Not exact matches
Unfortunately for the Japanese labour markets, as with many other countries, many young intellectuals seek
further study elsewhere in countries like the UK that have renowned Universities and research facilities, taking a large portion
of the skilled labour force the Japanese markets need, into other areas
of work such as research and
academia, a less hands on field that benefits the computer science industry on the whole but does not help specific firms achieve their targets directly.
Their influence has reached
far beyond the halls
of academia into popular catechesis and pastoral practice.
Further, the relativism in much
of academia should also be challenged by a certainty guaranteed by a rational, creator God.
The absurd notion that questioning is good but finding (or even desiring) answers is bad,
far from being the bright idea Greenberg pretends it to be, is precisely the false orthodoxy
of today in
academia.
His work in the world
of academia is
far - reaching into cyberspace exploring the fine points
of net neutrality and telecommunications protocol and yet, despite the high - minded rhetoric
of academia, you're constantly assailed by the notion that Wu is writing down what you have always known, except that you've never thought
of it.
Thus
far, I had successfully escaped reality, spending all my education and job - related activities in the safe haven
of academia.
One
of the perennial questions facing graduates is whether to stay on and
further your skills in
academia, or leap into the workforce and learn on the job.
In
academia, the lack
of minority S&E professors is obvious, but «the
farther up the ladder you go [in industry], you will notice that
academia and industry begin to look alike,» notes Clemmons.
This, said Clemmons, is because «what matters most to businesses are bottom - line results, whereas in
academia, a lot
of folks still spend precious time worrying about whether or not minorities are intellectually inferior, when in fact, nothing could be
further from the truth.»
The kind
of teamwork described in that NRC report is
far more common in industry than it is in
academia.
The European Federation
of Catalysis Societies (EFCATS) seems to be
far more
academia - led than the previous two organisations.
As the Government seems set to
further promote business activities within
academia and the opening up
of universities to industry, I would imagine that many more
of these positions will become available in the future.
«Anybody who's been in serious, aggressive science in
academia can tell you stories about people holding back key parts
of data,» he says, «because they want to get a little bit
farther down the road before they publish it.»
The implications
of polarity reverberate
far beyond the confines
of academia.
«By opening The City's dark fibre infrastructure to the private and public sector, non-profit companies, and
academia, we help enable the development
of projects like quantum encryption and create opportunities for
further research, innovation and economic growth in Calgary,» said Tyler Andruschak, project manager with Innovation and Collaboration at The City
of Calgary.
The main outcome
of this programme is a cohort
of researchers with computational, experimental laboratory and transferable skills ready to
further their career in
academia, public health and the private sector.
Commenting on the publication
of the report, Sir John Bell said, «We have created a strategy which capitalises on our strong science base to
further build the industry into a globally - unique and internationally competitive life sciences ecosystem, supported by collaboration across industry, government, the NHS,
academia, and research funders to deliver health and wealth.»
He
further notes that there is ``... significant discordance between preclinical findings and clinical results» and ``... inefficient partnerships between
academia and industry,» two challenges that must be addressed if academic research is to yield maximum clinical benefit and attain the ultimate goal
of saving patients» lives.
While a sense
of obligation to share science, enact change in
academia or advocate for a cause are reasons some scientist bloggers give for communicating online, these fall much
further down the list
of motivations, while popularizing science and self - expression motivations dominate.
The lower tax bracket on physical titles might be one
of the deciding factors when libraries, schools and
academia are establishing book acquisition budgets, their dollar simply stretches
further with print.
The lower tax bracket on physical titles might be one
of the deciding factors when libraries, schools and
academia are establishing book acquisition budgets, it simply goes
further with print.
Book value has received plenty
of attention from researchers in
academia and industry, starting with Roger Ibbotson's Decile Portfolios
of the New York Stock Exchange, 1967 — 1984 (1986) and Werner F.M. DeBondt and Richard H. Thaler's
Further Evidence on Investor Overreaction and Stock Market Seasonality (1987).
-LSB-...] plenty
of attention from researchers in
academia and industry, starting with Roger Ibbotson's Decile Portfolios
of the New York Stock Exchange, 1967 — 1984 (1986) and Werner F.M. DeBondt and Richard H. Thaler's
Further Evidence on Investor -LSB-...]
