
Short subject films have a long history in American cinemas. These could be anywhere from 2 to 40 minutes long and were used as a "filler" in a picture show that would include a cartoon, a newsreel, possibly a serial and a short before launching into the feature film. Shorts could tackle any topic of interest: an unusual travelogue, a comedy, musical revues, sports, nature or popular vaudeville acts. With the advent of sound-on-film in the mid-to-late 1920s, makers of earlier silent short subjects began experimenting with the short films, using them as a testing ground for the use of sound in feature movies. After the Second World War, and the rising popularity of television, short subject films became far too expensive to produce and they had mostly disappeared from the screens by the late 1950s. This encyclopedia offers comprehensive listings of American short subject films from the 1920s through the 1950s.
My memoir, I Should Have Been Music, covers the four years I spent on four different mental hospitals from 1957 to 1960. It was a time when little was known about mental illness, except the shame and horror of it, and nothing was known about early childhood trauma. I was passed from hospital to hospital carrying several severe classic diagnostic labels, and I narrowly missed being sent to a State hospital as my final stop, where, if not for luck, I might have been incarcerated for the rest of my life. The memoir follows my progress through these hospitals as well as my progress from psychosis to functioning adult. The book also includes doctors' reports from each of the hospitals, along with poems, letters, short stories, and notes from my journals during those years. These primary source materials reveal the stark contrast between the doctors' portrayal of my experience and the reality of the experience I remember living. I had become a pile of paper reports rather than a person. The narrative, at heart, is the journey of a young woman trying to find herself with remarkably little help.
"This catalogue to accompany the museum exhibition traces the emergence of the artistic impulses to use the earth as material, land as medium, and to locate works in remote sites, beyond familiar art contexts. Significantly, "Ends of the Earth" challenges many myths about Land art--that it was primarily a North American phenomenon, that it was foremost a sculptural practice, and that it exceeds the confines of the art system. Featuring over 100 artists hailing from countries including Great Britain, Germany, Iceland, Israel, Japan, the Netherlands, and the United States, the exhibition constitutes the most comprehensive survey of Land art to date"--Provided by publisher.