
CLASE 12. PARTE 3, EcologĂa, medio ambiente
Quiz by Ana Maria Flores
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âEl MIP es la aplicaciĂłn de diferentes tĂ©cnicas disponibles para el control y manejo de plagas agrĂcolas para controlar, y mantener el margen bajo de las poblaciones de plagas
âEl MIP involucra el______________
Control biolĂłgico y control quĂmico
Control biolĂłgico, control quĂmico, control cultural y control mecĂĄnico
Control orgĂĄnico, control biolĂłgico y control cultural
El MIP es la aplicaciĂłn de diferentes tĂ©cnicas disponibles para el control y manejo de plagas agrĂcolas para controlar, y mantener el margen bajo de las poblaciones de plagas
El MIP involucra el______________
El control cultural consiste en remover y destruir las plagas presentes y las partes de las plantas infestadas, asà como las malezas que se presenten en el terreno, por medio de herramientas mecånicas o técnicas manuales
El control mecĂĄnico utiliza enemigos naturales (insectos, hongos, y bacterias) para combatir plagasÂ
Un predador es un animal que se come otro animal (su presa). Ejemplo un predador es la mariquita y la presa el pulgĂłn Â
Los parĂĄsitos son organismos que entran al cuerpo de otro organismo (endoparasito) y otros habitan en la superficie de su cuerpo (hectoparĂĄsito). Ejemplo la avispa de la familia Brachonidae
El ________________________involucra practicas culturales de manipulación directa del ecosistema con el fin de disminuir el daño económico de las plagas. Ejemplo las practicas de preparación de suelos, manejo de agua y asociación de cultivos
El manejo integrado de plagas excluye el uso de plaguicidasÂ
Control de lectura CapĂtulo I: Antes que nada⊠(Preguntas 1â50) 1. ÂżQuĂ© es una tĂ©cnica de investigaciĂłn? Respuesta: Procedimiento sistemĂĄtico para recopilar y analizar informaciĂłn. 2. ÂżQuĂ© es un instrumento de investigaciĂłn? Respuesta: Herramienta especĂfica para recolectar y analizar datos. 3. Ejemplo de tĂ©cnica de investigaciĂłn. Respuesta: Encuesta. 4. Ejemplo de instrumento de investigaciĂłn. Respuesta: Cuestionario. 5. ÂżQuĂ© diferencia hay entre tĂ©cnica e instrumento? Respuesta: La tĂ©cnica es el procedimiento; el instrumento es la herramienta. 6. ÂżQuĂ© diferencia hay entre mĂ©todo e instrumento? Respuesta: El mĂ©todo es el proceso completo; el instrumento es una parte de este. 7. ÂżPara quĂ© sirve un instrumento de investigaciĂłn? Respuesta: Para recopilar datos precisos y confiables. 8. ÂżTodos los instrumentos se validan? Respuesta: No, pero es recomendable. 9. ÂżQuĂ© es la validez de un instrumento? Respuesta: Capacidad para medir lo que se propone. 10. ÂżQuĂ© es la confiabilidad de un instrumento? Respuesta: Capacidad de obtener resultados consistentes. 11. ÂżQuĂ© es la validez de contenido? Respuesta: Cobertura adecuada del tema de estudio. 12. ÂżQuĂ© es la validez de criterio? Respuesta: RelaciĂłn con otras medidas conocidas. 13. ÂżQuĂ© es la validez concurrente? Respuesta: Coincidencia con otros instrumentos similares. 14. ÂżQuĂ© es la validez predictiva? Respuesta: Capacidad para anticipar resultados futuros. 15. ÂżQuĂ© prueba mide confiabilidad? Respuesta: Prueba-retest. 16. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de anĂĄlisis evalĂșa la estructura del instrumento? Respuesta: AnĂĄlisis factorial. 17. ÂżQuĂ© diferencia hay entre instrumento cuantitativo y cualitativo? Respuesta: El cuantitativo mide en nĂșmeros; el cualitativo describe. 18. Ejemplo de instrumento cuantitativo. Respuesta: Escala de Likert. 19. Ejemplo de instrumento cualitativo. Respuesta: Entrevista abierta. 20. ÂżQuĂ© son los instrumentos mixtos? Respuesta: Combinan datos cuantitativos y cualitativos. 21. Ejemplo de instrumento mixto. Respuesta: Encuesta con preguntas cerradas y abiertas. 22. ÂżQuĂ© es la recolecciĂłn de datos? Respuesta: Proceso de obtenciĂłn de informaciĂłn. 23. Menciona una tĂ©cnica de recolecciĂłn de datos. Respuesta: ObservaciĂłn. 24. ÂżQuĂ© asegura la validez de un resultado? Respuesta: La precisiĂłn del instrumento. 25. ÂżQuĂ© asegura la confiabilidad de un resultado? Respuesta: La consistencia del instrumento. 26. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica se basa en la percepciĂłn directa del investigador? Respuesta: ObservaciĂłn participante. 27. ÂżQuĂ© se usa para medir variables numĂ©ricas? Respuesta: Instrumentos cuantitativos. 28. ÂżQuĂ© permite una entrevista abierta? Respuesta: Ampliar las respuestas libremente. 29. ÂżCuĂĄl es el primer paso en el mĂ©todo cientĂfico? Respuesta: IdentificaciĂłn del problema. 30. ÂżQuĂ© garantiza que el instrumento mida igual en diferentes momentos? Respuesta: Confiabilidad. 31. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de instrumento se usa para comparar poblaciones? Respuesta: Cuestionario. 32. ÂżQuĂ© se necesita para aplicar bien un instrumento? Respuesta: Elegirlo adecuadamente segĂșn el objetivo. 33. ÂżQuĂ© puede incluir un instrumento? Respuesta: Escalas, fichas, pruebas. 34. ÂżQuĂ© hace el anĂĄlisis estadĂstico en la validaciĂłn? Respuesta: EvalĂșa la precisiĂłn y coherencia. 35. ÂżQuĂ© se busca con la recolecciĂłn Ă©tica de datos? Respuesta: Respeto y confidencialidad. 36. ÂżQuĂ© implica la observaciĂłn directa? Respuesta: Ver al sujeto en su entorno. 37. ÂżQuĂ© implica la observaciĂłn indirecta? Respuesta: Uso de fotografĂas, grabaciones o planos. 38. ÂżQuĂ© se debe evitar en las preguntas del instrumento? Respuesta: Sesgo. 39. ÂżQuĂ© permite un instrumento validado? Respuesta: Resultados confiables. 40. ÂżQuĂ© garantiza la consistencia de los datos? Respuesta: Instrumentos estandarizados. 41. ÂżQuĂ© analiza el anĂĄlisis de fiabilidad? Respuesta: La estabilidad de los resultados. 42. ÂżQuĂ© mide la validez de criterio? Respuesta: RelaciĂłn con otros indicadores. 43. ÂżQuĂ© evalĂșa el anĂĄlisis factorial? Respuesta: Coherencia entre los Ătems. 44. ÂżQuĂ© significa que un instrumento sea fiable? Respuesta: Que da los mismos resultados en condiciones similares. 45. ÂżQuĂ© relaciĂłn hay entre confiabilidad y validez? Respuesta: Ambas son necesarias para resultados Ăștiles. 46. ÂżQuĂ© variable usan los instrumentos cuantitativos? Respuesta: NumĂ©ricas. 47. ÂżQuĂ© variable usan los instrumentos cualitativos? Respuesta: Narrativas o descriptivas. 48. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de instrumento es una prueba estandarizada? Respuesta: Cuantitativo. 49. ÂżQuĂ© diferencia hay entre validez concurrente y predictiva? Respuesta: La concurrente compara con otro instrumento; la predictiva anticipa resultados. 50. ÂżQuĂ© deben incluir los instrumentos mixtos? Respuesta: Elementos cualitativos y cuantitativos. ________________________________________ ÂżDeseas que continĂșe con el siguiente bloque de 100 preguntas del CapĂtulo II (TĂ©cnicas de investigaciĂłn) o prefieres ajustar el estilo, la cantidad o el formato? TĂș dijiste: si continua para todos los bloques ChatGPT Plus Perfecto. Continuaremos con bloques de 100 preguntas y respuestas breves de control de lectura, basadas en el contenido del libro "MetodologĂa de la investigaciĂłn: TĂ©cnicas e instrumentos de investigaciĂłn". ________________________________________ đ CapĂtulo II: TĂ©cnicas de investigaciĂłn (Preguntas 51â150) đ ObservaciĂłn (51â70) 51. ÂżQuĂ© es la tĂ©cnica de observaciĂłn? R: MĂ©todo para registrar y analizar comportamientos en su entorno. 52. ÂżEn quĂ© campos se utiliza la observaciĂłn? R: PsicologĂa, sociologĂa, educaciĂłn, antropologĂa. 53. ÂżQuĂ© observa la tĂ©cnica de observaciĂłn? R: Conductas, actitudes, eventos. 54. ÂżQuĂ© tipos de observaciĂłn existen? R: Participante y no participante. 55. ÂżQuĂ© implica la observaciĂłn participante? R: El investigador se involucra en la actividad. 56. ÂżQuĂ© implica la observaciĂłn no participante? R: El investigador no se involucra. 57. Ventaja de la observaciĂłn directa. R: Recoge datos de primera mano. 58. ÂżQuĂ© sesgo puede tener la observaciĂłn? R: Subjetividad del observador. 59. ÂżQuĂ© se recomienda para minimizar el sesgo? R: TĂ©cnicas rigurosas y sistemĂĄticas. 60. ÂżEs Ăștil para actitudes y opiniones? R: SĂ, porque observa comportamiento real. đł Encuesta (71â90) 71. ÂżQuĂ© es una encuesta? R: TĂ©cnica para obtener informaciĂłn de un grupo. 72. ÂżCĂłmo se aplican las encuestas? R: Cuestionarios presenciales, en lĂnea o telefĂłnicos. 73. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de datos recoge una encuesta? R: Cuantitativos o cualitativos. 74. ÂżCuĂĄl es el soporte comĂșn de una encuesta? R: Cuestionario. 75. ÂżQuĂ© requiere una encuesta cuantitativa? R: Datos numĂ©ricos y prueba de hipĂłtesis. 76. ÂżQuĂ© debe tener el instrumento? R: Confiabilidad y validez. 77. ÂżCĂłmo se procesan las preguntas abiertas? R: Se agrupan por categorĂas. 78. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnicas estadĂsticas se usan? R: Descriptiva e inferencial. 79. ÂżQuĂ© se recomienda para interpretar resultados? R: Tablas de frecuencia y grĂĄficos. 80. ÂżQuĂ© ventajas tiene la encuesta? R: Rapidez, amplitud de muestra, anĂĄlisis estadĂstico. đŁ Entrevista (91â110) 91. ÂżQuĂ© es una entrevista? R: TĂ©cnica de interacciĂłn directa para recolectar datos. 92. ÂżCuĂĄntos tipos de entrevista hay? R: Estructurada, semiestructurada y no estructurada. 93. ÂżQuĂ© es una entrevista estructurada? R: Preguntas fijas en orden especĂfico. 94. ÂżQuĂ© permite la entrevista no estructurada? R: Respuestas libres y espontĂĄneas. 95. ÂżQuĂ© ventaja tiene la entrevista? R: Profundiza en opiniones. 96. ÂżQuĂ© sesgo puede haber en entrevistas? R: Subjetividad del entrevistador. 97. ÂżQuĂ© debe evitarse en una entrevista? R: Preguntas discriminatorias. 98. ÂżQuĂ© medio puede usarse para entrevistas? R: TelĂ©fono, correo electrĂłnico, plataformas online. 99. ÂżQuĂ© es una guĂa de entrevista? R: Documento con temas y preguntas clave. 