Massachusetts Institute of Technology 麻省理工学院 3 University of California Berkeley 加州大学伯克利分校 3 University of Michigan Ann Arbor 密歇根大学安娜堡分校 5 New York University 纽约大学 5 University of Virginia 弗吉尼亚大学 7 Carnegie Mellon University 卡内基梅隆大学 7 the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校 7 University of Texas--Austin 德克萨斯大学奥斯汀分校 10 Cornell University 康奈尔大学 11 Indiana University--Bloomington 印地安纳大学伯明顿分校 11 University of Notre Dame 圣母大学 11 University of Southern California 南加州大学 14
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importance of the rank Staff Sergeant The rank of Staff Sergeant is the sixth rank in the United States Marine Corps enlisted rank structure. Being a Staff Sergeant also bestows upon the individual receiving the rank the title of Staff Non Commissioned Officer. Staff Sergeants are usually experienced Marines with 10 to 13 years of experience behind them on average. A staff sergeant is a Staff Noncommissioned Officer at DoD paygrade E-6‚ with a starting monthly pay of $2281.20. The rank of Staff Sergeant
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The history of the rank of Sergeant begins roughly about the year 1942 and it’s the oldest rank in the Marine Corps. The rank was used by both of the armies in the civil war but the colors of the three stripes that the rank Sergeant carries as a insignia varied depending on the job you had. Artillery had red‚ infantry had blue‚ cavalry had yellow and later in the war‚ sharpshooters had green. All had three stripes for both the armies‚ the Union Army and the Confederate Army. Before from the start
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In the U.S. Military services‚ rank determines who gets to tell whom what to do. The higher one ’s rank the more authority (and responsibility) they have. U.S. Military personnel fall into one of three categories: (1) enlisted members‚ (2) warrant officers‚ and (3) commissioned officers. Warrant officers outrank all enlisted members‚ and commissioned officers outrank all warrant officers and enlisted members. "Rank" and "pay grade" are closely associated terms‚ but not quite the same. "Pay grade"
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SPEARMAN’S RANK CORRELATION BY NILOY MAJUMDAR Table of Contents 1. INTRODUCTION 2. BIVARIATE DATA 3. ASSOCIATION AND CORRELATION 4. DEFINITION AND CALCULATION 5. RELATED QUANTITIES 6. INTERPRETATION 7. EXAMPLE 8. PEARSON’S PRODUCT-MOMENT CORRELATION COEFFICIENT 9. DETERMINING SIGNIFICANCE 10. CORRESPONDENCE ANALYSIS BASED ON SPEARMAN’S rho 11. REFERENCES 1. Introduction Rank correlation is used
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battlefield decision loop has become an achievable and likely goal. In his work “The Case for Ethical Autonomy in Unmanned Systems”‚ Arkin argues for the ethical case of fielding autonomous unmanned system in light of the benefits it produces. Contrary to
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A deontological ethical system is one that is concerned solely with the inherent nature of the act being judged. If an act is inherently good‚ then even if it results in bad consequences‚ it is still considered a good act. Teleological systems judge the consequences of an act. An act might look bad‚ but if it results in good consequences‚ then it can be defined as good under a teleological system. Ethical formalism is a deontological system because the important determinant for judging whether
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Ethical System of Inquiry Ethics in Management March 4‚ 2007 Ethical System of Inquiry "The Code of Business reaffirms what each Motorola employee stands for: Doing the right thing. Every day. No excuses” (Ethics and Code of Business Conduct‚ 2007). In developing a system of inquiry‚ I chose to use the ethics code for Motorola Corporation. Motorola’s Key Beliefs have been in existence for decades‚ and Motorola continues to have a strong culture of corporate ethics and citizenship.
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Ethical Systems Table PHL/323 June 20‚ 2012 Ethical Theory or System | Brief Definition | Other Names for Theory | Real-world Example | Workplace Example | Duty-based Ethics | Regardless of consequences‚ certain moral principles are binding‚ focusing on duty rather than results or moral obligation over what the individual would prefer to do (Treviño & Nelson‚ 2007‚ Ch. 4).In ethics‚ deontological ethics‚ or deontology (Greek: deon meaning obligation or duty)‚ is a theory holding that
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Directions: 1. Fill in brief definitions of each primary ethical theory. 2. Identify alternate names or variations of each ethical system based on your reading of the text and supplemental materials. Match the real-world examples listed below with the corresponding systems. The first one has been completed for you in the table. a. I believe people should be able to eat sand if they like the taste of it. b. I believe that if sand is going to be eaten‚ it should be
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