Universidad La Salle - Courses of Distant Learning

Courses of Distant Learning

  • Courses of Quality in the Service
  • Assertive communication
  • Discipline with dignity
  • Design of Strategies for the Evaluation for Competitions
  • Strategies of Motivation at the Classroom
  • Developmental strategies of the Competition Lectora in the Pupil of half level and half a superior
  • Evaluation of the Quality of the Services
  • Effective negotiation
  • New form of Learning News
  • Planning for Competitions
  • Preparation for Residencias's National Exam Medical ( ENARM )

Read more about this topic:  Universidad La Salle

Famous quotes containing the words courses of, courses, distant and/or learning:

    All the courses of my life do show
    I am not in the roll of common men.
    William Shakespeare (1564–1616)

    The inconveniences and horrors of the pox are perfectly well known to every one; but still the disease flourishes and spreads. Several million people were killed in a recent war and half the world ruined; but we all busily go on in courses that make another event of the same sort inevitable. Experientia docet? Experientia doesn’t.
    Aldous Huxley (1894–1963)

    Though there were numerous vessels at this great distance in the horizon on every side, yet the vast spaces between them, like the spaces between the stars,—far as they were distant from us, so were they from one another,—nay, some were twice as far from each other as from us,—impressed us with a sense of the immensity of the ocean, the “unfruitful ocean,” as it has been called, and we could see what proportion man and his works bear to the globe.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Without our being especially conscious of the transition, the word “parent” has gradually come to be used as much as a verb as a noun. Whereas we formerly thought mainly about “being a parent,” we now find ourselves talking about learning how “to parent.” . . . It suggests that we may now be concentrating on action rather than status, on what we do rather than what or who we are.
    Bettye M. Caldwell (20th century)