100. ÂżQuĂ© papel tiene el entrevistador? R: Facilitar, escuchar y registrar sin sesgo. đ AnĂĄlisis de documentos y discurso (111â130) 101. ÂżQuĂ© es el anĂĄlisis documental? R: RevisiĂłn de textos escritos para obtener informaciĂłn. 102. ÂżQuĂ© documentos pueden analizarse? R: Informes, actas, libros, publicaciones. 103. ÂżQuĂ© aporta esta tĂ©cnica? R: Evidencia histĂłrica y comparativa. 104. ÂżQuĂ© se busca en el anĂĄlisis? R: Patrones, coincidencias, contradicciones. 105. ÂżQuĂ© es el anĂĄlisis de discurso? R: Estudio del lenguaje en contexto. 106. ÂżQuĂ© se analiza en el discurso? R: Palabras, significados, intenciones. 107. ÂżDĂłnde se aplica esta tĂ©cnica? R: PolĂtica, medios, educaciĂłn, sociologĂa. 108. ÂżQuĂ© mĂ©todo puede apoyar el anĂĄlisis de discurso? R: CodificaciĂłn temĂĄtica. 109. ÂżQuĂ© debe evitarse en el anĂĄlisis documental? R: InterpretaciĂłn subjetiva. 110. ÂżCuĂĄl es una ventaja clave? R: Bajo costo y acceso a fuentes histĂłricas. đ§Ș Test, Historia de vida y Focus Group (131â150) 131. ÂżQuĂ© es un test? R: Prueba para evaluar habilidades o caracterĂsticas. 132. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de test hay? R: PsicolĂłgicos, educativos, clĂnicos. 133. ÂżQuĂ© debe tener un buen test? R: Validez y confiabilidad. 134. ÂżQuĂ© es la historia de vida? R: TĂ©cnica cualitativa centrada en la experiencia personal. 135. ÂżQuĂ© recopila la historia de vida? R: NarraciĂłn detallada de eventos significativos. 136. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica la complementa? R: Entrevista. 137. ÂżQuĂ© permite el enfoque de historia de vida? R: ComprensiĂłn profunda del contexto. 138. ÂżQuĂ© es un grupo focal? R: ReuniĂłn de personas para discutir un tema. 139. ÂżCuĂĄntos tipos de focus group hay? R: Tradicional, en lĂnea, mixto, doble, monĂłgrafo. 140. ÂżQuĂ© funciĂłn tiene el moderador? R: Guiar el diĂĄlogo sin influir en opiniones. 141. ÂżQuĂ© se hace con los resultados? R: Se graban, transcriben y analizan. 142. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de preguntas se usan? R: Abiertas. 143. ÂżPara quĂ© se usa un grupo focal? R: Conocer opiniones o reacciones sobre un tema. 144. ÂżQuĂ© ventaja tiene el focus group? R: Permite interacciĂłn y retroalimentaciĂłn entre participantes. 145. ÂżQuĂ© debe evitarse en el grupo focal? R: Opiniones dominantes. 146. ÂżQuĂ© se debe definir antes del grupo focal? R: El problema de investigaciĂłn. 147. ÂżCĂłmo se elige a los participantes? R: SegĂșn criterios relacionados con el tema. 148. ÂżQuĂ© recursos se necesitan? R: Espacio, grabadora, guĂa, consentimiento. 149. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de anĂĄlisis se aplica despuĂ©s? R: AnĂĄlisis cualitativo del contenido. 150. ÂżQuĂ© permite conocer el grupo focal? R: Expectativas, percepciones y emociones del grupo. ________________________________________ ÂżDeseas que continĂșe con el siguiente bloque (151â250) sobre el CapĂtulo III: Instrumentos de investigaciĂłn? Puedo incluir cuestionario, rĂșbrica, fichas, escalas y mĂĄs. TĂș dijiste: si por su puesto ChatGPT Plus Perfecto. AquĂ tienes el siguiente bloque: ________________________________________ đ CapĂtulo III: Instrumentos de investigaciĂłn (Preguntas 151â250) đ Cuestionario (151â180) 151. ÂżQuĂ© es un cuestionario? R: Instrumento para recopilar informaciĂłn mediante preguntas. 152. ÂżPara quĂ© se usa el cuestionario? R: Recoger datos de una muestra o poblaciĂłn. 153. ÂżQuĂ© debe tener un buen cuestionario? R: Preguntas claras, ordenadas y no sesgadas. 154. ÂżQuĂ© garantiza la confidencialidad? R: ProtecciĂłn de datos personales. 155. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de escalas se pueden usar en un cuestionario? R: Likert o diferencial semĂĄntico. 156. ÂżQuĂ© es un cuestionario dicotĂłmico? R: Preguntas con dos opciones, como SĂ/No. 157. ÂżQuĂ© es un cuestionario politĂłmico? R: Preguntas con tres o mĂĄs respuestas. 158. ÂżQuĂ© es una pregunta abierta? R: Pregunta sin respuestas predefinidas. 159. ÂżQuĂ© es una pregunta cerrada? R: Pregunta con opciones predeterminadas. 160. ÂżCuĂĄl es una ventaja del cuestionario? R: Permite recolectar datos de forma rĂĄpida. 161. ÂżQuĂ© limita un cuestionario cerrado? R: La profundidad de las respuestas. 162. ÂżCĂłmo se aplica un cuestionario? R: En persona, por correo, en lĂnea. 163. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de datos proporciona? R: Cuantitativos o cualitativos. 164. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de anĂĄlisis requiere? R: EstadĂstico para los cuantitativos. 165. ÂżQuĂ© es una escala tipo Likert? R: Escala que mide el grado de acuerdo o frecuencia. 166. ÂżQuĂ© es una escala diferencial semĂĄntica? R: Escala que mide opiniones entre dos extremos. 167. ÂżQuĂ© debe evitar un cuestionario? R: AmbigĂŒedad y doble sentido. 168. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de diseño debe tener? R: Coherente, lĂłgico y temĂĄticamente agrupado. 169. ÂżQuĂ© garantiza la validez del cuestionario? R: Que mida lo que debe medir. 170. ÂżQuĂ© asegura la confiabilidad? R: Resultados consistentes en diferentes momentos. 171. ÂżQuĂ© es un cuestionario de perfil? R: Recolecta informaciĂłn demogrĂĄfica. 172. ÂżQuĂ© es un cuestionario de evaluaciĂłn? R: Mide desempeño o progreso. 173. ÂżQuĂ© es un cuestionario de satisfacciĂłn? R: EvalĂșa percepciĂłn de usuarios o clientes. 174. ÂżQuĂ© se necesita para validar un cuestionario? R: Pruebas estadĂsticas y revisiĂłn de expertos. 175. ÂżQuĂ© es un cuestionario autoaplicado? R: Lo responde el participante sin ayuda. 176. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de escalas usa un cuestionario cuantitativo? R: NumĂ©ricas, como la escala Likert. 177. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de escalas usa un cualitativo? R: Preguntas abiertas o categĂłricas. 178. ÂżQuĂ© facilita la tabulaciĂłn de datos? R: Preguntas cerradas. 179. ÂżQuĂ© mejora la profundidad del anĂĄlisis? R: Preguntas abiertas. 180. ÂżQuĂ© se debe pilotar antes de aplicar? R: El cuestionario. ________________________________________ đ RĂșbrica de evaluaciĂłn (181â200) 181. ÂżQuĂ© es una rĂșbrica? R: Instrumento para evaluar con criterios definidos. 182. ÂżQuĂ© contiene una rĂșbrica? R: CategorĂas, niveles de logro y descripciones. 183. ÂżQuĂ© evalĂșa una rĂșbrica de desempeño? R: Calidad en la ejecuciĂłn de una tarea. 184. ÂżQuĂ© evalĂșa una rĂșbrica de producto? R: El resultado final del trabajo. 185. ÂżQuĂ© evalĂșa una rĂșbrica de proceso? R: Los pasos seguidos para desarrollar una tarea. 186. ÂżQuĂ© evalĂșa una rĂșbrica de participaciĂłn? R: Involucramiento en actividades grupales. 187. ÂżQuĂ© evalĂșa una rĂșbrica de habilidades? R: Capacidades como trabajo en equipo o creatividad. 188. ÂżCuĂĄl es una ventaja de la rĂșbrica? R: Claridad en los criterios de evaluaciĂłn. 189. ÂżQuĂ© fomenta el uso de rĂșbricas? R: Transparencia y retroalimentaciĂłn. 190. ÂżQuiĂ©n puede usar una rĂșbrica? R: Docentes, evaluadores o el propio estudiante. 191. ÂżQuĂ© debe evitarse en una rĂșbrica? R: Criterios vagos o subjetivos. 192. ÂżQuĂ© permite una rĂșbrica bien construida? R: EvaluaciĂłn objetiva. 193. ÂżQuĂ© hace una rĂșbrica con los aprendizajes? R: Los evidencia y sistematiza. 194. ÂżQuĂ© relaciĂłn tiene con la tĂ©cnica de observaciĂłn? R: Es un instrumento de esta tĂ©cnica. 195. ÂżCĂłmo deben ser los niveles de logro? R: Claros y diferenciados. 196. ÂżQuĂ© es un descriptor en una rĂșbrica? R: DefiniciĂłn especĂfica de cada nivel. 197. ÂżQuĂ© se necesita para diseñar una rĂșbrica? R: Claridad de objetivos y criterios. 198. ÂżQuĂ© aporta una rĂșbrica al proceso de evaluaciĂłn? R: EstandarizaciĂłn. 199. ÂżQuĂ© mejora en el estudiante una buena rĂșbrica? R: ComprensiĂłn de expectativas. 200. ÂżQuĂ© fortalece en el docente? R: Capacidad de evaluaciĂłn justa. ________________________________________ En el siguiente bloque (251â350) incluirĂ©: âą Fichas de observaciĂłn âą Fichas de entrevista âą Escalas de valoraciĂłn âą Pruebas objetivas âą Fichas de anĂĄlisis documental y de chequeo âą Instrumentos mixtos ÂżContinuamos con ese bloque ahora? TĂș dijiste: continua ChatGPT Plus Perfecto. Continuamos con el siguiente bloque de 100 preguntas del CapĂtulo III: Instrumentos de investigaciĂłn, ahora con los instrumentos restantes. ________________________________________ đ CapĂtulo III: Instrumentos de investigaciĂłn (Preguntas 251â350) đ Ficha de observaciĂłn (251â270) 251. ÂżQuĂ© es una ficha de observaciĂłn? R: Instrumento para registrar comportamientos observados. 252. ÂżQuĂ© campos la utilizan? R: EducaciĂłn, psicologĂa, ciencias sociales. 253. ÂżQuĂ© se anota en la ficha? R: Comportamientos, fechas, contexto. 254. ÂżQuĂ© ventaja ofrece? R: Registro sistemĂĄtico y objetivo. 255. ÂżQuĂ© puede limitar su efectividad? R: Mal diseño o sesgo del observador. 256. ÂżQuĂ© ayuda a reducir el sesgo? R: CategorĂas claras y criterios definidos. 257. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de ficha se usa para conducta? R: Ficha de observaciĂłn de comportamiento. 258. ÂżQuĂ© ficha se usa en el aula? R: Ficha de desempeño o aprendizaje. 259. ÂżQuĂ© se observa en una ficha naturalista? R: Animales o personas en su entorno natural. 260. ÂżQuĂ© debe incluir una ficha? R: Fecha, hora, lugar, observaciĂłn, observador. đ Ficha de entrevista (271â290) 271. ÂżQuĂ© es una ficha de entrevista? R: GuĂa para registrar respuestas en una entrevista. 272. ÂżQuĂ© contiene? R: Datos del entrevistado, preguntas y respuestas. 273. ÂżQuĂ© tipos existen? R: Abierta, cerrada y semiestructurada. 274. ÂżQuĂ© garantiza su uso? R: Registro ordenado y coherente. 275. ÂżQuĂ© evita una ficha bien diseñada? R: OmisiĂłn o tergiversaciĂłn de respuestas. 276. ÂżQuĂ© permite la ficha abierta? R: Respuestas libres y extensas. 277. ÂżQuĂ© exige la ficha estructurada? R: Preguntas fijas y respuestas codificadas. 