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The Question & Answer (Q&A) Knowledge Managenet
The Internet has many places to ask questions about anything imaginable and find past answers on almost everything.
Example Diagnostic Tools
A diagnostic assessment is a form of pre-assessment where teachers can evaluate students’ strengths, weaknesses, knowledge and skills before their instruction. With this form of assessment, teachers can plan meaningful and efficient instruction and can provide students with an individualized learning experience.
Consider the following five major categories of classroom writing performance:
Writing-Intensive Courses are those in which writing is used as a central mode of learning as well as of evaluating student performance. Students in these courses are expected to write regularly, and their grades in these courses are linked to the quality and content of their written work.
Imitative 1 Imitative writing includes the rudiments of forming letters, words, and simple sentences. Tasks in hand such as writing letters, words, and punctuation are within the larger domain of language assessment. One hand writing assessment or activity is have the student copy letters or words.
Intensive or controlled: Writing is used as production mode for learning, reinforcing or testing grammatical concepts. This intensive writing typically appears in controlled written grammar exercises: Controlled writing, guided writing, dictocomp writing.
One example of extensive writing is a journal entry. Journals are informal and not meant to be read by a wide audience. Like other pieces of extensive…
It is something more than a training of oneself by means of writing, through the advice and opinions one gives to the other: it also constitutes a certain way of manifesting oneself to oneself and to others. The letter makes the writer “present” to the one to whom he addresses it.
1a : marked by imitation acting is an imitative art. b : reproducing or representing a natural sound : onomatopoeic “hiss” is an imitative word. c : exhibiting mimicry.
Excommunication, form of ecclesiastical censure by which a person is excluded from the communion of believers, the rites or sacraments of a church, and the rights of church membership but not necessarily from membership in the church as such.
For example, humans are able to imitate a sequence of responses (e.g., how to change batteries in a flashlight). Can animals show such an advanced form of imitation (for suggestive evidence obtained from pigeons, see Nguyen et al.
A musical texture featuring two or more equally prominent, simultaneous melodic lines, those lines being similar in shape and sound. If the individual lines are similar in their shapes and sounds, the polyphony is termed imitative; but if the strands show little or no resemblance to each other, it is non-imitative.
Fugue for Tinhorns
In music, imitation is the repetition of a melody in a polyphonic texture shortly after its first appearance in a different voice. Imitation helps provide unity to a composition and is used in forms such as the fugue and canon.
Homophonic Texture Definition So, a homophonic texture is where you can have multiple different notes playing, but they’re all based around the same melody. A rock or pop star singing a song while playing guitar or piano at the same time is an example of homophonic texture.
Examples of Homophony A singer accompanied by a guitar picking or strumming chords. A small jazz combo with a bass, a piano, and a drum set providing the “rhythm” background for a trumpet improvising a solo. A single bagpipes or accordion player playing a melody with drones or chords.
In music, monophony is the simplest of musical textures, consisting of a melody (or “tune”), typically sung by a single singer or played by a single instrument player (e.g., a flute player) without accompanying harmony or chords. Many folk songs and traditional songs are monophonic.
An example of texture is the smooth feeling of satin. A structure of interwoven fibers or other elements. The distinctive physical composition or structure of something, especially with respect to the size, shape, and arrangement of its parts. The texture of sandy soil; the texture of cooked fish.
The texture stimulates two different senses: sight and touch. There are four types of texture in art: actual, simulated, abstract, and invented texture.
In musical terms, particularly in the fields of music history and music analysis, some common terms for different types of texture are:
Textures Some textures include: rough, hard, liquid, solid, wet, bumpy, fuzzy, sticky, dusty, sharp, rough, gritty, soft, lumpy.
In the context of artwork, there are two types of texture: visual and actual. Visual texture refers to an implied sense of texture that the artist creates through the use of various artistic elements such as line, shading and color.
Orange Peel
Some things feel just as they appear; this is called real or actual texture. Some things look like they are rough but are actually smooth. Texture that is created to look like something it is not, is called visual or implied texture.
Tactile texture is the tactile quality of a surface, such as rough, smooth, sticky, fuzzy, soft or slick. A real texture is one you can actually feel with your hand, such as a piece of sandpaper, a wet glass, or animal fur. It also can be created by an artist by doing a collage.
There are two types of shapes: geometric and free-form. Geometric shapes are precise shapes that can be described using mathematical formulas. Geometric shapes include circle, square, triangle, oval, rectangle, octagon, parallelogram, trapezoid, pentagon, and hexagon.