... encourage the process of change in language teaching.1 • The Functional-Notional ApproachIn the 1970s teachers ofthe Functional-Notional Approach stopped teaching grammar and started teaching ... QUESTIONS: The teacher asks some guiding questions onthe main points of the dialogue. The teacher writes the questions onthe board before playing/reading the dialogue. a) How long has Nam lived ... questions onthe board.1. How much beef does Ba want?2. How many eggs does Ba want?ã The teacher plays/reads the dialogue.ã The teacher plays /reads it again if they don’t know the answers.STEP...
... ACKNOWLEDGEMENTSFirst of all, I would like to express my deep gratitude to all my teachers at College of Foreign Languages, Vietnam National University-Hanoi for their valuable lectures. And ... attention and encouragement.I am appreciative of all those who have kindly advised and helped me during the period of my study at College of Foreign Languages, VNU-Hanoi.Finally, I wish to thank ... experience and training 9ã Qualifications 10 2.6.2.2. Information about Schools 10ã Access to resource at school 10ã Conditions that facilitate teaching 10ã Conditions that impede teaching 11...
... micromotion components are presented as 'totaltranslational migration' and 'total translational micromo-tion'. Similarly, the terms 'total rotational migration' and'total ... migration accounted for 94 to 99% of the total translational migration. The average absoluterotational migration was smaller than 0.04° in the sagittaland frontal planes, but much larger in the transverseplane ... Massachussetts). The measurementresolution was smaller than 0.7 μm in all translationaldirections, and smaller than 0.001° in rotation. The accu-racy ofthe system in measuring translation was evaluatedagainst...
... mean,” Journal of Inequalities in Pure andApplied Mathematics, vol. 4, no. 4, article 80, 4 pages, 2003.17 E. Neuman, A generalization of an inequality of Jia and Cau,” Journal of Inequalities ... Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications,vol. 131, no. 1, pp. 271–281, 1988.6 F. Qi, “Logarithmic convexity of extended mean values,” Proceedings ofthe American MathematicalSociety, ... 2002.7 A. Witkowski, “Comparison theorem for two-parameter means,” to appear in Mathematical Inequalities& Applications.8 Zh H. Yang, “Simple discriminances of convexity of homogeneous...
... b)andthesiteofattachmentofQuiNActoRha(atposition2or3)aswellaswithO-acetylation and amidation ofthe GalNA derivatives(Table 3). Because O-acetylation and amidation, which arenonstoichiometric, are likely to be postpolymerizationmodifications, ... O-polysaccharide structures of P. aeruginosa immunotype 1 and related serotypes of P. aeruginosa O6 are associated with the configuration of the QuiNAc linkage (a or b)andthesiteofattachmentofQuiNActoRha(atposition2or3)aswellaswithO-acetylation ... repeating units ofthe O-polysac-charide this residue is in the a- configuration. The dataobtained are in accordance with the initiation of biosynthesis of the O-polysaccharide of P. aeruginosa...
... of autonomous BANs in the context of medicalapplications [16-18], an accurate evaluation ofthe impacts of the BAN topology and transmission rate onthe energyconsumption is of fundamental ... reflections off the environment. A substantial measurement campaign has shown that the contribution ofthe environment can be considered, on average, as an additive, constant power when the transmission ... Proceedings ofthe 2008 SecondInternational Conference on Future Generation Communication andNetworking (FGCN ‘08), Hainan Island, China (2008)9. N Katayama, K Takizawa, T Aoyagi, J-I Takada, H-B...