278. ÂżQuĂ© se recomienda al aplicarla? R: Escuchar activamente y anotar con fidelidad. 279. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento acompaña esta ficha? R: Grabadora (opcional) para respaldo. 280. ÂżQuĂ© facilita el anĂĄlisis posterior? R: TranscripciĂłn clara y segmentaciĂłn por temas. đ Ficha de anĂĄlisis de documentos (291â310) 291. ÂżQuĂ© es esta ficha? R: Herramienta para registrar informaciĂłn extraĂda de documentos. 292. ÂżQuĂ© documentos se pueden analizar? R: Informes, leyes, artĂculos, cartas. 293. ÂżQuĂ© datos se registran? R: Autor, fecha, tema, citas relevantes. 294. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de anĂĄlisis se hace? R: CategorizaciĂłn temĂĄtica y crĂtica. 295. ÂżQuĂ© ventaja tiene? R: Acceso a informaciĂłn histĂłrica o institucional. 296. ÂżQuĂ© riesgo existe? R: Subjetividad en la interpretaciĂłn. 297. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de fuente se recomienda? R: Confiable, actual y pertinente. 298. ÂżQuĂ© ayuda a validar el anĂĄlisis? R: TriangulaciĂłn con otros instrumentos. 299. ÂżQuĂ© debe evitarse? R: Inferencias sin fundamento. 300. ÂżQuĂ© mejora el rigor del anĂĄlisis? R: SistematizaciĂłn y codificaciĂłn clara. đ Escala de valoraciĂłn (311â330) 311. ÂżQuĂ© es una escala de valoraciĂłn? R: Instrumento que mide el nivel de una variable. 312. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de respuestas tiene? R: Categorizadas (como "siempre, a veces, nunca"). 313. ÂżQuĂ© mide una escala tipo Likert? R: Frecuencia, acuerdo o intensidad. 314. ÂżQuĂ© ventaja tiene? R: Permite anĂĄlisis cuantitativo de actitudes. 315. ÂżQuĂ© aspecto debe cuidar? R: RedacciĂłn clara y unidimensional de los Ătems. 316. ÂżQuĂ© evita el uso de escalas numĂ©ricas? R: AmbigĂŒedad en la interpretaciĂłn. 317. ÂżQuĂ© permite una escala con 5 opciones? R: Neutralidad en la respuesta central. 318. ÂżQuĂ© se analiza con la escala? R: Tendencias y niveles de respuesta. 319. ÂżQuĂ© se requiere para su uso? R: ValidaciĂłn y confiabilidad estadĂstica. 320. ÂżDĂłnde se aplican comĂșnmente? R: Encuestas, evaluaciones educativas, psicologĂa. đ§Ș Prueba objetiva (331â340) 331. ÂżQuĂ© es una prueba objetiva? R: Instrumento con respuestas Ășnicas correctas. 332. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de preguntas incluye? R: OpciĂłn mĂșltiple, verdadero/falso, emparejamiento. 333. ÂżQuĂ© ventaja tiene? R: Facilita correcciĂłn automĂĄtica. 334. ÂżQuĂ© se recomienda en su diseño? R: Claridad, precisiĂłn y nivel de dificultad adecuado. 335. ÂżQuĂ© mide esta prueba? R: Conocimientos especĂficos o habilidades. 336. ÂżQuĂ© evita una buena redacciĂłn? R: AmbigĂŒedad y confusiĂłn en la respuesta. 337. ÂżQuĂ© se debe evitar en las opciones? R: Distractores poco plausibles. 338. ÂżQuĂ© se analiza despuĂ©s de aplicar? R: Resultados y patrones de error. 339. ÂżQuĂ© prueba puede validarla? R: AnĂĄlisis de Ătems. 340. ÂżQuĂ© fortalece su confiabilidad? R: Coherencia interna y revisiĂłn por pares. â
Ficha de comprobaciĂłn (Check List) (341â345) 341. ÂżQuĂ© es una ficha de chequeo? R: Lista para marcar cumplimiento de aspectos observables. 342. ÂżQuĂ© se marca en ella? R: Presencia o ausencia de indicadores. 343. ÂżQuĂ© ventaja ofrece? R: Rapidez y claridad en la observaciĂłn. 344. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento la usa? R: ObservaciĂłn directa o sistemĂĄtica. 345. ÂżQuĂ© debe tener? R: Indicadores precisos y relevantes. âïž Instrumentos mixtos (346â350) 346. ÂżQuĂ© son los instrumentos mixtos? R: Combinan preguntas cerradas y abiertas. 347. ÂżQuĂ© permiten analizar? R: Datos cuantitativos y cualitativos. 348. Ejemplo de instrumento mixto. R: Encuesta con escala Likert y preguntas abiertas. 349. ÂżQuĂ© ventaja tiene? R: InformaciĂłn mĂĄs rica y contextualizada. 350. ÂżQuĂ© exige su anĂĄlisis? R: MĂ©todos estadĂsticos y anĂĄlisis de contenido. ________________________________________ ÂżDeseas que continĂșe con el Ășltimo bloque (351â500) incluyendo temas integradores, aplicaciĂłn prĂĄctica, validaciĂłn, confiabilidad, anĂĄlisis de resultados y ejemplos de uso de instrumentos segĂșn el texto? TĂș dijiste: continua ChatGPT Plus Perfecto. A continuaciĂłn te presento el bloque final de preguntas, del nĂșmero 351 al 500, que abordan temas integradores, validaciĂłn, confiabilidad, aplicaciĂłn prĂĄctica, anĂĄlisis de resultados y ejemplos de uso, siempre basados en el libro MetodologĂa de la investigaciĂłn: TĂ©cnicas e instrumentos de investigaciĂłn. ________________________________________ đ AplicaciĂłn, validaciĂłn, anĂĄlisis y uso prĂĄctico (Preguntas 351â500) đŹ ValidaciĂłn y confiabilidad (351â380) 351. ÂżQuĂ© es la validaciĂłn de un instrumento? R: Proceso para asegurar que mide lo que debe medir. 352. ÂżQuĂ© es la confiabilidad de un instrumento? R: Estabilidad y consistencia de sus resultados. 353. ÂżQuĂ© prueba mide la confiabilidad en el tiempo? R: Prueba-retest. 354. ÂżQuĂ© mide el anĂĄlisis de consistencia interna? R: Homogeneidad de los Ătems. 355. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica evalĂșa la estructura interna? R: AnĂĄlisis factorial. 356. ÂżQuĂ© es la validez de contenido? R: Cubre adecuadamente el tema estudiado. 357. ÂżQuĂ© es la validez de criterio? R: RelaciĂłn con resultados conocidos. 358. ÂżQuĂ© es la validez predictiva? R: Predice eventos futuros. 359. ÂżQuĂ© es la validez concurrente? R: Coincide con otros instrumentos similares. 360. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de validez se evalĂșa con expertos? R: Validez de contenido. 361. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento requiere validaciĂłn previa? R: Cuestionario tipo escala. 362. ÂżQuĂ© implica validar empĂricamente? R: Aplicar prueba piloto y analizar resultados. 363. ÂżQuĂ© se busca con la validaciĂłn? R: Confianza en los resultados obtenidos. 364. ÂżCuĂĄndo se debe validar un instrumento? R: Antes de su aplicaciĂłn definitiva. 365. ÂżQuĂ© garantiza la confiabilidad? R: Resultados estables en condiciones similares. 366. ÂżQuĂ© es un coeficiente alfa de Cronbach? R: Mide la consistencia interna de un instrumento. 367. ÂżQuĂ© valor mĂnimo es aceptable en el alfa? R: 0.70 368. ÂżQuĂ© instrumentos deben ser confiables? R: Todos los que se usen para tomar decisiones. 369. ÂżQuĂ© pasa si un instrumento no es vĂĄlido? R: Los resultados pueden ser errĂłneos. 370. ÂżQuĂ© pasa si un instrumento no es confiable? R: Los resultados serĂĄn inconsistentes. 371. ÂżQuĂ© anĂĄlisis combina confiabilidad y validez? R: AnĂĄlisis factorial confirmatorio. 372. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento se prueba con anĂĄlisis de Ătems? R: Pruebas objetivas. 373. ÂżQuĂ© se debe revisar en cada Ătem? R: Claridad, relevancia, comprensiĂłn. 374. ÂżQuĂ© asegura el juicio de expertos? R: Validez de contenido. 375. ÂżQuĂ© implica una prueba piloto? R: Aplicar el instrumento a una muestra pequeña. 376. ÂżQuĂ© se hace despuĂ©s de la prueba piloto? R: Ajustar Ătems segĂșn resultados. 377. ÂżQuĂ© anĂĄlisis requiere una escala Likert? R: Coeficiente de confiabilidad. 378. ÂżQuĂ© prueba compara instrumentos? R: CorrelaciĂłn entre instrumentos similares. 379. ÂżQuĂ© se usa para validar predictivamente? R: RegresiĂłn o correlaciĂłn. 380. ÂżQuĂ© se hace si un Ătem tiene baja correlaciĂłn? R: Se modifica o elimina. ________________________________________ đ§Ș AplicaciĂłn prĂĄctica y ejemplos (381â420) 381. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento se usa para medir actitudes? R: Escala de valoraciĂłn tipo Likert. 382. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica usa un cuestionario? R: Encuesta. 383. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento se usa para observar clase? R: Ficha de observaciĂłn. 384. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento se usa en grupos focales? R: GuĂa o ficha de entrevista. 385. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica requiere un moderador? R: Grupo focal. 386. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento se usa para analizar textos? R: Ficha de anĂĄlisis de documentos. 387. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica usa mĂĄs la historia de vida? R: Entrevista a profundidad. 388. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento es Ăștil en evaluaciones docentes? R: RĂșbrica de desempeño. 389. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica es mejor para explorar opiniones? R: Entrevista abierta. 390. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento permite codificaciĂłn numĂ©rica? R: Cuestionario politĂłmico. 391. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica se usa para comparar poblaciones? R: Encuesta con escalas. 392. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento se usa en pruebas de ingreso? R: Test de rendimiento. 393. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica permite estudiar interacciones sociales? R: ObservaciĂłn participante. 394. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento se usa en anĂĄlisis cuantitativo? R: Escala Likert. 395. ÂżQuĂ© se usa para evaluar una presentaciĂłn? R: RĂșbrica de evaluaciĂłn oral. 396. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento evalĂșa variables emocionales? R: Cuestionario con indicadores psicolĂłgicos. 397. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica recoge experiencias de vida? R: Historia de vida. 398. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica puede usarse en entornos educativos? R: ObservaciĂłn sistemĂĄtica. 399. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento permite autoevaluaciĂłn? R: Escala de valoraciĂłn personal. 400. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica usa entrevistas semiestructuradas? R: InvestigaciĂłn cualitativa. 401. ÂżQuĂ© se requiere antes de aplicar un test? R: Instrucciones claras y control de ambiente. 