View allAll Photos Tagged oral_presentation
Charleston, SC. Memminger Elementary School, near St. Philip Street service entrance. Memminger School detached music and art studio building once part of the girls high school complex. Photo taken October 2006.
Originally constructed in 1953-54, school underwent a total renovation which was completed in 2001. That multi-million dollar project included roof replacement and equipping the school with all new furnishings and fixtures.
In 1998 a complete analysis of the Charleston region was conducted with published results relating to what might be expected if an earthquake were to strike the area with a similar force as the one in August of 1886, now estimated to have registered 7.3 on the Richter Scale. The report was designed to review what might happen to the urban area's public buildings and infrastructure given the dramatic development differences that exist between Charleston in 1886 and the same city in 1998, slightly more than 100 years later. Representatives of all public agencies in the area, including top administrators from the Charleston County School District, were present for the oral presentation of the findings. The published report and conclusions was also given to the local school district facilities director soon afterwards and prior to 2001.
In the fall of 2003 and spring of 2004, the architectural firm of Harvey Gantt of Charlotte, NC, reported that the school was structurally sound and with some program design changes would likely serve the community's needs for the future. In the fall of 2009, school district officials ordered a different engineering study, without an RFP, designed to project liabilities in the event of an earthquake registering 5.0 or greater. Five schools were singled out against an inventory of over 80 school facilities, many with conditions at greater risk than the ones singled out. The structural analysis of each of the 5 schools, all built before 1998 and prior to the implimentation of the IBC, indicated that safety risks existed in the event of a cataclismic event. The reports also indicated that each building could be made safe by following accepted practices for retrofitting structural supports to meet current seismic codes. It was not required that any of the five schools be demolished if a standard structural retrofit was attempted.
In early 2010, school district officials decided the building was seismicly unsafe and ordered the school to be immediately vacated and torn down. Community objections were ignored.
Photo and text initially posted: January 2008
Revised: 12 August 2010
Copyrights Reserved: hdescopeland
McMichael High School presents information about how they developed their bridge design during their oral presentation.
A total of 200 participants, 70 oral presentations, 170 scientific posters on display, two culinary demonstrations, more than a dozen specialized sessions, visits to laboratories and field trials from the cassava program at CIAT, a new president of the ISTRC, and a touching award ceremony. These are some of the figures that show how intense and productive were those four days of work in the 18th Triennial Symposium of the International Society for Tropical Root Crops (ISTRC), that was held from October 22 to 25 at CIAT’s headquarters.
Credit: ©2018CIAT/JuanMarín
Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.
For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org
Utah State University partnered with the Utah MESA (Mathematics, Engineering, science, Achievement) program to hold the state MESA Prosthetic Arm Challenge contest finals during USU Physics Day at Lagoon on May 16.
“USU Physics Day is an educational activity that gives high school and middle school students the chance to explore the reality of physics in a fun way. It provides students with the opportunity to take concepts outside the classroom and into their memories forever,” said Physics Day organizers.
This year eleven teams participated, seven in the junior high category and four in the high school category.
During the competition, the teams are asked to complete four tasks using the prosthetic arm they have researched, designed, built and tested. Teams do distance accuracy relay, object relocation, dexterity, and design efficiency. Prior to the competition teams must complete a technical report and academic display that are used during their oral presentations for the judges.
The winners of the state finals, Granite Park Team #6 and Cottonwood High School Team #4, will travel to Portland, Oregon in June to compete at nationals.
The Utah State Office of Education provides leadership for the MESA program. MESA is a public education program holding membership in a consortium. Consortium members represent public education, industry, higher education, and the community.
Photo courtesy of Andrew Marks
Based on my rudimentary knowledge of the Spanish Language, here is what I think it says starting from the second line because I have no idea what the first line says.
"same sex
meeting every other week
oral presentation"
Hands-On challenge oral presentation by the participant during the RHB-The Star Mighty Minds National Challenge for Upper Secondary Catergory at Suria Sabah shopping complex in Kota Kinabalu yesterday..
.
