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The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) has established a Portal on Higher Education Institutions that is now available online. The Portal provides access to higher education institutions sanctioned either by government or other competent authorities and general information about higher education, accreditation, quality assurance and related subjects in various countries. At present, the Portal serves as entry point to 12 countries’ institutions and information. This will be expanded over time. May 2008, Source: Council for Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA)

Furthermore, for people who intend to work with the subject limited to understanding of accreditation especially of Engineering Education, following links may be useful (might save you some time :) ):

  1. American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE)
  2. International Engineering Accords like Washigton (1989), Sydney (2001) and Dublin (2002) Accords at International Engineering Alliance Website
  3. Carnegie programme and institutional classifications at Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching
  4. Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology
  5. Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education  QAA (UK)
  6. European Association for Quality Assurance in Higher Education (ENQA)
  7. New England Association of Schools & Colleges, Inc. (NEASC)
  8. NSF, Division of Engineering Education and Centres (NSF_EEC)

then…this is for you! The Library Thing; Its a web service with your reader’s and books’ profile having your own and shared bookshelves. Very nice, powerful  and interesting web resource!

I am surprised…never came across it earlier. Clearly, I am not very fond of reading :)

And if you are not just happy with the bookshelves why don’y you go for your own library. Google Books is a real good service where you can read and refer to many parts of a huge volume of books while creating your own library. References are available to most frequently quoted parts… Doesn’t it make life simple? It becomes so easy to make a quick reference or to decide buying a book or otherwise.

 

 

While reviewing Cooper’s Stage Gate model I came across this website called Proven Models, a digital publishing house. Seems to be a useful introductory level reference for theories and models in management and business related subjects. The design is quite useful according to types of users. If you want specific author, or model you may get it through search but even if you spend some time reading or understanding you can click to choose a model from the model book as shown below…(Representation below is the owner ship of the respective copyright holders and is depicted here only for user’s info.)

I tried few searches and found it useful. The best part is the Assets, Pros and Cons sections presented for each of the models alongwith primary references. Enjoy! These are just few…many more on the website.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Institute of Prospective Technology Studies (IPTS) is one of the seven research institutions of EU JRC. Two of their publications of e-Government caught my eye for very interesting data, arguments and implications, although I was looking for some other things at that instance. I am uploading the same for those interested.

These are some of the confernces in which i am interested. I will keep on updating and adding to the following, as I find time.

  1. STI Indicators for Policy. Addressing New Demands from Stakeholders on May 28-30, 2008, at Oslo Norway by PRIME hosted by Oslo University College 
  2. EuroCPR 2008: Innovations in communications:The role of users, industry, and policy, on March 31-April 1, 2008 at Seville, Spain organizaed by CICT hosted by IPTS, JRC, EU
  3.  IAMOT 2008, April 6-10, 2008 at Dubai, UAE by IAMOT hosted by The British University in Dubai 
  4. EuroMOT 2008, Sep 17-19, 2008 at Nice France, by IAMOT hosted by CERAM Business School
  5. 6th Globelics: “New insights for understanding innovation and competence building for sustainable development and social justice”
    , Sep 22-24 at Mexico by Globelics, UAM and UNAM
  6. Few  more, here…

With thanks to Daniel Fink 

“MIT World™ is a free and open site that provides on-demand video of significant public events at MIT. MIT World’s video index contains more than 500 videos.” Here is the subject video of the panel discussion moderated by Pudmashree, CTO of Motorola. Enjoy listening when you want to have some easy time and casual learning experience!

In simple terms :) ,     Technology shapes or determines a society’s culture, structure and history     or     a society’s culture, politics and socio-economic factors determine the paths for innovation and technology development.

Although these questions and theories mentioned in the subject are fundamental questions for students of S&T and its relationship to Society/Social Sciences but I feel these are relevant for students from other disciplines as well for understanding because the words like “Information Society”, “Industrialized Societies” are commonly used. So, is Infomation leading the change  in social fabric or society took its course to spur Infomation Revolution.

Karl Marx, father of communism believed that capitalism will destroy itself giving way to a class-less society. Many argue that he was a technological determinist while others (Rosenberg: Inside the Black Box)  show that it is easier to identify that he was not.

Interesting? The web page by David Chandler gives a good view on theroetical viewpoints of Technology Determinism while UMSL webpage summarizes the opposite i.e. SCOT well.

 Full Lecture here..Some excerpts follow

“Many people feel that that in fact there is no such thing as the Islamic problem of science…three main positions which exist in the Islamic world today as far as the relationship between Islam and modern science is concerned…I am sure many of you in this room, and especially at a place like MIT, who would not have had much of a chance to study the philosophical implications of either your own tradition, that is Islam, nor of Western science, believe that one studies science and then one says prayers, loves God and obeys the laws of the Shariah, and that there is really no problem.

…The second position which is held within the Islamic world today, which is now held by a number of very interesting and eminent thinkers, is that, in fact, the problem of the confrontation of modern science with Islam is not at all an intellectual problem but rather an ethical problem…

…Now we come to the third point of view. This was discussed for a long time by practically no one, except yours truly. But in the last twenty years, it has gained a large number of followers. And that point of view is that science has its own world-view. No science is created in a vacuum. Science arose under particular circumstances in the West with certain philosophical presumptions about the nature of reality. As soon as you say, m, f, v, and a, that is, the simple parameters of classical physics, you have chosen to look at reality from a certain point of view. There is no mass, there is no force out there like that chair or table. These are particularly abstract concepts which grew in the seventeenth century on the basis of a particular concept of space, matter and motion which Newton developed. The historians and philosophers of science in the last twenty [or] thirty years have shown beyond the scepter of doubt that modern science has its own world view. It is not at all value free; nor is it a purely objective science of reality irrespective of the subject you study. It is based upon the imposition of certain categories upon the study of nature, with a remarkable success in the study of certain things, and also a remarkable lack of success [in others], depending on what you are looking at.

Modern science is successful in telling you the weight and chemical structure of a red pine leaf, but it is totally irrelevant to what is the meaning of the turning of this leaf to red. The “how” has been explained in modern science, the “why” is not its concern. If you are a physics student and you ask the question, `what is the force of gravitation?’, the teacher will tell you the formula, but as to what is the nature of this force, he will tell you it is not a subject for physics. So [science] is very successful in certain fields, but leaves other aspects of reality aside. “

More…

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