402. ÂżQuĂ© puede invalidar un instrumento? R: Preguntas sesgadas. 403. ÂżQuĂ© ayuda a mejorar la aplicaciĂłn del instrumento? R: CapacitaciĂłn del aplicador. 404. ÂżQuĂ© debe tener una ficha de chequeo? R: Indicadores observables y verificables. 405. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica es Ăștil para explorar lenguaje? R: AnĂĄlisis de discurso. 406. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento puede tener preguntas dicotĂłmicas? R: Cuestionario cerrado. 407. ÂżQuĂ© permite comparar datos entre grupos? R: Escalas estandarizadas. 408. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento se adapta mejor a encuestas en lĂnea? R: Cuestionario digital. 409. ÂżQuĂ© se recomienda al transcribir entrevistas? R: Textualidad y fidelidad. 410. ÂżQuĂ© permite una ficha de entrevista semiestructurada? R: Flexibilidad y orientaciĂłn temĂĄtica. 411. ÂżQuĂ© mejora la claridad del instrumento? R: RevisiĂłn lingĂŒĂstica. 412. ÂżQuĂ© aporta la observaciĂłn sistemĂĄtica? R: Datos detallados con categorĂas previas. 413. ÂżQuĂ© se hace tras aplicar el instrumento? R: Sistematizar y analizar los datos. 414. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica facilita la triangulaciĂłn? R: Uso de mĂșltiples instrumentos. 415. ÂżQuĂ© mejora la calidad de la recolecciĂłn? R: Uso combinado de tĂ©cnicas. 416. ÂżQuĂ© garantiza la Ă©tica en la aplicaciĂłn? R: Consentimiento informado. 417. ÂżQuĂ© se debe hacer si un instrumento falla? R: Revisar y rediseñar. 418. ÂżQuĂ© evalĂșa una rĂșbrica de proceso? R: Etapas del trabajo realizado. 419. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento combina cuali y cuantitativo? R: Cuestionario mixto. 420. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica permite identificar patrones narrativos? R: Historia de vida o discurso. ________________________________________ đ§© IntegraciĂłn final y metacogniciĂłn (421â500) 421. ÂżQuĂ© significa "triangular" instrumentos? R: Usar varios mĂ©todos para validar resultados. 422. ÂżQuĂ© se considera al seleccionar un instrumento? R: Tipo de variable y objetivo. 423. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento ayuda a recolectar percepciones? R: Encuesta con escala. 424. ÂżQuĂ© implica un anĂĄlisis de contenido? R: Interpretar significados en narrativas. 425. ÂżQuĂ© se evalĂșa antes de usar un instrumento? R: Validez, confiabilidad y pertinencia. 426. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica se basa en la interacciĂłn grupal? R: Focus group. 427. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica requiere observador entrenado? R: ObservaciĂłn sistemĂĄtica. 428. ÂżQuĂ© aporta una guĂa de observaciĂłn? R: Foco en categorĂas clave. 429. ÂżQuĂ© permite la escala tipo Likert? R: Medir grados de opiniĂłn o actitud. 430. ÂżQuĂ© se busca con un test psicomĂ©trico? R: MediciĂłn objetiva de habilidades o rasgos. 431. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica apoya mejor a estudios exploratorios? R: Entrevista abierta. 432. ÂżQuĂ© se mide con una rĂșbrica? R: Criterios previamente definidos. 433. ÂżQuĂ© se requiere para un test confiable? R: Condiciones estandarizadas. 434. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento aporta mĂĄs control? R: Prueba objetiva. 435. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica apoya la etnografĂa? R: ObservaciĂłn participante. 436. ÂżQuĂ© se obtiene del anĂĄlisis de documentos? R: Datos histĂłricos, legales o institucionales. 437. ÂżQuĂ© mejora la precisiĂłn del cuestionario? R: RedacciĂłn revisada por expertos. 438. ÂżQuĂ© puede invalidar un grupo focal? R: Falta de moderaciĂłn efectiva. 439. ÂżQuĂ© hace el anĂĄlisis de resultados? R: Organiza y da sentido a los datos. 440. ÂżQuĂ© herramienta puede usarse para codificaciĂłn? R: Software cualitativo (ej. Atlas.ti, NVivo). 441. ÂżQuĂ© implica un enfoque mixto? R: Uso combinado de mĂ©todos cuantitativos y cualitativos. 442. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento recoge evidencia de aprendizaje? R: RĂșbrica de evaluaciĂłn. 443. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento se usa para describir un fenĂłmeno? R: Entrevista abierta o historia de vida. 444. ÂżQuĂ© se debe hacer con los datos recogidos? R: Analizar, interpretar y presentar resultados. 445. ÂżQuĂ© garantiza un diseño metodolĂłgico sĂłlido? R: SelecciĂłn adecuada de tĂ©cnicas e instrumentos. 446. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento recopila respuestas numĂ©ricas? R: Cuestionario con escala Likert. 447. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica favorece la espontaneidad? R: Focus group. 448. ÂżQuĂ© permite contrastar hipĂłtesis? R: Instrumentos cuantitativos validados. 449. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica analiza lenguaje, poder e ideologĂa? R: AnĂĄlisis crĂtico del discurso. 450. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento evalĂșa competencias? R: RĂșbrica por niveles. 451. ÂżQuĂ© se debe cuidar en preguntas sensibles? R: Ătica y privacidad. 452. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica combina lenguaje verbal y no verbal? R: ObservaciĂłn participante. 453. ÂżQuĂ© se hace tras recolectar los datos? R: Procesarlos y analizarlos. 454. ÂżQuĂ© significa codificar datos cualitativos? R: Agrupar por categorĂas. 455. ÂżQuĂ© elemento es comĂșn en todo instrumento? R: Claridad. 456. ÂżQuĂ© mejora la calidad de la investigaciĂłn? R: Uso de instrumentos adecuados y validados. 457. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento es mĂĄs flexible? R: Entrevista no estructurada. 458. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica ayuda a generar hipĂłtesis? R: InvestigaciĂłn cualitativa. 459. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento ofrece comparaciĂłn directa? R: Cuestionario cerrado. 460. ÂżQuĂ© se requiere al aplicar una encuesta? R: Muestra representativa. 461. ÂżQuĂ© permite ver la evoluciĂłn de datos? R: AplicaciĂłn longitudinal de instrumentos. 462. ÂżQuĂ© se recomienda antes de cada aplicaciĂłn? R: Ensayo o prueba piloto. 463. ÂżQuĂ© tipo de escala se usa mĂĄs en educaciĂłn? R: Escala tipo Likert. 464. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento se adapta mejor a autoevaluaciĂłn? R: RĂșbrica o escala de valoraciĂłn. 465. ÂżQuĂ© fortalece el rigor cientĂfico? R: ValidaciĂłn metodolĂłgica. 466. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica requiere empatĂa del investigador? R: Historia de vida. 467. ÂżQuĂ© es un instrumento adaptado? R: Uno modificado para contexto especĂfico. 468. ÂżQuĂ© es saturaciĂłn en cualitativa? R: Cuando ya no emergen nuevos datos. 469. ÂżQuĂ© asegura la representatividad? R: Muestreo adecuado. 470. ÂżQuĂ© debe incluir el informe de instrumentos? R: JustificaciĂłn, aplicaciĂłn y validaciĂłn. 471. ÂżQuĂ© debe revisarse despuĂ©s del anĂĄlisis? R: Coherencia con los objetivos. 472. ÂżQuĂ© fortalece la Ă©tica de investigaciĂłn? R: Transparencia en el uso de instrumentos. 473. ÂżQuĂ© indica la dispersiĂłn de respuestas? R: Variabilidad en opiniones. 474. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica se recomienda para detectar discursos ocultos? R: AnĂĄlisis crĂtico del discurso. 475. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento revela conocimientos previos? R: Test diagnĂłstico. 476. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento puede usarse al final del curso? R: Encuesta de satisfacciĂłn o evaluaciĂłn. 477. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica facilita comprender realidades complejas? R: InvestigaciĂłn cualitativa. 478. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica complementa una encuesta? R: Entrevista a profundidad. 479. ÂżQuĂ© permite la mezcla de datos cuali y cuanti? R: Mayor comprensiĂłn del fenĂłmeno. 480. ÂżQuĂ© se busca con un buen diseño instrumental? R: Datos Ăștiles y relevantes. 481. ÂżQuĂ© se recomienda para redactar Ătems? R: PrecisiĂłn y simplicidad. 482. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento mide comportamientos observables? R: Ficha de observaciĂłn. 483. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica se centra en la experiencia subjetiva? R: Historia de vida. 484. ÂżQuĂ© aporta la codificaciĂłn en investigaciĂłn? R: OrganizaciĂłn conceptual de datos. 485. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica se basa en preguntas? R: Entrevista. 486. ÂżQuĂ© requiere una entrevista profunda? R: Tiempo, confianza y preparaciĂłn. 487. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento ayuda a mejorar el aprendizaje? R: RĂșbrica de retroalimentaciĂłn. 488. ÂżQuĂ© mejora la presentaciĂłn de resultados? R: Uso de grĂĄficos, tablas y citas. 489. ÂżQuĂ© fortalece la interpretaciĂłn de resultados? R: Marco teĂłrico bien definido. 490. ÂżQuĂ© se debe tener para aplicar instrumentos en niños? R: Consentimiento de padres y lenguaje adecuado. 491. ÂżQuĂ© requiere analizar los datos de un cuestionario? R: CodificaciĂłn, tabulaciĂłn y anĂĄlisis. 492. ÂżQuĂ© debe indicar cada instrumento? R: PropĂłsito, poblaciĂłn y modo de aplicaciĂłn. 493. ÂżQuĂ© diferencia hay entre ficha y escala? R: La ficha registra hechos; la escala mide nivel. 494. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento permite evaluar procesos? R: RĂșbrica de evaluaciĂłn de proceso. 495. ÂżQuĂ© tĂ©cnica usa registro audiovisual? R: ObservaciĂłn o entrevista grabada. 496. ÂżQuĂ© favorece una redacciĂłn efectiva de preguntas? R: Evitar tecnicismos y ambigĂŒedad. 497. ÂżQuĂ© debe usarse para medir variables psicolĂłgicas? R: Test o escalas validadas. 498. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento se adapta al entorno virtual? R: Cuestionario digital. 499. ÂżQuĂ© instrumento permite medir satisfacciĂłn? R: Encuesta. 500. ÂżQuĂ© es un control de lectura? R: EvaluaciĂłn para verificar comprensiĂłn de un texto.