... (5Â-GGTCTTCTCGTAAGTGCCC-3Â), SKTM -A6 3V (5Â-GACAAATACTCTGAAGTACTCAAAGATGCCCAG-3Â), SKTM-1R (5Â-CTGGGCATCTTTGAGTACTTCAGAGTATTGTC-3Â), SKTM-K70T (5Â-AAAGATGCACAGGAGACGCTGGAGCTGGCAGAG-3Â), SKTM-2R ... the maineffects of mutations A6 3V, K70T and E180G are mainlyrelated to the overall stability ofthe protein as a whole, ratherthan onthe position ofthe mutation in the polypeptide chain,as ... substitutioncould cause a local change in Tm conformation andtherefore in stability.Because the mutations did not affect the normal function of the thin filament and the mutant Tms did not aggregateat...
... that arenot part ofthe active site area but which are situated on the surface ofthe catalytic domain or an inti-mately associated domain rather than ona CBM, e.g. a starch-binding domain ... for the Ala211-Pro218 loop (Fig. 5)that connects b5 and a5 ofthe catalytic (b ⁄ a) 8-barrelat the end ofthe aglycon-binding area ofthe active sitecleft. Earlier, significant deviation was ... very large and may reflect that only a few a- glucan chains in the granules are readily hydrolyzedor that a major fraction ofthe products remains asso-ciated with the granules. The trend of an...
... D16W-D24)37GGN4, a GGN4analogue with both the C-terminal 14 residue truncationand the substitution ofthe aspartic acid at position 16 bytryptophan, showed antimicrobial activity comparable tothat of native ... facilitate the amphipathic interactionbetween the peptide and the membrane surface, as the tryptophan side chain is amphiphilic in nature. The tryptophan side chain conformation was more clearlydefined ... respectively. The direction of view is approximately perpen-diculartothehelicalaxisinpanelsAandB,and is parallel to the helical axis in panels Cand D.Ó FEBS 2002 Structure–activity relationships of...
... Association of Academic Physiatrists, the Foundation for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, the American Hospital Association, and the Federation forAmerican Hospitals. The same organizations ... Education Council, CARF Inter-national (formerly the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities), Casa Colina Centers for Reha-bilitation, eRehabData, Fowler Healthcare Associates,HealthSouth ... providedfinancial support. Major financial and staff support wasprovided by the American Medical Rehabilitation Provid-ers Association (AMRPA). Additional sponsors included the American Physiatric...
... (NOD) ran-dom variables and negatively associated (NA) [2] random variables are the mostimportant and special cases of pairwise NQD random variables. So, it is very significantto study probabilistic ... variable sequences a nd NA random variablesequences are the most important and special cases of pairwise NQD random variablesequences, then we have the following results as two corollaries of Theorems ... a. s.(3:17) The proof of Theorem 2.2 is complete.Huang et al. Journal of Inequalities and Applications 2011, 2011:92http://www.journalofinequalitiesandapplications.com/content/2011/1/92Page 6 of 8...
... negatively associated random variables.Theorem 1.4. Let {Xni,1≤ i ≤ kn, n ≥ 1} be an array of rowwise negatively associatedrandom variables and {a n, n ≥ 1} a sequence of nonnegative constants. ... 1} be an array of rowwise negatively associatedmean zero random variables and {a n, n ≥ 1} a sequence of nonnegative constants. Sup-pose that the following conditions hold:(i)∞n=1 a nkni=1P( ... convergence for arrays of rowwise negatively associated randomvariables. Theor Probab Appl. 52, 393–397 (2007)10. Dehua, Q, Chang, KC, Giuliano Antonini, R, Volodin, A: Onthe strong rates of convergence...
... |Aut(G)| =1} .Theorem 3. Rigid ∈ AMProof. The proof is an easy adaptation ofthe result of [7, 8] that the languageNGI = {(G1,G2):G1 G2}is in AM . In the formulation of AM given above, ... introduction.One naturally wonders at the relationship of Dist to more familiar classes such asNP and coNP. In this direction, applying the machinery of [6], we can argue that it isunlikely that ... several directions. They conjectured that if |G| > |Aut(G)| and the action of Aut(G)onG has no singleton orbits, then (G) = 2. Though there are graphs forwhich this fails1, the idea that...