(NORMIMIE DIUN/The Star)
I'm back from a trip to DC -- my first time to Washington. Unfortunately it was mostly work as I was there for the Society for Neuroscience 2008 annual conference where over 31,000 neuroscientists converged on DC. I gave an oral presentation on my recent work on Alzheimer's. It was a great conference, but was so big and intense I had little time to get out and see DC. I did sneak out one night to visit the monuments, and though I froze my tail off, I did get at least this shot that I kinda like.
A total of 200 participants, 70 oral presentations, 170 scientific posters on display, two culinary demonstrations, more than a dozen specialized sessions, visits to laboratories and field trials from the cassava program at CIAT, a new president of the ISTRC, and a touching award ceremony. These are some of the figures that show how intense and productive were those four days of work in the 18th Triennial Symposium of the International Society for Tropical Root Crops (ISTRC), that was held from October 22 to 25 at CIAT’s headquarters.
Credit: ©2018CIAT/JuanMarín
Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.
For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org
Range after difficulty midway flight profile
Oral Presentation Summary / January 21, 1964
Presented to the Boeing Board of Directors
Interior Configuration and Body Extension
Oral Presentation Summary / January 21, 1964
Presented to the Boeing Board of Directors
A total of 200 participants, 70 oral presentations, 170 scientific posters on display, two culinary demonstrations, more than a dozen specialized sessions, visits to laboratories and field trials from the cassava program at CIAT, a new president of the ISTRC, and a touching award ceremony. These are some of the figures that show how intense and productive were those four days of work in the 18th Triennial Symposium of the International Society for Tropical Root Crops (ISTRC), that was held from October 22 to 25 at CIAT’s headquarters.
Credit: ©2018CIAT/JuanMarín
Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.
For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org
SST Program Summary and Staffing
Oral Presentation Summary / January 21, 1964
Presented to the Boeing Board of Directors
Interior Configuration and Payload-Range
Oral Presentation Summary / January 21, 1964
Presented to the Boeing Board of Directors
A total of 200 participants, 70 oral presentations, 170 scientific posters on display, two culinary demonstrations, more than a dozen specialized sessions, visits to laboratories and field trials from the cassava program at CIAT, a new president of the ISTRC, and a touching award ceremony. These are some of the figures that show how intense and productive were those four days of work in the 18th Triennial Symposium of the International Society for Tropical Root Crops (ISTRC), that was held from October 22 to 25 at CIAT’s headquarters.
Credit: ©2018CIAT/JuanMarín
Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.
For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org
Charleston, SC. Memminger Elementary School, construction marker from mid 1950's. Photo taken October 2006.
Originally constructed in 1953-54, school underwent a total renovation which was completed in 2001. That multi-million dollar project included roof replacement and equipping the school with all new furnishings and fixtures.
In 1998 a complete analysis of the Charleston region was conducted with published results relating to what might be expected if an earthquake were to strike the area with a similar force as the one in August of 1886, now estimated to have registered 7.3 on the Richter Scale. The report was designed to review what might happen to the urban area's public buildings and infrastructure given the dramatic development differences that exist between Charleston in 1886 and the same city in 1998, slightly more than 100 years later. Representatives of all public agencies in the area, including top administrators from the Charleston County School District, were present for the oral presentation of the findings. The published report and conclusions was also given to the local school district facilities director soon afterwards and prior to 2001.
In the fall of 2003 and spring of 2004, the architectural firm of Harvey Gantt of Charlotte, NC, reported that the school was structurally sound and with some program design changes would likely serve the community's needs for the future. In the fall of 2009, school district officials ordered a different engineering study, without an RFP, designed to project liabilities in the event of an earthquake registering 5.0 or greater. Five schools were singled out against an inventory of over 80 school facilities, many with conditions at greater risk than the ones singled out. The structural analysis of each of the 5 schools, all built before 1998 and prior to the implimentation of the IBC, indicated that safety risks existed in the event of a cataclismic event. The reports also indicated that each building could be made safe by following accepted practices for retrofitting structural supports to meet current seismic codes. It was not required that any of the five schools be demolished if a standard structural retrofit was attempted.