Electrostatics The section of CBSE Class 12 Physics electrostatic potential and capacitance notes mainly deals with the in-depth analysis of electromagnetic phenomena when they are not performing any movements. Additionally, it is divided into ten further sub-topics to study the companion processes of reaching the state. These are - 1. Electric charge In this section of Physics ch 2 Class 12 notes, you get to learn about the basic features of electric charge and its expression in Physics. Along with its basics, the sections help to understand the full potential of charge. Different aspects of Charge included in Class 12 Physics Chapter 2 notes are - Definition Type: Positive and Negative Charge Unit and dimensional formula Point Charge Properties of Charge Comparison of Charge and Mass Methods of Charging Electroscope 2. Coulomb's Law Force is created when charges of opposite signs attract each other, and they repulse if the signs are the same. Coulomb's law tries to define this phenomenon through a mathematical formula, explicitly mentioned in Physics Class 12 notes Chapter 2. Moreover, there is key information about the variation of the constant k and its effect on a medium. Coulomb's law's vector form and the principle of superimposition are also explained in ch 2 Physics Class 12 notes. (Image will be uploaded soon) 3. Electric Field As stated in Class 12 Physics Chapter 2 notes, every positively or negatively charged particle has their respective electric fields. It feels a force at the time of interaction which might be attraction or repulsion. As it arises from electric charge, it is crucial to know about its different parts like - Electric field intensity Relation between electric force and electric field Super imposition of electric field Point charge Continuous charge distributions Properties of Electric Field Lines Motion of Charged Particles in an Electric field Learning more about the electric field from electric potential and capacitance notes Class 12 helps a student to get a grasp of upcoming chapters. 4. Electric Potential Energy When energy helps a charge to move from an electric field, it is known as the Electric Potential Energy. This section of electrostatic chapter Class 12 notes requires a student to study the Electron volt (eV), and the potential energy that an n number of charges can hold. 5. Electric Potential This section of Class 12 Physics Chapter 2 notes focuses on in-depth learning of Electric Potential or Voltage. Basically, it defines the potential movement of energy. 6. Relation between Electric Field and Potential Apart from knowing more about the relationship between the two values, Physics Class 12 Chapter 2 notes also discuss equipotential surfaces. 7. Electric Dipole Essentially, 'Dipoles' are two opposite points of charge represented with q and âq, with their distance between each other being 2a. Electric Dipoles are crucial in your study of Physics Class 12 Chapter 2 notes to learn more about electric fields and their potential. Additionally, Class 12 Physics Chapter 2 notes focus on the influence of electric dipoles on a uniform electric field mainly through Force and Torque, Work, and Potential Energy. In the last part of Electrostatics, further focus is on using the formulas to their fullest potential. It includes subsections of Electric Field, Electric Potential Energy, Electric Potential, and Electric Dipole. In the notes for electrostatic potential and capacitance, you will find proper solutions accompanied by clear and crisp diagrams for better understanding. 8. Gauss's Law Apart from just discussing the Gauss's Law, in Physics Class 12 ch 2 notes there is a thorough explanation of its properties and applications. The Gauss' Law states that net electric flux passing through a hypothetical closed surface is equal to the net electric charge present within the same closed surface. Being a broad part of the whole chapter, you may need to spend a little more time on it. Moving forward, it starts discussing the properties of conductors in relation to Gauss's Law. The Class 12 Physics notes Chapter 2 perfectly defines the journey to Gauss' Law from Coulomb's Law. Here is the Gauss's Law present in the Class 12 Physics ch 2 notes, (image will be uploaded soon) 9. Capacitors There is a dedicated section about Capacitors in the Class 12 Physics Chapter 2 notes elucidating its functions and importance as storage of potential electric energy. After explaining the structure of a capacitor, it points out the different types, parallel plate, spherical and cylindrical. The section of Chapter 2 notes of Physics Class 12 is further divided into subheads like: Properties of an ideal battery Grouping of capacitors Simple circuits (Series and Parallel) Dielectric Van de Graaff generator Combination of drops Charge distribution method Wheatstone Bridge-based circuit Extended Wheatstone Bridge Infinite network of capacitors Redistribution of charge between two capacitors Vedantu prepares the Class 12 Physics Chapter 2 notes with help from subject matter experts. In the PDF, you get a comprehensive idea of the topic along with potential answers to the most asked questions. Furthermore, the detailed explanation on each section and subsections are written in a simple language allows a student to ace their exams with wholesome knowledge. These Physics Chapter 2 Class 12 notes are going to be one of the best supplementary study materials besides a studentâs textbooks. Visit the Vedantu website or download the app to get your hands on all important notes! Important Questions A charge of 4 Ă 10â8C is uniformly distributed on the surface of a spherical conductor, having a radius of 15 cm. Determine the electric field just outside this sphere at a point that is 15 cm from the centre of this sphere. Determine the capacitance given that the distance between the two plates has been reduced by half and the parallel plate capacitor holds a capacitance of 20 pF (where 1pF = 10-12 F) having air between the two plates. What will be the total capacitance of a combination where three capacitors, each having a capacitance of 20 pF, are connected in series. A square having a side of 10 cm has a 500 ”C charge at its centre. Determine the work done to move a charge of 10 ”C between two points that are diagonally opposite each other on the square. At an equatorial point, what will be the electrostatic potential because of an electric dipole? Calculate the work done to move a test charge, q, through a length of 1 cm along the equatorial axis of an electric dipole? Polarisation A capacitor has its plates enclosed in a medium that can be filled by insulating substances. A net dipole moment is then induced by an electric field in the dielectric. This event causes the field in an opposite direction. Equipotential Surface An equipotential surface is a type of surface where the potential always has a constant value. If considered as a point charge, the concentric spheres that are centred at a particular area of this charge are basically equipotential surfaces. Advantages of Vedantu's Revision Notes: A Comprehensive Resource for Effective Learning There are several reasons why one may refer to Vedantu's revision notes for studying a subject like Electrostatic Potential and Capacitance. Here are some key points: Comprehensive Coverage: Vedantu's revision notes provide a comprehensive coverage of the entire topic, ensuring that all important concepts and subtopics are included. Concise and Organized: The notes are designed to be concise, focusing on the key points and core ideas. They are organized in a structured manner, making it easy for students to navigate and revise the content. Simplified Explanation: The revision notes offer simplified explanations of complex concepts, making them more accessible and easier to understand. This helps students grasp the material more effectively. Key Formulas and Equations: The notes highlight the key formulas and equations relevant to the topic, ensuring that students have a clear understanding of the mathematical aspects of Electrostatic Potential and Capacitance. Examples and Illustrations: Vedantu's revision notes often include examples and illustrations that help clarify concepts and provide practical applications, enabling students to better relate theory to real-world scenarios. Quick Recap: The revision notes serve as a quick recap of the important points, allowing students to review the material efficiently before exams or assessments. Exam-Oriented Approach: Vedantu's revision notes are designed with an exam-oriented approach, focusing on the topics and concepts that are frequently asked in examinations. This helps students prepare effectively and increase their chances of scoring well. Accessible Anytime: Vedantu's revision notes are easily accessible online, allowing students to study at their convenience and revise the material anytime, anywhere.
In this video we take a look at the 0:02 fetch to code 0:03 execute cycle including its effect on 0:06 the various registers we've previously 0:12 [Music] 0:14 discussed a computer is defined Definition 0:17 as an electronic device that takes an 0:20 input 0:22 processes data 0:25 and delivers output 0:29 in this simple example you can see we're 0:31 taking the input 5 0:35 we're multiplying it by 2 that's our 0:37 process 0:39 and we're outputting 10. 0:44 but this could be way more complex for 0:46 example of a game console 0:48 the input could be the buttons you press 0:50 on a controller 0:53 the processes would then be carried out 0:55 by the console itself 0:59 and the output would be some form of 1:01 update to a monitor 1:02 and sound out for a speaker possibly 1:04 vibration feedback through the 1:06 controller 1:10 to process data a computer follows a set 1:13 of instructions 1:14 known as a computer program 1:18 if we take the lid off a typical desktop 1:20 computer we can identify 1:22 two critical components the memory 1:26 that stores the program and the central 1:29 processing unit or processor 1:31 which is under this large fan and 1:33 carries out the instructions 1:37 a computer carries out its function by 1:40 fetching 1:41 instructions decoding them and then 1:43 executing them 1:44 in a continuous repetitive cycle 1:46 billions of times a second 1:48 let's look at each of these stages in a 1:50 little more detail Fetch 1:53 so let's start with the fetch stage the 1:55 very first thing that happens 1:57 is the program counter is checked as it 2:00 holds the address 2:01 of the next instruction to be executed 2:07 the address stored is then copied into 2:09 the memory address register 2:14 the address is then sent along the 2:16 address bus to main memory 2:18 where it waits to receive a signal from 2:21 the control 2:22 bus so it knows what to do 2:27 as we want to read the data that's 2:29 stored in memory address 2:30 0 0 0 0 the control unit sends 2:34 a read signal along the control bus to 2:36 main memory 2:41 now main memory knows the data needs to 2:44 be read 2:45 the content stored in memory address 000 2:49 can be sent along the data bus to the 2:51 memory data register 2:56 now as we're currently in the process of 2:58 fetching an instruction 3:00 the data received by the memory data 3:03 register gets copied 3:04 into the current instruction register 3:11 the instruction effectively has now been 3:14 fetched from memory 3:16 just before we proceed to the decode 3:18 phase we now 3:19 increment the program counter so that 3:22 the address it contains 3:24 points to the address of the next 3:26 instruction which will need to be 3:30 executed 3:32 the instruction now being held in the 3:33 current instruction register 3:35 is ready to be decoded 3:39 now as we mentioned in the previous 3:41 video the instruction is made up of two 3:43 parts 3:44 we have the op code that's what it is we 3:47 need to do 3:50 and we have the operand what are we 3:53 going to do it to 3:55 now the operand could contain the actual 3:57 data 3:58 or indeed it