Battlezone Gold Edition (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC)- May 1 Killing Floor: Incursion (PlayStation VR)-- May 1 Outbreak: The Nightmare Chronicles (Xbox One)- May 1 Super Mega Baseball 2 (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC)- May 1 Coffee Crisis (PC)- May 2 Total War Saga: Thrones
of Britannia (PC)- May 3 City
of Brass (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC)- May 4 Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze (Nintendo Switch)- May 4 Conan Exiles (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC)- May 8 Destiny 2: Warmind (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC)- May 8 Last Encounter (PC)- May 8 Megadimension Neptunia VIIR (PlayStation 4)- May 8 Pillars
of Eternity 2: Deadfire (PC)-- May 8 Raging Justice (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, PC)- May 8 Tacoma (PlayStation 4)- May 8 AO International Tennis (PlayStation 4, Xbox One)- May 8 Subaeria (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC)- May 9 Immortal Redneck (Nintendo Switch)- May 10 Laser League (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC)- May 10 Hyper Sentinel (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC, Nintendo Switch)- May 11 One Piece: Pirate Warriors 3 (Switch)- May 11 Warhammer 40,000: Inquisitor - Martyr (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC)- May 11 Battle Chasers: Nightwar (Nintendo Switch)- May 15 Dragon's Crown Pro (PlayStation 4)- May 15 Little Witch
Academia: Chamber
of Time (PlayStation 4, PC)- May 15 Shin Megami Tensei: Strange Journey Redux (Nintendo 3DS)- May 15 Horizon Chase Turbo (PlayStation 4, PC)- May 15 Little Witch
Academia: Chamber
of Time (PlayStation 4, PC)- May 15 Omensight (PlayStation 4, PC)- May 15 Shin Megami Tensei: Strange Journey Redux (Nintendo 3DS)- May 15 Wizard
of Legend (Nintendo Switch)- May 15
Far: Lone Sails (PC)- May 17 Fox N Forests (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, PC)- May 17 Worlds Adrift (PC)- May 17 Hyrule Warriors Definitive Edition (Nintendo Switch)- May 18 Little Nightmares: Complete Edition (Nintendo Switch)- May 18 State
of Decay 2 (Xbox One, PC)-- May 18 Ancestors Legacy (Xbox One, PC)-- May 22 NBA Playgrounds 2 (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, PC)- May 22 Mega Man Legacy Collection (Nintendo Switch)- May 22 Mega Man Legacy Collection 2 (Nintendo Switch)- May 22 Runner 3 (Nintendo Switch, PC)- May 22 Space Hulk: Deathwing - Enhanced Edition (PlayStation 4, PC)- May 22 Tennis World Tour (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, PC)- May 22 Dillon's Dead - Heat Breakers (Nintendo 3DS)- May 24 Dark Souls Remastered (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, PC)- May 25 Detroit: Become Human (PlayStation 4)- May 25 PixelJunk Monsters 2 (PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch)- May 25 Agony (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC)- May 29 Everspace (PS4)-- May 29 Legend
of Kay Anniversary (Nintendo Switch)-- May 29 Moonlighter (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, PC)-- May 29 Sega Mega Drive Classics (PlayStation 4, Xbox One)-- May 29 Yesterday Origins (Nintendo Switch)- May 31
While I am reading this thread and its ample links to
further my own research on the web, I want to leave a new link today which accompanied a UCSUSA bulletin: the link is to a 50 - pp pdf published by an assortment
of individuals in
academia and government in CA, which document is to serve as the basis for an online colloquy involving UCSUSA members April 27.
If you want some evidence
of the bias among high profile climate change Australian
Academia, go no
further than the series
of thirteen extremist articles by Australia's top climate change academics here: https://theconversation.com/climate-change-is-real-an-open-letter-from-the-scientific-community-1808 Note: it was coordinated by the Editor
of the Conversation and Stephen Lewandowski.
The US Department
of Energy (DOE) is seeking comments from industry and
academia on a draft report outlining domestic unconventional fossil energy resource opportunities and associated technology applications, in support
of an overall strategy for the
further development
of these resources.
The Fifth Assessment will
of course be
far more nuanced than previous Reports and that is how a hoax dies but hopefully along the way there will be a needed reassessment
of continued funding paid for by hard working Americans
of all anti-America, anti-capitalist, nti - Judeo / Christian institutions like the UN, EPA and Big Government - funded
academia.
And I've learnt that
academia is very
far from its own utopian view
of itself.
I've been around
academia a lot
of years,
far more than most.
Populations around the globe have so
far, unfortunately, accepted the «commercial air traffic condensation trail» official lie that is fed to them by agencies and the vast majority
of government sponsored
academia.
Law students are
far more deeply immersed in legal
academia than practitioners, due to time constraints and the allocation
of responsibilities.
Further study is essential for a career in
academia and can be useful for a range
of other careers, for example, developing new technologies and products.
Describe your university achievements so
far outside
of academia — eg your extracurricular activities, working while at university, sports volunteering.