In early 2010, school district officials decided the building was seismicly unsafe and ordered the school to be immediately vacated and torn down. Community objections were ignored.
Photo and text initially posted: January 2008
Revised: 12 August 2010
Copyrights Reserved: hdescopeland
Andrew Wistuk presents his research project, "Violations during incarceration: A research study on femal inmates," at the 2016 Undergraduate Exhibition. Wistuk won first place in oral presentations.
A total of 200 participants, 70 oral presentations, 170 scientific posters on display, two culinary demonstrations, more than a dozen specialized sessions, visits to laboratories and field trials from the cassava program at CIAT, a new president of the ISTRC, and a touching award ceremony. These are some of the figures that show how intense and productive were those four days of work in the 18th Triennial Symposium of the International Society for Tropical Root Crops (ISTRC), that was held from October 22 to 25 at CIAT’s headquarters.
Credit: ©2018CIAT/JuanMarín
Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.
For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org
Over 100 students from the UCD School of Medicine competed for the 2016 Student Summer Research Awards.
Each undertook 8 week supervised laboratory, clinical or patient/advocate-centred research projects. All students made poster presentations and eight students were selected to give oral presentations at the UCD 2016 Student Summer Research Awards.
Performance Comparison and Payload-Range Capability
Oral Presentation Summary / January 21, 1964
Presented to the Boeing Board of Directors
A total of 200 participants, 70 oral presentations, 170 scientific posters on display, two culinary demonstrations, more than a dozen specialized sessions, visits to laboratories and field trials from the cassava program at CIAT, a new president of the ISTRC, and a touching award ceremony. These are some of the figures that show how intense and productive were those four days of work in the 18th Triennial Symposium of the International Society for Tropical Root Crops (ISTRC), that was held from October 22 to 25 at CIAT’s headquarters.
Credit: ©2018CIAT/JuanMarín
Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.
For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org
Typical Airline Economics 1963 v. 1975 (estimated)
Oral Presentation Summary / January 21, 1964
Presented to the Boeing Board of Directors
Program comparisons and major associate / supplier contractor share
Oral Presentation Summary / January 21, 1964
Presented to the Boeing Board of Directors
A total of 200 participants, 70 oral presentations, 170 scientific posters on display, two culinary demonstrations, more than a dozen specialized sessions, visits to laboratories and field trials from the cassava program at CIAT, a new president of the ISTRC, and a touching award ceremony. These are some of the figures that show how intense and productive were those four days of work in the 18th Triennial Symposium of the International Society for Tropical Root Crops (ISTRC), that was held from October 22 to 25 at CIAT’s headquarters.
Credit: ©2018CIAT/JuanMarín
Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.
For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org
A total of 200 participants, 70 oral presentations, 170 scientific posters on display, two culinary demonstrations, more than a dozen specialized sessions, visits to laboratories and field trials from the cassava program at CIAT, a new president of the ISTRC, and a touching award ceremony. These are some of the figures that show how intense and productive were those four days of work in the 18th Triennial Symposium of the International Society for Tropical Root Crops (ISTRC), that was held from October 22 to 25 at CIAT’s headquarters.
Credit: ©2018CIAT/JuanMarín
Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.
For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org
WSSU Research Conference Disparities To Health Equity Louis Sullivan
Dr. Louis W. Sullivan, former secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and former president of Morehouse School of Medicine, will be the keynote speaker at a research conference on Thursday, April 18, hosted by the School of Health Sciences at Winston-Salem State University (WSSU).
The conference, entitled “Moving from Health Disparities to Health Equity: The Search for Solutions,” will be held in the Dillard Auditorium in the Anderson Conference Center on the WSSU campus from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. In addition to Sullivan’s address, there will be expert panel discussions, poster and oral presentations, and break-out sessions that highlight proven models and promising strategies for achieving health equity. The conference is free and open to the public, but registration is requested. Participants may register at www.wssu.edu/shs.