could contain an address of 4:01 where the data is to be found 4:06 by decoding this instruction we can see 4:08 the operation we need 4:10 is a load operation so we need to load 4:14 the contents of memory location0101 4:18 into the cpus accumulator 4:25 in the exam a simple model will be used 4:27 to describe the 4:29 structure of any given instruction 4:32 you're not going to be expected to 4:34 define how an opcode is made up 4:36 but simply to interpret opcodes in the 4:39 given context of an exam 4:40 question in the example here 4:44 you can see there's a total of 16 4:46 different opcodes available 4:48 and this is because we're using four 4:50 bits for our representation 4:56 so now we've fetched the instruction and 4:59 we've decoded it so we know what we need 5:00 to do 5:01 we're finally ready to execute it 5:05 so we now send address 0101 5:08 to the memory dress register 5:13 now we're in the memory address register 5:15 we can finally send the address 5:18 down the address bus to main memory 5:24 this time we want to read the data 5:26 that's stored in memory 5:28 and so the control unit again sends a 5:30 read signal along the control bus 5:36 so main memories now receive an address 5:38 and a read signal 5:40 so the content stored at memory location 5:43 0101 5:44 can now be sent along the data bus back 5:46 to the cpu 5:47 and into the memory data register 5:54 finally the contents of the memory data 5:56 register are copied to the accumulator 5:59 and this is one of a number of general 6:00 purpose registers found in the cpu 6:04 this first instruction is now complete Branching 6:11 so what does this program actually do 6:14 you should be able to work it through 6:16 carefully and figure it out 6:19 we're now pointing instructions zero 6:21 zero zero one in the program counter 6:23 and we're ready to fetch the second 6:25 instruction 6:27 at the end of this video we're gonna 6:29 provide you with the answer 6:34 so let's talk a second about programs 6:37 that branch 6:40 on the left here we have a very simple 6:42 piece of pseudo code 6:44 line zero says first execute this line 6:46 of code 6:47 line 1 now execute this line and then 6:50 line 2 says 6:52 if the age is greater than 18 then 6:56 we're going to execute lines 3 and 4 6:58 otherwise 6:59 we're going to execute lines six and 7:02 seven 7:03 so this program doesn't necessarily 7:05 follow strictly in sequence from line 7:07 zero through to seven there's a chance 7:10 here the program may branch and jump 7:14 around 7:16 so we're going to pretend that this 7:17 program has been loaded into memory 7:20 each line of code on the left here has 7:23 ended up 7:24 as a location in memory now this is not 7:27 strictly how this would happen in this 7:28 one-to-one way 7:29 but for the purpose of example it's 7:31 absolutely fine 7:35 so the program counter starts by 7:37 pointing to memory address zero 7:39 and we fetch the first instruction 7:41 decode it and execute it 7:44 it then updates and tells us the next 7:47 instruction 7:48 is zero zero zero one because remember 7:50 the program counter is being incremented 7:52 so we fetch it decode it and we execute 7:55 line one of our program 7:59 we then fetch line two which in binary 8:01 is one 8:02 zero 8:06 now at this point depending on what 8:10 happens during the execution 8:11 of line two the program may be required 8:15 to fetch line three from memory or 8:18 line five from memory 8:25 so let's look at how this actually works 8:27 because we've said the program counter 8:28 simply gets incremented 8:31 well in the current instruction register 8:33 we have an instruction with the op code 8:36 0 1 1 0. 8:41 now when we look this up in the decode 8:43 unit we discover that this 8:45 code means branch always 8:51 this replaces the value held in the 8:54 program counter 8:56 with the contents of the operand that's 8:58 the second part of the instruction 9:01 from the current instruction register so 9:03 this case 9:04 one zero zero one 9:09 now when the next fetch cycle begins the 9:12 program counter is obviously checked 9:14 and as its contents have been previously 9:16 updated to a new memory location 9:19 and not simply incremented the program 9:22 effectively is able to jump 9:24 around memory 9:28 so having watched this video you should 9:30 be able to answer the following key 9:32 question 9:33 how does a cpu work 9:39 okay so let's um answer the question we 9:41 posed 9:42 earlier what did that program actually 9:48 do 9:50 so this is the first fetch to code 9:53 execute cycle 9:55 and this is the one that we ran through 9:57 in detail earlier 9:58 it effectively loaded the contents of 10:01 the memory 10:02 stored at location location0101 10:05 into the accumulator in other words 10:08 the dna number 3 is moved 10:11 from memory into the cpu 10:18 we then proceed onto the second fetch 10:20 decode execute cycle 10:23 now this one adds the contents of memory 10:27 located at 0 1 1 0 10:30 to the current contents of the 10:32 accumulator 10:34 so in other words the dna number one 10:38 because that's what's stored at address 10:40 zero one one zero 10:43 is added to the number three that was in 10:45 the accumulator 10:46 the results are stored back over the 10:48 accumulator 10:49 so effectively we've done three plus one 10:53 equals four 10:58 the third fetch to code execute cycle 11:00 stores the contents which are in the 11:02 accumulator 11:03 into memory location zero one one one 11:07 and that's because the op code the first 11:09 part of this current instruction 11:10 zero zero one one is the command to 11:13 store when we look it up in the decoder 11:15 unit 11:16 so in other words the result of the 11:17 previous calculation three plus one 11:19 equals four 11:20 is now written back into main memory 11:28 the fourth fetch decode execute cycle 11:30 outputs the contents of the accumulator 11:33 remember they were copied into main 11:34 memory but they're still held in the 11:35 accumulator 11:37 so in this simple abstraction the number 11:40 four is now 11:41 output to the user so they can see the 11:43 result of the calculation 11:49 the fifth and final fetch code execute 11:51 cycle 11:52 brings a halt to the current program 11:58 so this very simple program which has 12:01 five 12:02 fetch decode execute cycles has 12:04 performed the calculation 12:06 three plus one is then stored the result 12:09 in main memory 12:10 and displayed the result four to the 12:12 user 12:13 and in a high-level language this may 12:15 look something very similar to the 12:17 following two lines of code 12:20 sum variable equals num1 plus num2 12:24 print sum to the user 12:27 so you can start to get an appreciation 12:29 here of how the high level code you 12:32 write actually ends up being fetched 12:34 decoded 12:35 and executed inside a processor 12:38 of course your processor is doing 12:40 billions and billions of these 12:42 operations a second 12:43 which when you think about it is really 12:45 very impressive 12:52 [Music] 13:03 you. make 10 questions for a standerd of a level
Got you now đ â you donât want a code, you want ready-made quiz content you can paste into Quizalize so a teacher/class can use it. Iâll generate a proper SSS1 quiz bank (Maths, English, Basic Science) in a clean format. You can copy this into Quizalize âCreate Quizâ. đ SSS1 QUIZ (READY FOR QUIZALIZE) đ§ MATHS (10 QUESTIONS) What is 9 Ă 8? A. 72 B. 64 C. 81 D. 74 Answer: A Solve: 3x = 15 A. 3 B. 5 C. 6 D. 9 Answer: B What is 12ÂČ? A. 124 B. 144 C. 132 D. 122 Answer: B Simplify: 18 Ă· 3 A. 3 B. 5 C. 6 D. 9 Answer: C What is the square root of 49? A. 5 B. 6 C. 7 D. 8 Answer: C Find x: x + 7 = 20 A. 11 B. 12 C. 13 D. 14 Answer: C 5 Ă 5 Ă 5 = ? A. 125 B. 100 C. 150 D. 75 Answer: A What is 100 Ă· 4? A. 20 B. 25 C. 30 D. 40 Answer: B What is 15 + 17? A. 31 B. 32 C. 33 D. 34 Answer: B What is 10% of 200? A. 10 B. 20 C. 30 D. 40 Answer: B đ ENGLISH (10 QUESTIONS) Choose correct spelling A. Recieve B. Receive C. Receve D. Recive Answer: B Opposite of âfastâ A. Quick B. Slow C. Sharp D. Rapid Answer: B Synonym of âhappyâ A. Sad B. Angry C. Joyful D. Tired Answer: C A noun is a name of a⊠A. Action B. Place/Person/Thing C. Verb D. Adverb Answer: B He ___ to school every day A. go B. going C. goes D. gone Answer: C Plural of child A. Childs B. Childes C. Children D. Childer Answer: C Antonym of âbigâ A. Large B. Huge C. Small D. Wide Answer: C A verb is a word that shows A. Name B. Action C. Place D. Thing Answer: B She is ___ honest girl A. a B. an C. the D. no article Answer: A Past tense of go A. Goed B. Gone C. Went D. Going Answer: C đŹ BASIC SCIENCE (10 QUESTIONS) Plants absorb carbon dioxide during A. Respiration B. Photosynthesis C. Digestion D. Movement Answer: B Human breathing organ A. Heart B. Liver C. Lungs D. Kidney Answer: C Water boils at A. 0°C B. 50°C C. 100°C D. 150°C Answer: C Which is a metal? A. Rubber B. Copper C. Wood D. Plastic Answer: B The sun is a A. Planet B. Star C. Moon D. Comet Answer: B Force is measured in A. Joule B. Newton C. Watt D. Kelvin Answer: B Solid â Liquid is called A. Freezing B. Melting C. Evaporation D. Condensation Answer: B Earth revolves around A. Moon B. Mars C. Sun D. Jupiter Answer: C Human blood is pumped by A. Brain B. Heart C. Lungs D. Kidney Answer: B Energy from the sun is called A. Nuclear B. Solar C. Chemical D. Sound Answer: B ⥠HOW TO USE IN QUIZALIZE Go to Quizalize Click Create Quiz Choose Manual Input Copy each question Paste with options + correct answer Set timer per question (5â10 sec for pressure mode) đ„ IF YOU WANT NEXT LEVEL I can also: ïżœâ Turn this into 100-question exam paper ïżœâ Add hard WAEC/JAMB-level traps Or ïżœâ simulate inter-house elimination rounds Just say: âupgrade meâ đ
Select all the numbers that can be used as a common denominator to rewrite the fractions __ 2 6 and __ 1 2 . A 3 D 12 B 6 E 16 C 8 2 Aaron ran __ 5 8 mile to his friendâs house. Then he ran another __ 1 4 mile to the park. 1 1 8 1 8 1 8 1 8 1 8 1 8 1 8 1 8 1 8 1 8 1 8 1 8 1 4 Which equation shows how many miles Aaron ran? A __ 5 8 â __ 1 4 = __ 2 8 C __ 5 8 + __ 1 4 = __ 7 8 B __ 5 8 â __ 1 4 = __ 3 8 D __ 5 8 + __ 1 4 = __ 8 8 3 Select all the expressions that can be used to find the sum of __ 6 8 and ___9 12. A ___ 36 48 + ___ 36 48 D ___ 18 20 + ___ 17 20 B ___ 24 36 + ___ 27 36 E ___ 18 24 + ___ 18 24 C ___ 14 16 + ___ 13 16 4 Write a pair of equivalent fractions for __ 3 4 and __ 2 5 using a common denominator of 20. __ 3 4 = __ 2 5 = 5 Katie spent __ 4 5 hour painting and __ 1 2 hour drawing. ? 1 1 2 1 5 1 5 1 5 1 5 How much more time in hours did she spend painting than drawing? 6 Dave is planting a garden. He plants cucumbers in ___2 12 of his garden and tomatoes in __ 2 3 of his garden. What fraction of his garden does Dave plant with cucumbers and tomatoes? 7 Of the students in Mariaâs class, __ 2 5 have dogs and __ 1 3 have cats. No students have both a dog and a cat. What fraction represents how many more students in Mariaâs class have dogs? 52 © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company Module 6 âą Form A Name Module Test DO NOT EDIT--Changes must be made through "File info" CorrectionKey=NL-C 9 Mr. Gonzales used __ 3 4 quart of broth and __ 1 2 quart of milk to make soup. How many quarts of liquid did he use? Part A Complete the fraction model to represent the problem. 1 1 2 1 4 1 4 1 4 Part B Write an equation to show how many quarts of liquid Mr. Gonzales used to make soup. 10 A bowl of cereal contains __ 2 3 cup of oats and __ 2 8 cup of raisins. Write a numerical expression using equivalent fractions with a common denominator of 24 to model how many more cups of oats than raisins there are in the bowl. 11 Jessica read __ 1 6 of her book on Thursday, __ 2 9 of her book on Friday, and __ 1 2 of her book on Saturday. Part A Write a numerical expression using equivalent fractions to model how much of her book she has read so far. Part B What fraction of her book has Jessica read?
