http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
Transient Enhanced Diffusion and Its Impact on Devices
Griffin,P. B. 대한전자공학회 1997 ICVC : International Conference on VLSI and CAD Vol.5 No.1
There now exists a much deeper understanding of how transient enhanced diffusion (TED) due to implant damage affects dopant motion and consequently device performance. This is a direct result of understanding at an atomic level the physical processes that control TED. In this paper, we will examine the phenomena of TED and show how its impact on devices can be mitigated.
Wardening, Witnessing, Words and Writing : Rights of Passage, Passages to Write
Griffin,C.C.M. Australian Studies Institute 1999 Journal of Australian studies Vol.6 No.1
Some authorities found it very difficult to find a suitable wardenand some decided not to do so because they could find no one who was respected by a majority of the families, and acepted by th erival clans on the site. On all sites a set of rules is issued to ensure some sense of order... The threat of evition is used with varying frequency, but there is no evidence to suggest that eviction is often actually used as a means of rigidly enforcing rules: generally officials are prepared toturn a blind eye to many breaches of regulations. Gypsies and Other Travellers(HMSO, 1965)
Heritage Tourism Performances, Cultural Identity, and Recovery from Natural and Man-Made Disasters
Jon Griffin Donlon,Ph.D,Hitoshi Nishino,Ph.D 세계문화관광학회 2010 Conference Proceedings Vol.11 No.0
There is no question that heritage performances such as the Carnival of New Orleans, the bull pushing festival in Niigata, Japan, and spectacles of camel fighting staged in Turkey help knit together local community and create dynamic destination “magnets.” In 2004, the region around Niigata, Japan was powerfully struck by a devastating earthquake. In 2005, New Orleans was inundated by the effects of Katrina. Then, in 2010, Louisiana was impacted by the great man-made disaster of the British Petroleum drilling rupture. In each case, cultural performance played an important role in the reemergence of the pre-existing human communities. For hundreds of years, until the introduction of machines, communities in the region around Niigata, Japan, raised and bred enormously powerful bulls as their engines of agricultural labor. Traditionally, the great stamina and strength of these draft animals has been celebrated at bull-fighting festivals (events which are entirely non-violent): the “winner”gains prestige and is identified as the best bull. Manifesting a long European history but set in the USA, Carnival on the Gulf Coast, especially at New Orleans, has created unique food, festive, and music ways for the region. This paper briefly reprises earlier research on the two affected regions, explaining the role of the relevant heritage performances and establishing a little of each community’s cultural past. It outlines the previous natural disasters explaining how the BP event has affected Louisiana. Finally, it notes how developing accessibility to a heritage tourism economy may help these settings survive (while presenting and conserving heritage material).
Assessment of Creative Writing in Vietnamese Primary Education
Patrick Griffin,Phan Nguyet Anh 서울대학교 교육연구소 2005 Asia Pacific Education Review Vol.6 No.1
The teaching and assessment of essay writing at primary schools throughout Vietnam is regulated by the Ministry of Education and Training. The analytical error-recognition method of assessment, however, does not facilitate direct interpretation of students' writing competence. In this study, which involved samples of Grade 5 students in five provinces in Vietnam, a combination of traditional and partial credit scoring rubrics was developed to enable data analysis using the Rasch model. Based on such analysis, a continuum of writing ability at Grade 5 level was identified and a mastery level defined in terms of writing skills. The study has implications for possible changes in future assessment and marking schemes.
Festival Events and Cultural Capital
Jon Griffin Donlon,Jin Nishino,Jocelyn Hazelwood Donlon 세계문화관광학회 2009 Conference Proceedings Vol.10 No.0
Josef Pieper has pointed out in In Tune with the World that festivity requires at least two things: it must be public, and it must be an interruption of mundane, ordinary time. Research in cultural tourism indicates that such "time out of time" occasions act to build social capital. Presumably, this is because these opportunities quickly and easily reconfigure the local area community, nurturing the rapid accumulation of good will. This presentation focuses on three festival events-the Edinburgh International Festival in Scotland, Camel Wrestling in Turkey, and Bull Pushing in Japan-in order to discuss them as expressions of cultural tourism and to explain how conserving and planning for sustainability of this cultural matter acts to generate valuable social capital. Our understanding of these settings is informed by what the International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) describes as "the natural and cultural heritage, diversities and living cultures [as] major tourism attractions." While the Charter points out that "excessive or poorly-managed tourism and tourism related development can threaten their physical nature, integrity and significant characteristics," and that "the ecological setting, culture and lifestyles of host communities may also be degraded, along with the visitor's experience of the place," festivals, we intend to show, can celebrate and preserve local culture and cultural artifacts if managed properly.