Aviary - Tools - 0 views
Transposing Instruments - 0 views
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Common Transposing Instruments
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Material Detail - 0 views
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This is an on-line survey that can be taken to determine your preferred Learning Style.
Teaching Online - A Time Comparison - 0 views
Download Free Trials - 0 views
AP Central - The AP Macroeconomics Exam - 0 views
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Questions
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All Questions
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Questions
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THE BRAIN FROM TOP TO BOTTOM - 0 views
Signal Detection on ePsych - 0 views
ePsych: An electronic Psychology text - 0 views
Economics Interactive Tutorial: Elasticity - 0 views
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In each of the following examples, choose whether you would expect demand to be elastic or inelastic. In none of these examples will the demand be as elastic as the demand for gasoline at a particular gas station on a street with many gas stations. Drivers will flock to a gas station with a price a few pennies below its neighbors' prices, and will abandon a gas stations with a price a few pennies higher. Choose "Elastic demand" if you think that buyers will buy somewhat less if the price goes up, or somewhat more if the price goes down. Choose "Inelastic demand" if you think that the buyers will buy about the same amount if the price goes up or down. An unconscious bleeding man is brought to a hospital emergency room. A patient is given a presciption for a drug to control high blood pressure. The patient's insurance doesn't cover drugs, so the patient must pay out of pocket. A hospital in-patient has insurance that will pay all charges. What would the demand be like for nurse-administered propoxyphene (Darvon), a pain-reliever? A senior signs up with a managed care plan to get the Medicare drug benefit. Even though the senior is locked in for a year, the plan can, at any time, change which drugs it will pay for, based on the plan's judgement about a drug's effectiveness and price relative to other drugs that do about the same thing. For members of that plan, what might the demand for the Darvon be like? Darvon's cheapest alternative might be acetomenophen (Tylenol) in this case. A family has a high-deductible health insurance policy. The effect is that the family pays for primary care office visits out of pocket. Now, one of their children has an earache. What would their demand be like for an office visit to get this checked out? In general, if the decision-maker has an incentive to spend less on some product and if there is an adequate substitute for that product, then demand is more ...
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Health Savings Accounts -- The Best Way to Make Demand More Elastic?
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Elasticity
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Music Theory Skills Tests - 0 views
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Interactive Applet Skill Tests
Well-Tempered Clavier: analysis, scores, and digital sound - 0 views
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Hover over the keyboard to get a list of fuges by J.S. Bach. Click on one and an excerpt from that fugue will play. Move over to play movie and a new screen will come up. The entire fugue will play while scrolling through the music. A listening analysis map will also show and will move while the piece is playing.
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video blogging class / FrontPage - 0 views
seesmic visual - 0 views
Kristina Lattanzio's Blog.... - 0 views
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Teacher presence, which is how you speak and relate to your students, must not be confused with teaching presence, which is the way a course is structured, activities are designed and feedback is given.
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kristina: are you missing the even bigger point here that "teaching presence" is not the exclusive domain of the one in the "role" of "teacher?" Than "teaching presence" in an effectively designed online learning environment is equally expressed, cultivated and facilitated from those in the "role" of "student." can you demonstrate to me that you understand this key concept?
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One of the resources I came across identified audio feedback to be associated retention of content and students associate it with the perception that the instructor cared more about them.
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