1. Flammable materials, like alcohol, should never be dispensed or used near A. an open door. B. an open flame. C. another student. D. a sink. 2. If a laboratory fire erupts, immediately A. notify your instructor. B. run for the fire extinguisher. C. throw water on the fire. D. open the windows. 3. Approved eye protection devices (such as goggles) are worn in the laboratory A. to avoid eye strain. B. to improve your vision. C. only if you donât have corrective glasses. D. any time chemicals, heat or glassware are used. 4. If you wear contact lenses in the school laboratory, A. take them out before starting the lab. B. you do not have to wear protective goggles. C. advise your science instructor that you wear contact lenses. D. keep the information to yourself. 5. If you do not understand a direction or part of a lab procedure, you should A. figure it out as you do the lab. B. try several methods until something works. C. ask the instructor before proceeding. D. skip it and go on to the next part. 6. After completing an experiment, all chemical wastes should be A. left at your lab station for the next class. B. disposed of according to your instructorâs directions. C. dumped in the sink. D. taken home. 7. If a lab experiment is not completed, you should A. discuss the issue with your instructor. B. sneak in after school and work alone. C. come in during lunch and finish while eating lunch. D. make up some results. 8. You are heating a substance in a test tube. Always point the open end of the tube A. toward yourself. B. toward your lab partner. C. toward another classmate. D. away from all people. Science Laboratory Safety teSt 9. You are heating a piece of glass and now want to pick it up. You should A. use a rag or paper towels. B. pick up the end that looks cooler. C. use tongs. D. pour cold water on it. 10. You have been injured in the laboratory (cut, burn, etc.). First you should A. visit the school nurse after class. B. see a doctor after school. C. tell the science instructor at once. D. apply first aid yourself. 11. When gathering glassware and equipment for an experiment, you should A. read all directions carefully to know what equipment is necessary. B. examine all glassware to check for chips or cracks. C. clean any glassware that appears dirty. D. All of the above. 12. You want to place a piece of glass tubing into a rubber stopper after the tubing has been fire polished and cooled. This is best done by A. lubricating the tubing with water or glycerin. B. using a towel or cotton gloves for protection. C. twisting the tubing and stopper carefully. D. all of the above. 13. Personal eyeglasses provide as much protection as A. a face shield. B. safety glasses. C. splashproof chemical goggles. D. none of the above. 14. Long hair in the laboratory must be A. cut short. B. held away from the experiment with one hand. C. always neatly groomed. D. tied back or kept entirely out of the way with a hair band, hairpins, or other confining device. 15. In a laboratory, the following should not be worn. A. loose clothing. B. dangling jewelry. C. sandals. D. all of the above. 16. The following footwear is best in the laboratory. A. sandals B. open-toed shoes C. closed-toed shoes D. shoes appropriate for the weather3 © 2017 Flinn Scientific, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 17. Horseplay or practical jokes in the laboratory are A. always against the rules. B. okay. C. not dangerous. D. okay if you are working alone. 18. If a piece of equipment is not working properly, stop, turn it off, and tell A. the custodian. B. your lab partner. C. your best friend in the class. D. the science instructor. 19. If an acid is splashed on your skin, wash at once with A. soap. B. oil. C. weak base. D. plenty of water. 20. When you finish working with chemicals, biological specimens, and other lab substances, always A. treat your hands with skin lotion. B. wash your hands thoroughly with soap and water. C. wipe your hands on a towel. D. wipe your hands on your clothes. TrueâFalse T F 22. â â Hot glass looks the same as cold glass. 23. â â All chemicals in the lab are to be considered dangerous. 24. â â Return all unused chemicals to their original containers. 25. â â Work areas should be kept clean and tidy. 26. â â Pipets are used to measure and dispense small amounts of liquids. You should draw the liquid into the pipet using your mouth. 27. â â Laboratory work can be started immediately upon entering the laboratory even if the instructor is not yet present. 28. â â Never remove chemicals or other equipment from the laboratory. T F 29. â â Chipped or cracked glassware is okay to use. 30. â â Read all procedures thoroughly before entering the laboratory. 31. â â All unauthorized experiments are prohibited. 32. â â You are allowed to enter the chemical preparation/storage area any time you need to get an item. 33. â â Laboratory aprons should be worn during all lab activities. 34. â â Itâs okay to pick up broken glass with your bare hands as long as the glass is placed in the trash. 35. â â Never leave a lit burner unattended. 21. Draw a diagram of your science room and label the locations of the following: â Fire Blanket â Fire Extinguisher(s) â Exits â Eyewash Station â Emergency Shower â Closest Fire Alarm Station â Waste Disposal Container(s)4 © 2017 Flinn Scientific, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Name: ________________________________________________ Date: ______________________________________________ 1. Flammable materials, like alcohol, should never be dispensed or used near A. an open door. B. an open flame. C. another student. D. a sink. 2. If a laboratory fire erupts, immediately A. notify your instructor. B. run for the fire extinguisher. C. throw water on the fire. D. open the windows. 3. Approved eye protection devices (such as goggles) are worn in the laboratory A. to avoid eye strain. B. to improve your vision. C. only if you donât have corrective glasses. D. any time chemicals, heat or glassware are used. 4. If you wear contact lenses in the school laboratory, A. take them out before starting the lab. B. you do not have to wear protective goggles. C. advise your science instructor that you wear contact lenses. D. keep the information to yourself. 5. If you do not understand a direction or part of a lab procedure, you should A. figure it out as you do the lab. B. try several methods until something works. C. ask the instructor before proceeding. D. skip it and go on to the next part. 6. After completing an experiment, all chemical wastes should be A. left at your lab station for the next class. B. disposed of according to your instructorâs directions. C. dumped in the sink. D. taken home. 7. If a lab experiment is not completed, you should A. discuss the issue with your instructor. B. sneak in after school and work alone. C. come in during lunch and finish while eating lunch. D. make up some results. 8. You are heating a substance in a test tube. Always point the open end of the tube A. toward yourself. B. toward your lab partner. C. toward another classmate. D. away from all people. Science Laboratory Safety teSt 9. You are heating a piece of glass and now want to pick it up. You should A. use a rag or paper towels. B. pick up the end that looks cooler. C. use tongs. D. pour cold water on it. 10. You have been injured in the laboratory (cut, burn, etc.). First you should A. visit the school nurse after class. B. see a doctor after school. C. tell the science instructor at once. D. apply first aid yourself. 11. When gathering glassware and equipment for an experiment, you should A. read all directions carefully to know what equipment is necessary. B. examine all glassware to check for chips or cracks. C. clean any glassware that appears dirty. D. All of the above. 12. You want to place a piece of glass tubing into a rubber stopper after the tubing has been fire polished and cooled. This is best done by A. lubricating the tubing with water or glycerin. B. using a towel or cotton gloves for protection. C. twisting the tubing and stopper carefully. D. all of the above. 13. Personal eyeglasses provide as much protection as A. a face shield. B. safety glasses. C. splashproof chemical goggles. D. none of the above. 14. Long hair in the laboratory must be A. cut short. B. held away from the experiment with one hand. C. always neatly groomed. D. tied back or kept entirely out of the way with a hair band, hairpins, or other confining device. 15. In a laboratory, the following should not be worn. A. loose clothing. B. dangling jewelry. C. sandals. D. all of the above. 16. The following footwear is best in the laboratory. A. sandals B. open-toed shoes C. closed-toed shoes D. shoes appropriate for the weather5 © 2017 Flinn Scientific, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 17. Horseplay or practical jokes in the laboratory are A. always against the rules. B. okay. C. not dangerous. D. okay if you are working alone. 18. If a piece of equipment is not working properly, stop, turn it off, and tell A. the custodian. B. your lab partner. C. your best friend in the class. D. the science instructor. 19. If an acid is splashed on your skin, wash at once with A. soap. B. oil. C. weak base. D. plenty of water. 20. When you finish working with chemicals, biological specimens, and other lab substances, always A. treat your hands with skin lotion. B. wash your hands thoroughly with soap and water. C. wipe your hands on a towel. D. wipe your hands on your clothes. 21. Draw a diagram of your science room and label the locations of the following: â Fire Blanket â Fire Extinguisher(s) â Exits â Eyewash Station â Emergency Shower â Closest Fire Alarm Station â Waste Disposal Container(s) TrueâFalse T F 22. â â Hot glass looks the same as cold glass. 23. â â All chemicals in the lab are to be considered dangerous. 24. â â Return all unused chemicals to their original containers. 25. â â Work areas should be kept clean and tidy. 26. â â Pipets are used to measure and dispense small amounts of liquids. You should draw the liquid into the pipet using your mouth. 27. â â Laboratory work can be started immediately upon entering the laboratory even if the instructor is not yet present. 28. â â Never remove chemicals or other equipment from the laboratory. T F 29. â â Chipped or cracked glassware is okay to use. 30. â â Read all procedures thoroughly before entering the laboratory. 31. â â All unauthorized experiments are prohibited. 32. â â You are allowed to enter the chemical preparation/storage area any time you need to get an item. 33. â â Laboratory aprons should be worn during all lab activities. 34. â â Itâs okay to pick up broken glass with your bare hands as long as the glass is placed in the trash. 35. â â Never leave a lit burner unattended.
THE FIDE LAWS OF CHESS. Introduction FIDE Laws of Chess cover over-the-board play. The Laws of Chess have two parts: 1. Basic Rules of Play and 2. Competitive Rules of Play. The English text is the authentic version of the Laws of Chess (which were adopted at the 93rd FIDE Congress at Chennai, India) coming into force on 1 January 2023. Preface. The Laws of Chess cannot cover all possible situations that may arise during a game, nor can they regulate all administrative questions. Where cases are not precisely regulated by an Article of the Laws, it should be possible to reach a correct decision by studying analogous situations which are regulated in the Laws. The Laws assume that arbiters have the necessary competence, sound judgement and absolute objectivity. Too detailed a rule might deprive the arbiter of his/her freedom of judgement and thus prevent him/her from finding a solution to a problem dictated by fairness, logic and special factors. FIDE appeals to all chess players and federations to accept this view. A necessary condition for a game to be rated by FIDE is that it shall be played according to the FIDE Laws of Chess. It is recommended that competitive games not rated by FIDE be played according to the FIDE Laws of Chess. Member federations may ask FIDE to give a ruling on matters relating to the Laws of Chess. BASIC RULES OF PLAY. Article 1: The Nature and Objectives of the Game of Chess 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 The game of chess is played between two opponents who move their pieces on a square board called a âchessboardâ. The player with the light-coloured pieces (White) makes the first move, then the players move alternately, with the player with the dark-coloured pieces (Black) making the next move. A player is said to âhave the moveâ when his/her opponentâs move has been âmadeâ. The objective of each player is to place the opponentâs king âunder attackâ in such a way that the opponent has no legal move. 1.4.1 The player who achieves this goal is said to have âcheckmatedâ the opponentâs king and to have won the game. Leaving oneâs own king under attack, exposing oneâs own king to attack and also âcapturingâ the opponentâs king is not allowed. 1.4.2 The opponent whose king has been checkmated has lost the game. 1.5 If the position is such that neither player can possibly checkmate the opponentâs king, the game is drawn (see Article 5.2.2). Article 2: The Initial Position of the Pieces on the Chessboard 2.1 2.2 The chessboard is composed of an 8 x 8 grid of 64 equal squares alternately light (the âwhiteâ squares) and dark (the âblackâ squares). The chessboard is placed between the players in such a way that the near corner square to the right of the player is white. At the beginning of the game White has 16 light-coloured pieces (the âwhiteâ pieces); Black has 16 dark-coloured pieces (the âblackâ pieces). These pieces are as follows: A white king usually indicated by the symbol K A white queen Two white rooks Two white bishops Two white knights Eight white pawns A black king A black queen Two black rooks Two black bishops Two black knights Eight black pawns usually indicated by the symbol Q usually indicated by the symbol R usually indicated by the symbol B usually indicated by the symbol N usually indicated by the symbol usually indicated by the symbol K usually indicated by the symbol Q usually indicated by the symbol R usually indicated by the symbol B usually indicated by the symbol N usually indicated by the symbol Staunton Pieces p Q K B N R 9 2.3 The initial position of the pieces on the chessboard is as follows: 2.4 The eight vertical columns of squares are called âfilesâ. The eight horizontal rows of squares are called âranksâ. A straight line of squares of the same colour, running from one edge of the board to an adjacent edge, is called a âdiagonalâ. Article 3: The Moves of the Pieces 3.1 It is not permitted to move a piece to a square occupied by a piece of the same colour. 3.1.1 If a piece moves to a square occupied by an opponentâs piece the latter is captured and removed from the chessboard as part of the same move. 3.1.2 A piece is said to attack an opponentâs piece if the piece could make a capture on that square according to Articles 3.2 to 3.8. 3.1.3 A piece is considered to attack a square even if this piece is constrained from moving to that square because it would then leave or place the king of its own colour under attack. 3.2 The bishop may move to any square along a diagonal on which it stands. 3.3 The rook may move to any square along the file or the rank on which it stands. 3.4 The queen may move to any square along the file, the rank or a diagonal on which it stands. 3.5 3.6 3.7 When making these moves, the bishop, rook or queen may not move over any intervening pieces. The knight may move to one of the squares nearest to that on which it stands but not on the same rank, file or diagonal. 