Australia ; Ethnic diversity ; Policing ; Recruitment ; Victoria Police
Description:
Abstract not available.
Publisher:
The Australian Sociological Association
Year of Publication:
2008
Document Type:
conference paper
Source:
[Proceedings] Annual Conference of the Australian Sociological Association (TASA 2008): Re-imagining Sociology, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 02-05 December 2008
Mango ; Mango industry ; Fruit ; Spectrum analysis. ; Near infrared spectroscopy. ; Horticultural crops not elsewhere classified (620299) ; Plant Biochemistry and Physiology (300201) ; Agricultural, Veterinary and Environmental Sciences not elsewhere (309999) ; Near-infrared - - Spectroscopy - - Non-invasive - - Mango - - Internal quality (9)
Description:
Short wave near infrared (SWNIR) (400–1100 nm) spectroscopy was trialled in assessment of mango (Mangifera indica L.) fruit maturation and as a harvest time guide to final eating quality. Fruit maturity was indexed in terms of flesh colour (r2 = 0.79 for Hunter b value against maturity score), dry matter content (r2 = 0.66 for % DM against maturity score) and a visual ranking of maturity. Fruit eating quality at fully ripe stage was indexed in terms of total soluble solids content ...
Publisher:
Netherlands : Elsevier
Year of Publication:
2007
Document Type:
journal article
Source:
Subedi, P P, Walsh, K B & Owens, G 2007, 'Prediction of mango eating quality at harvest using short-wave near infrared spectrometry', Postharvest Handling and Technology, Vol. 43, no. 3, pp. 326-334.
Language:
en
Relations:
Postharvest biology and technology. Netherlands. : Elsevier, 2007. vol 43, issue 3 (March 2007) p. 326-334 9 pages Refereed 0925-5214 ; aCQUIRe [electronic resource] : Central Queensland University Institutional Repository.
International and Multi-modal Education ; Higher education (740301) ; Educational Technology and Media (330107) ; Instructional systems ; Educational change. ; Computer-assisted instruction. ; Roles in ICT -- Course design -- Online learning
Description:
Technology has had a significant impact on the pedagogical practice of academics in the tertiary education sector. For most academics, this has meant a struggle to adapt to potentially different approaches to learning design. At worst, technology has resulted innothing more than the use of traditional methods of learning design in an online environment; delivering content in a seemingly linear way that offers little opportunity to enhance learning and teaching. For others, online ...
Publisher:
Nanyang, Singapore : Centre for Educational Development, Nanyang Technological University
Year of Publication:
2007
Document Type:
conference paper
Source:
Fleming, J & Becker, K 2005, 'The roles we play in ICT based learning design: do academics have it all?' in ICT: Providing choices for learners and learning : The Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education (ASCILITE), Singapore, Centre for Educational Development, Nanyang Technological University, pp. 290-299.
Language:
en
Relations:
ASCILITE 2007 conference : ICT: Providing choices for learners and learning, 2-5 December 2007, Singapore Nanyang, Singapore. : Centre for Educational Development, Nanyang Technological University, 2007. p.290-299 10 pages Refereed 9789810595784 (online) ; aCQUIRe [electronic resource] : Central Queensland University Institutional Repository.
Continuing education. ; Computer-assisted instruction. ; Human-computer interaction. ; Educational technology. ; Higher education (740301) ; Continuing education (749902) ; Computer-Human Interaction (280104) ; Educational Psychology (330101) ; Educational Technology and Media (330107) ; Internet in education. ; Flow -- Human-computer interaction -- Online learning -- Engagement -- Play -- Web -- Games -- Educational technology -- Instructional design
Description:
Many of the diverse pleasures that people experience during recreational computing activities can be synthesised into a single concept known as flow. Flow is a state of intense mental focus that occurs when a person’s perceptual and cognitive systems are challenged at near capacity without being exceeded. It typically results in feelings of enjoyment and reduced awareness of factors that are irrelevant to the task at hand. For example, sometimes while surfing the Web or playing ...
Publisher:
Rockhampton, Queensland. : Central Queensland University
Year of Publication:
2007
Document Type:
journal article
Source:
Pace, S 2007, 'Play and flow: implications for online learning', Studies in Learning, Evaluation, Innovation and Development, vol. 4, issue 1, June , pp. 67-78. http://sleid.cqu.edu.au/include/getdoc.php?id=520&article=161&mode=pdf
Language:
en
Relations:
Studies in Learning, Evaluation, Innovation and Development : Rockhampton, Queensland. : Central Queensland University, 2007. Vol. 4, no. 1 (June 2007), p. 67-78 12 pages Refereed 1832-2050 (online) ; aCQUIRe [electronic resource] : Central Queensland University Institutional Repository.
