(In person TRS1-107) Sundays 11:15 to 12:00 (Online) Office: TRS 1-107 E-mail: sui.sui@ryerson.ca Phone: (416) 979 5000 ext. 6710 _______________________ COURSE INFORMATION Pre-requisites and/or Exclusions: None Posting of Grades and Feedback on Work: Grades on assignments and tests will be posted on the Blackboard site for the course. All assignments submitted for grading will be handed back within three weeks except for the final assignment which will be available for pick-up after official
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marks@ualberta.ca Office Hours: MWF 12:30-13:30‚ and by appointment ------------------------------------------------- Lecture Room & Time: TL B2‚ MWF 11:00-11:50 ------------------------------------------------- Course Web Page: E-Class (Moodle) - login with your CCID and password Course Description: Systems of linear equations. Vectors in -space‚ vector equations of lines and planes. Matrix algebra‚ inverses and invertibility. Introduction to linear transformations. Subspaces of -space. Determinants
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Lecture Time: Monday 17.45 – 20.15 Tutorial Time: Mon/Tue/Wed. 16.15 – 17.05 Email: grimes@encs.concordia.ca Office : EV-2.253. Phone: Ex 5447 Office Hours: Mon. 16.00 – 17.00; Tue. & Thu. 16.15 – 17.15. Course Description ENCS 272. Three-credit course. ENCS 272 teaches the fundamentals of English composition and argumentation: grammar; reasoning and persuasion; persuasive proofs; argumentation; structuring and outlining; the problem statement; the body; and the conclusions
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is quite sure what that means for the future study of culture. If culture is “everything” and “everywhere” what exactly isn’t culture‚ and do we actually need a subfield in sociology to study it if everyone is already studying it anyway? Does this course sound confusing? Does it sound like something you’d best run away? Please don’t. You need not worry. Culture is both the norms‚ values‚ and rituals that you celebrate and hold dearly‚ and the one’s that you take for granted as “common sense.” Culture
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Course Syllabus BMAL 602 Non-Profit Management Course Description This course provides the student with a foundational knowledge of non-profit business enterprises. Particular emphasis will be given to Christian non-profit businesses. Emphasis will also be given to the common characteristics of all successful business enterprises‚ that is‚ what do non-profit business have in common with all for-profit businesses and in what significant ways do they differ. Rationale In the United
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Office Hours Class Location Class Hours Gerard N. Brathwaite-Sturgeon DMS 5144 (613) 562-5800 (ext 8839: please no voice mail) brathwaite@telfer.uottawa.ca DMS 5144: Thursdays 5:30 – 6:45 or by appointment. DMS 4140 Thursdays: 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm Course Deliverable Team Class Topic Facilitation Individual Article Review Mid-Term Exam Team Case Report and Presentation Final Exam Due Date According to the schedule established in class June 10‚ 2010 June 24‚ 2010 - Mid Term Exam Week Presentations
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FDN-BN101-DB Foundation Course in Banking – I 1 Table of Contents 1 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.5.1 1.5.2 1.5.3 1.6 Evolution of Banking ________________________________________ 6 What is banking? ______________________________________________________6 History of Banking _____________________________________________________7 Services Offered by Banks ______________________________________________10 Trends in Banking Services _____________________________________________12 Classification
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1 Annexure ‘I’ M.A. English Part-I & II The Appendix ‘A’ (Outlines of Tests) and Appendix ‘B’ (Syllabi & Courses of Reading for M.A. English Part-I and Part-II shall be effective from the Session 2002-2003. The class admitted in the year 2002 will take their M.A. English Part-I Examination of 2003 according to new syllabus in the year 2003: - M.A. (English) Part I Examination of 2003 Appendix ‘A’ (Outlines of Tests) Marks Paper I (Classical Poetry) Paper II (Drama) Paper III (Novel) Paper
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Online Instructor Addendum Section 1: Course Information Course Id: HSM415 Course Name: Threats to Homeland Security Term: WI14 Instructor: Lisa Davenport Contact Information: 717 991-0289 (please do not call after 8:30 p.m.) Office Hours Upon Request Section 2: Course Overview This course will analyze the history and many dimensions of national security before and after 9/11. It will also provide a comprehensive and interdisciplinary critique of the concepts of threats
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Course Description: BUMGT 5921 Organizations: Behaviour‚ Structure‚ Processes CRICOS Provider Number 00103D Semester 1‚ 2014 - IIBIT-Sydney Page 1 of 17 School/Portfolio: The Faculty of Business Course Code/ID: BUMGT 5921 Course Title: Organizations: Behaviour‚ Structure‚ Processes Teaching Location: IIBIT-Sydney Semester: 1/2014 Prerequisite(s): Nil Corequisite(s): Nil Exclusion(s): Nil Credit Points/ Progress Units: 15 ASCED Code: 080307 Adopted Reference Style APA Course
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