3.7 When making these moves, the bishop, rook or queen may not move over any intervening pieces. The knight may move to one of the squares nearest to that on which it stands but not on the same rank, file or diagonal. The pawn: 3.7.1 The pawn may move forward to the square immediately in front of it on the same file, provided that this square is unoccupied, or 3.7.2 on its first move the pawn may move as in 3.7.1 or alternatively it may advance two squares along the same file, provided that both squares are unoccupied, or 3.7.3 the pawn may move to a square occupied by an opponentâs piece diagonally in front of it on an adjacent file, capturing that piece. 3.7.3.1 A pawn occupying a square on the same rank as and on an adjacent file to an opponentâs pawn which has just advanced two squares in one move from its original square may capture this opponentâs pawn as though the latter had been moved only one square. 3.7.3.2 This capture is only legal on the move following this advance and is called an âen passantâ capture. 3.7.3.3 When a player, having the move, plays a pawn to the rank furthest from its starting position, he/she must exchange that pawn as part of the same move for a new queen, rook, bishop or knight of the same colour on the intended square of arrival. This is called the square of âpromotionâ. 3.7.3.4 The player's choice is not restricted to pieces that have been captured previously. 3.7.3.5 This exchange of a pawn for another piece is called promotion, and the effect of the new piece is immediate. 3.8 There are two different ways of moving the king: 3.8.1 by moving to an adjoining square. 3.8.2 by âcastlingâ. This is a move of the king and either rook of the same colour along the playerâs first rank, counting as a single move of the king and executed as follows: the king is transferred from its original square two squares towards the rook on its original square, then that rook is transferred to the square the king has just crossed. 3.8.2.1 The right to castle has been lost: 3.8.2.1.1 If the king has already moved, or 3.8.2.1.2 With a rook that has already moved. 3.8.2.2 Castling is prevented temporarily: 3.8.2.2.1 if the square on which the king stands, or the square which it must cross, or the square which it is to occupy, is attacked by one or more of the opponent's pieces, or 3.8.2.2.2 if there is any piece between the king and the rook with which castling is to be effected. 3.9 The king in check: 3.9.1 The king is said to be 'in check' if it is attacked by one or more of the opponent's pieces, even if such pieces are constrained from moving to the square occupied by the king because they would then leave or place their own king in check. 3.9.2 No piece can be moved that will either expose the king of the same colour to check or leave that king in check. 3.10 Legal and illegal moves; illegal positions: 3.10.1 A move is legal when all the relevant requirements of Articles 3.1 â 3.9 have been fulfilled. 3.10.2 A move is illegal when it fails to meet the relevant requirements of Articles 3.1 â3.9. 3.10.3 A position is illegal when it cannot have been reached by any series of legal moves. Article 4: The Act of Moving the Pieces 4.1 4.2 Each move must be played with one hand only. Adjusting the pieces or other physical contact with a piece: 4.2.1 Only the player having the move may adjust one or more pieces on their squares, provided that he/she first expresses his/her intention (for example by saying âjâadoubeâ or âI adjustâ). 4.2.2 Any other physical contact with a piece, except for clearly accidental contact, shall be considered to be intent. 4.3 Except as provided in Article 4.2.1, if the player having the move touches on the chessboard, with the intention of moving or capturing: 4.3.1 one or more of his/her own pieces, he/she must move the first piece touched that can be moved. 4.3.2 one or more of his/her opponentâs pieces, he/she must capture the first piece touched that can be captured. 4.3.3 one or more pieces of each colour, he/she must capture the first touched opponentâs piece with his/her first touched piece or, if this is illegal, move or capture the first piece touched that can be moved or captured. If it is unclear whether the playerâs own piece or his/her opponentâs was touched first, the playerâs own piece shall be considered to have been touched before his/her opponentâs. 4.4 If a player having the move: 4.4.1 touches his/her king and a rook he/she must castle on that side if it is legal to do so 4.4.2 deliberately touches a rook and then his/her king he/she is not allowed to castle on that side on that move and the situation shall be governed by Article 4.3.1. 4.4.3 intending to castle, touches the king and then a rook, but castling with this rook is illegal, the player must make another legal move with his/her king (which may include castling with the other rook). If the king has no legal move, the player is free to make any legal move. 4.4.4 promotes a pawn, the choice of the piece is finalised when the piece has touched the square of promotion. 4.5 4.6 If none of the pieces touched in accordance with Article 4.3 or Article 4.4 can be moved or captured, the player may make any legal move. The act of promotion may be performed in various ways: 4.6.1 the pawn does not have to be placed on the square of arrival. 4.6.2 removing the pawn and putting the new piece on the square of promotion may occur in any order. 4.6.3 If an opponentâs piece stands on the square of promotion, it must be captured. 4.7 When, as a legal move or part of a legal move, a piece has been released on a square, it cannot be moved to another square on this move. The move is considered to have been made in the case of: 4.7.1 A capture, when the captured piece has been removed from the chessboard and the player, having placed his/her own piece on its new square, has released this capturing piece from his/her hand. 4.7.2 Castling, when the player's hand has released the rook on the square previously crossed by the king. When the player has released the king from his/her hand, the move is not yet made, but the player no longer has the right to make any move other than castling on that side, if this is legal. If castling on this side is illegal, the player must make another legal move with his/her king (which may include castling with the other rook). If the king has no legal move, the player is free to make any legal move. 4.7.3 Promotion, when the player's hand has released the new piece on the square of promotion and the pawn has been removed from the board. 4.8 4.9 A player forfeits his/her right to claim against his/her opponentâs violation of Articles 4.1 â 4.7 once the player touches a piece with the intention of moving or capturing it. 4.8. A player forfeits his/her right to claim against his/her opponentâs violation of Articles 4.1 â 4.7 .4.9. If a player is unable to move the pieces, an assistant, who shall be acceptable to the arbiter, may be provided by the player to perform this operation. Article 5: The Completion of the Game 5.1.1 The game is won by the player who has checkmated his/her opponentâs king. This immediately ends the game, provided that the move producing the checkmate position was in accordance with Article 3 and Articles 4.2 â 4.7. 5.1.2 The game is lost by the player who declares he/she resigns (this immediately ends the game), unless the position is such that the opponent cannot checkmate the playerâs king by any possible series of legal moves. In this case the result of the game is a draw. 5.2.1 The game is drawn when the player to move has no legal move and his/her king is not in check. The game is said to end in âstalemateâ. This immediately ends the game, provided that the move producing the stalemate position was in accordance with Article 3 and Articles 4.2 â 4.7. 5.2.2 The game is drawn when a position has arisen in which neither player can checkmate the opponentâs king with any series of legal moves. The game is said to end in a âdead positionâ. This immediately ends the game, provided that the move producing the position was in accordance with Article 3 and Articles 4.2 â 4.7. 5.2.3 The game is drawn upon agreement between the two players during the game, provided both players have made at least one move. This immediately ends the game. COMPETITIVE RULES OF PLAY Article 6: The Chessclock 6.1 âChessclockâ means a clock with two time displays, connected to each other in such a way that only one of them can run at a time. âClockâ in the Laws of Chess means one of the two time displays. Each time display has a âflagâ. âFlag-fallâ means the expiration of the allotted time for a player. 6.2 Handling the chessclock: 6.2.1 During the game each player, having made his/her move on the chessboard, shall pause his/her own clock and start his/her opponentâs clock (that is to say, he/she shall press his/her clock). This âcompletesâ the move. A move is also completed if: 6.2.1.1 6.2.1.2 the move ends the game (see Articles 5.1.1, 5.2.1, 5.2.2, 9.2.1, 9.6.1 and 9.6.2), or the player has made his/her next move, when his/her previous move was not completed. 6.2.2 A player must be allowed to pause his/her clock after making his/her move, even after the opponent has made his/her next move. The time between making the move on the chessboard and pressing the clock is regarded as part of the time allotted to the player. 6.2.3 A player must press his/her clock with the same hand with which he/she made his/her move. It is forbidden for a player to keep his/her finger on the clock or to âhoverâ over it. 6.2.4 The players must handle the chessclock properly. It is forbidden to press it forcibly, to pick it up, to press the clock before moving or to knock it over. Improper clock handling shall be penalised in accordance with Article 12.9. 6.2.5 6.2.6 Only the player whose clock is running is allowed to adjust the pieces. If a player is unable to use the clock, an assistant, who must be acceptable to the arbiter, may be provided by the player to perform this operation. His/Her clock shall be adjusted by the arbiter in an equitable way. This adjustment of the clock shall not apply to the clock of a player with a disability. 6.3 Allotted time: 6.3.1 When using a chessclock, each player must complete a minimum number of moves or all moves in an allotted period of time including any additional amount of time added with each move. All these must be specified in advance. 6.3.2 The time saved by a player during one period is added to his/her time available for the next period, where applicable. In the time-delay mode both players receive an allotted âmain thinking timeâ. Each player also receives a âfixed extra timeâ with every move. The countdown of the main thinking time only commences after the fixed extra time has expired. Provided the player presses his/her clock before the expiration of the fixed extra time, the main thinking time does not change, irrespective of the proportion of the fixed extra time used. 6.4 Immediately after a flag falls, the requirements of Article 6.3.1 must be checked. 6.5 Before the start of the game the arbiter shall decide where the chessclock is placed. 6.6 At the time determined for the start of the game Whiteâs clock is started.6.7. Default time: 6.7.1 The regulations of an event shall specify a default time in advance. If the default time is not specified, then it is zero. Any player who arrives at the chessboard after the default time shall lose the game unless the arbiter decides otherwise. 6.7.2 If the regulations of an event specify that the default time is not zero and if neither player is present initially, White shall lose all the time that elapses until he/she arrives, unless the regulations of an event specify, or the arbiter decides otherwise. 6.8 A flag is considered to have fallen when the arbiter observes the fact or when either player has made a valid claim to that effect. 6.9 Except where one of Articles 5.1.1, 5.1.2, 5.2.1, 5.2.2, 5.2.3 applies, if a player does not complete the prescribed number of moves in the allotted time, the game is lost by that player. However, the game is drawn if the position is such that the opponent cannot checkmate the playerâs king by any possible series of legal moves. 6.10 Chessclock setting: 6.10.1 Every indication given by the chessclock is considered to be conclusive in the absence of any evident defect. A chessclock with an evident defect shall be replaced by the arbiter, who shall use his/her best judgement when determining the times to be shown on the replacement chessclock. 6.10.2 If during a game it is found that the setting of either or both clocks is incorrect, either player or the arbiter shall pause the chessclock immediately. The arbiter shall install the correct setting and adjust the times and move-counter, if necessary he/she shall use his/her best judgement when determining the clock settings. 6.11.1 If the game needs to be interrupted, the arbiter shall pause the chessclock. 6.11.2 A player may pause the chessclock only in order to seek the arbiterâs assistance, for example when promotion has taken place and the piece required is not available. 6.11.3 The arbiter shall decide when the game restarts. 6.11.4 If a player pauses the chessclock in order to seek the arbiterâs assistance, the arbiter shall determine whether the player had any valid reason for doing so. If the player has no valid reason for pausing the chessclock, the player shall be penalised in accordance with Article 12.9. 6.12.1 Screens, monitors, or demonstration boards showing the current position on the chessboard, the moves and the number of moves made/completed, and clocks which also show the number of moves, are allowed in the playing hall. 6.12.2 The player may not make a claim relying only on information shown in this manner.
Sanitation must always be observed to promote hygiene and to prevent diseases. Sanitation and safety measures at home must never be taken for granted. All responsible members of the family should see to it that everything at home is in proper order to avoid accident. Children are usually careless and playful, they must be well taken cared off and not left alone for themselves, otherwise something wrong might happen. My dear learners keep focus, learn more! How can accidents be avoided at home? a. Multiple octopus connection can cause power overload. This can cause fire, hence it is better to install an extra outlets than to have your house burned. b. Unplug electrical appliances after use to avoid overheat appliances causing fire. c. Electrical cord should be placed away from childrenâs reach. d. Sharp objects should be placed in secure places where children will not reach , thus causing accidents. e. Separate shelves must be provided for poisonous substances and another one for food supplies and medicines. Following are guidelines to be observed to avoid accidents at home. Home Economics and Livelihood Education 7 Seibo College 128 f. Never touch electrical switches with wet hands. Be sure to dry your hands before plugging or unplugging appliances. In addition to that, there are accidents usually occurs in the kitchen. Since the kitchen is considered the busiest part of the house it is best to follow safety measures to avoid accidents. . 1. When preparing and cooking food never leave the fruit and vegetable peelings on the floor. Someone might step on it and fall. 2. When someone accidentally spilled liquid on the floor, wipe it immediately. 3. Use a tray when carrying or serving hot liquids to protect yourself from spills. 4. When lighting the gas stove, be sure to light the match first before turning the gas on. Always turn-off the gas stove after use. 5. Throw sand or a damp rag in case your stove catches fire. 6. Use dry pot holders to hold hot utensils. 7. Hold the kettle and its cover with dry pot holders when draining. 8. To avoid touching handles of hot utensils while cooking, turn them inward. Listed below are the health and safety practices while working in the kitchen Home Economics and Livelihood Education 7 Seibo College 129 9. Avoid carrying hot pots filled with hot liquids across the kitchen to avoid getting burned. 10. Be sure to wash your hands before and after cooking. 11. Use appropriate cooking wear like apron and hairnet. 12. Provide for a covered garbage can for trash and rubbish. 13. