Your search
Results 2,239 resources
-
Context: In the Gambia, West Africa, Malaria is a major cause of death among children in rural areas. It has been estimated that in one division in the country malaria accounts for 40% of all deaths in children aged between one and 4 years. Most malaria cases are managed at home assisted by primary healthcare workers. The strategic plan of Gambia's National Malaria Control Programme includes improved training and supervision of all health care providers, at all levels, and increased...
-
A quantitative, non-experimental and exploratory study was undertaken to determine the contribution by the clinical nurse instructor to develop critical thinking skills of student nurses in Namibia.
 
 Opsomming
 ‘n Kwantitatiewe nie-eksperimentele en verkennende studie is onderneem om te bepaal wat die bydrae van die kliniese verpleeginstrukteur is om kritiese denke by die studentverpleegkundige in Namibië te ontwikkel.
 
 *Please note: This is a reduced version of...
-
Athens experienced its most glorious moment under the leadership of Pericles who led the Greek city state from its former Aristocratic political arrangement to democratic government. This development created a cultural vacuum because older Aristocratic education did not prepare and equip the Athenian citizens for life and its challenges in the new democratic Athens. The arrival of the sophists at this point in time in the history of Athens and the type of education they introduced filled...
-
The success of the most competitive companies throughout the world, including higher education institutions, lies in their highly skilled employees on which these institutions spend millions to retain. Literature reveals the cost of losing best employees to be enormous – beyond monetary quantification. Also worth noting is that the loss of one competent employee to a competitor institution strengthens the competitor’s advantage. This case study analysed human resources turnover data, and...
-
Training of qualified personnel is of paramount importance in the provision of library services in the school system. This paper takes a critical look at efforts made prior to 1991 to train school librarians in the Colleges and 1991 resolution of the Nigerian School Library Association that Diploma holders be employed to staff school libraries. The vacuum created by the cancellation of Library Studies in Colleges over the past ten years was also examined. As we enter a new millennium,...
-
A survey of library users from University of Lagos, Lagos State Polytechnic and Adeniran Ogunsanya College of Education was conducted between April and May, 2002 for their assessment of the User Education Programme. There were 300 respondents, 100 from each of three academic institutions. The criticisms, problems highlighted by the respondents and suggestions for improvement are discussed.Keywords: education, institution, nigeria, tertiary, userLagos Journal of Library and Information Science Vol. 1(1) 2003: 32-36
-
Research findings and experience in Library Service has greatly shown shelve management as a tool for measuring performance, satisfaction and realization of set goal. This paper examines the state of shelving activities in five high school libraries at different local government areas of Lagos State. This includes statistics and period of shelving, staff strength, accuracy, performance and users satisfaction. School libraries are prone to challenges emanating from staff and management style....
-
In South Africa, disability grant allocation has been under review and tensions are evident in government rhetoric stressing welfare provision on the one hand, and encouraging ‘rationalization’ on the other. This ambiguity is traced down to the level of grant negotiations between doctors and ‘clients’ in a psychiatry clinic in Khayelitsha. Here ‘having nerves’ embodies the distress associated with harsh circumstances and is deemed by supplicants as sufficient to secure a grant. The paper...
-
A nursing student deported from the UK last month is believed to be in hiding in Uganda because she fears for her life.
-
This collection of original, adapted, and previously published articles fills a critical need for professional literature that documents successful research-based practices and programs that teach African American children to read. Thoughtful commentary on historic and current issues, discussion of research-based best practices, and examples of culturally appropriate instruction help you identify and select the best practices and programs that will lead your African American learners to reading success.
-
The HIV/AIDS knowledge survey was carried out among Nigerian university students to assess their level of knowledge about HIV/AIDS. A total of 900 undergraduates of Niger Delta University, Wilberforce Island, Nigeria participated in the study. They consisted of 520 male students and 380 female students within the age bracket of 18years and 40 years (M= 20.62, SD=2.28). The main finding of the study indicated that current students have a highly favourable knowledge about HIV/AIDS. To this...
-
In Tunisia, during the summer, the demand for electricity greatly increases because of the extensive use of air-conditioning systems. This is a source of major problems in the country’s electricity supply and contributes to an increase of CO2 emissions causing the environmental pollution and global warming. On the other hand, vapor compression air conditioning systems have impacts on stratospheric ozone depletion because of the chlorofluorocarbons (CFC) and the hydrofluorocarbon (HCFC)...
-
The Global Fund's decision to suspend Uganda's five grants sent shock waves through the country, whose robust response to AIDS is a point of national pride. Now, the accounts are unfrozen and Uganda is being seen by the Fund as a test case for country-driven reforms. Emily Bass reports. When in Kampala, Victor Bampoe, East Africa portfolio manager for the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria (GFATM), works in an office with panoramic views of the downtown area of Uganda's...
-
In 2004 South Africa celebrated ten years of democracy. The past decade has witnessed radical changes to South Africa's socio-politico-geographical milieu. Included in these changes is the introduction of several new education policies. Foremost among these are new national curriculum frameworks for General Education and Training (GET) and Further Education and Training (FET). In the early stages of curriculum renewal, the position of geography in the new curriculum structures seemed...