Sullivan was appointed secretary of Health and Human Services by President George H.W. Bush and served in that capacity from 1989 until 1993. He also served as chair of the President’s Commission on Historically Black Colleges and Universities and was co-chair of the President’s Commission on HIV and AIDS under President George W. Bush.
Currently, Sullivan is chairman of the board of the National Health Museum in Atlanta, an organization that works to improve health by enhancing health literacy and advancing healthy behaviors. He also is chairman of the Washington, D.C.-based Sullivan Alliance to Transform America’s Health Professionals.
A native of Atlanta, Sullivan graduated manga cum laude from Morehouse College and earned his medical degree, sum laude, from Boston University School of Medicine. He was instructor of medicine at Harvard medical School and spent nine years at Boston University where he founded the Boston University Hematology Service at Boston City Hospital. In 1975, he left Boston University to become the founding dean and director of the Medical Education Program at Morehouse College and became dean and president of Morehouse School of Medicine in 1981 and remained in that position for more than two decades. He retired in 2002 and was appointed president emeritus.
On Friday, December 19th, 2014 the cafeteria was transformed into an international classroom! The 6th grade scholars had been working hard on their Holidays Around the World projects, for three weeks, and were very proud to showcase their research. Some of the holidays researched were Chinese New Year, Kwanzaa, Hanukkah, Three Kings Day, and Holi. Each scholar’s family was invited to join us for our Holiday Festival, which included watching the oral presentations and tasting traditional holiday recipes. In addition to the numerous families, many of the upper grade teachers stopped by the cafeteria during the festival. Overall, it was a very enjoyable and successful project and culminating activity.
Production Plan & Conclusion
Oral Presentation Summary / January 21, 1964
Presented to the Boeing Board of Directors
A total of 200 participants, 70 oral presentations, 170 scientific posters on display, two culinary demonstrations, more than a dozen specialized sessions, visits to laboratories and field trials from the cassava program at CIAT, a new president of the ISTRC, and a touching award ceremony. These are some of the figures that show how intense and productive were those four days of work in the 18th Triennial Symposium of the International Society for Tropical Root Crops (ISTRC), that was held from October 22 to 25 at CIAT’s headquarters.
Credit: ©2018CIAT/JuanMarín
Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.
For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org
10 June 2011 - Vienna
CTBTO Executive Secretary Tibor Tóth presenting awards for the best contributions. Tatsuhiko Hara receiving the award for the best oral presentation.
Copyright CTBTO Preparatory Commission
Photographer: Marianne Weiss
WSSU Research Conference Disparities To Health Equity Louis Sullivan
Dr. Louis W. Sullivan, former secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and former president of Morehouse School of Medicine, will be the keynote speaker at a research conference on Thursday, April 18, hosted by the School of Health Sciences at Winston-Salem State University (WSSU).
The conference, entitled “Moving from Health Disparities to Health Equity: The Search for Solutions,” will be held in the Dillard Auditorium in the Anderson Conference Center on the WSSU campus from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. In addition to Sullivan’s address, there will be expert panel discussions, poster and oral presentations, and break-out sessions that highlight proven models and promising strategies for achieving health equity. The conference is free and open to the public, but registration is requested. Participants may register at www.wssu.edu/shs.
Sullivan was appointed secretary of Health and Human Services by President George H.W. Bush and served in that capacity from 1989 until 1993. He also served as chair of the President’s Commission on Historically Black Colleges and Universities and was co-chair of the President’s Commission on HIV and AIDS under President George W. Bush.
Currently, Sullivan is chairman of the board of the National Health Museum in Atlanta, an organization that works to improve health by enhancing health literacy and advancing healthy behaviors. He also is chairman of the Washington, D.C.-based Sullivan Alliance to Transform America’s Health Professionals.