Rights:
By submitting a Work to aCQUIRe the author(s) grant(s) to Central Queensland University permission to publish the Work under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs Licence. ; Reproduced with permission.
Integrated (ecosystem) assessment and management (770306) ; Environment and Resource Economics (340202) ; Community development ; Environmental impact assessment
Description:
Impact assessment currently forms and will continue to play a major part of industrial development in Australia and increasingly globally. While the impact assessment processes used have evolved they are still traditionally undertaken as a single issue and point in time analysis (social, environmental or economic assessment). With an increased focus on regional growth management and a Triple Bottom Line (TBL) approach to sustainable regional development it is now timely to think ...
Paper presented at the Sustainable Economic Growth for Regional Australia (SEGRA) Conference at Launceston, Northern Tasmania on Tuesday 20 August 2006.
Language:
en
Relations:
SEGRA 2006 Sustainable Economic Growth for Regional Australia : Adaptable regions : open minds, open opportunities. Tenth National Conference, 28-30 August, 2006, Launceston, Northern Tasmania. Brisbane, Qld. : Management Solutions Pty Ltd, 2006. 23 pages Refereed 0980283310 ; aCQUIRe [electronic resource] : Central Queensland University Institutional Repository
Rights:
By submitting a work to aCQUIRe the author(s) grant(s) to Central Queensland University permission to publish the Work under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs Licence. Further details available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ ; Reproduced with publisher permission.
Banking, Finance and Investment (350300) ; Public Policy (360201)
Description:
For almost 55 years there have been two cornerstones of social housing provision in Australia: public housing, and the Commonwealth-State Housing Agreement, the latter being the funding mechanism for the former. More recently, the small community housing sector is seeking to grow more rapidly and the Commonwealth Government is encouraging private investment in social housing. Over the past two decades the State Housing Authorities have investigated the possibilities of private ...
It appears that there are employers who believe that Generation Y employees are often problematic. The technology. mass marketing. poLitical times, and pop-culture in which Generation Y have grown up has ensured they have appreciably different ambitions and worLd views to previous generations. This paper reports the results of a study examining tourism and hospitality employer views of Generation Y employees and how some employers are attempting to draw upon the strengths of these ...
Publisher:
ePublications@SCU
Year of Publication:
2007
Source:
School of Tourism and Hospitality Management Papers
consumerism ; downshifting ; affluence ; poverty ; Australia
Description:
This article develops a critique of Hamilton and Dennis's book Affluenza. In recognising many of the strengths of the book in terms of its focus on Australia's consumerist culture, the article nonetheless outlines a range of significant shortcomings in its argument, not least the tendency to overstate the prevalence of consumerist values, the narrow interpretation of what constitutes 'consumerism', the flawed assumptions over marketing, savings and 'downsizing', and the range ...
Publisher:
ePublications@SCU
Year of Publication:
2007
Source:
School of Tourism and Hospitality Management Papers
Pl. no. 45 of: Voyage autour du monde. Atlas historique / Louis de Freycinet.; S7266.
Publisher:
[Paris : s.n., 1822?]
Contributors:
Garneray, Louis, 1783-1857. ; Pellion, Alphonse. ; Freycinet, Louis Claude Desaulses de, 1779-1842. Voyage autour du monde. ; Niquet, Claude, b. 1770.
Year of Publication:
1822
Document Type:
Image
Source:
Item held by National Library of Australia
Rights:
You may save or print this image for research and study. If you wish to use it for any other purposes, you must contact the National Library of Australia to request permission.
Pl. no. 47 of: Voyage autour du monde. Atlas historique / Louis de Freycinet.; S7268.
Publisher:
[Paris : s.n., 1822?]
Contributors:
Bevalet, Antoine-Germain, 1779-1850. ; Freycinet, Louis Claude Desaulses de, 1779-1842. Voyage autour du monde. ; Forget, E.
Year of Publication:
1822
Document Type:
Image
Source:
Item held by National Library of Australia
Rights:
You may save or print this image for research and study. If you wish to use it for any other purposes, you must contact the National Library of Australia to request permission.