A native of Atlanta, Sullivan graduated manga cum laude from Morehouse College and earned his medical degree, sum laude, from Boston University School of Medicine. He was instructor of medicine at Harvard medical School and spent nine years at Boston University where he founded the Boston University Hematology Service at Boston City Hospital. In 1975, he left Boston University to become the founding dean and director of the Medical Education Program at Morehouse College and became dean and president of Morehouse School of Medicine in 1981 and remained in that position for more than two decades. He retired in 2002 and was appointed president emeritus.
recipe: www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/giada-de-laurentiis/mascarpon...
made this for my italian oral presentation. loved making it, so it was kind of sad to see it chopped up and devoured in 5 minutes by 20 students
Each spring, undergraduates have the opportunity to present their research or creative work during the Student Technology, Arts, & Research Symposium (STARS). Students will share their work through oral presentations, poster presentations, art exhibitions, or performances. STARS takes place this week at UIS.
Story by Carol Weeks, TCH
Staff and students of T.C. Henderson Elementary School gathered together in recognition of Patriot Day on September 11, 2014. Students met in the amphitheater, but had to move their program to the gym following a sudden rainstorm. Fifth grade students in Carol Weeks’ AIG and enrichment class delivered an oral presentation to the student body. Ashlyn Luker “interviewed” fellow students Liam McNeely, Christopher Weemhoff and Jaida Ansari, who played the role of local “historians.” Questions and answers provided an age appropriate presentation on the history of the events that took place on September 11, 2011.
The presentation also included a moment of silence and the Pledge of Allegiance. These students designed and decorated the podium with red, white, and blue festoons and hung combat boots and an army cap in silent commemoration ofthose that gave their lives that day.
After the oral presentation, music teacher Laura Sullivan led the students in singing “America the Beautiful.” As a precursor to September 11th, each student and staff member created one link for a red, white and blue “chain of hope.” Students wrote words or sentences of hope on their respective links. Following the music, each teacher brought up her class’s chain and joined them all together as a symbol of unity and hope. The chain will be displayed at the school.
Some of the text from the presentation (written by Lead Teacher Rhonda Whitmire, with some additions by the 5th graders) follows:
In order to bring more dignity and hope to this tragic, historical event that happened 13 years ago today, many campaigns for peace have been established all over the world.
Adults and officials in our great nation and all around the world have joined forces to focus on safety, security, and world peace.
As members of an ever-changing society, each one of us can also play an important role in making our world a safer place. In remembrance of September 11th, we can work together each and every day to prevent conflict………. in our homes, at our school, and in our communities.
Our Chain of Hope that we each helped create will be displayed in the hallway of our school. As you pass by it each day, please remember to do YOUR part to be kind, patient, and tolerant of ALL people and their differences.
© 2014, Transylvania County Schools. All rights reserved.
Program Cost Summary
Oral Presentation Summary / January 21, 1964
Presented to the Boeing Board of Directors
Management Structure
Oral Presentation Summary / January 21, 1964
Presented to the Boeing Board of Directors
Virtual Enterprises International and WISE held the summit in New York from April 4-7, 2011 and was sponsored by New York Life Foundation, Deloitte, HSBC and McGraw-Hill Education. Students competition included the National Business Plan Competition (NBPC) and Global Business Challenge (GBC). The NBPC challenged Virtual Enterprise students from across the country to demonstrate their global business expertise through written business plans and oral presentations. It showcased the best practices, rewarded excellence and allowed high school students to apply sophisticated knowledge and skills attributed to business professionals and college students. 19 teams began the competition with the winner announced on the April 7th at the Trade Fair. The GBC competition tasked students to work in multinational teams to identify the challenges, opportunities and risks involved in a global business by examining a business case styd. After 2.5 hours of analysis and deliberation, teams presented their findings to a plane of judges.
A total of 200 participants, 70 oral presentations, 170 scientific posters on display, two culinary demonstrations, more than a dozen specialized sessions, visits to laboratories and field trials from the cassava program at CIAT, a new president of the ISTRC, and a touching award ceremony. These are some of the figures that show how intense and productive were those four days of work in the 18th Triennial Symposium of the International Society for Tropical Root Crops (ISTRC), that was held from October 22 to 25 at CIAT’s headquarters.
Credit: ©2018CIAT/JuanMarín
Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.
For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org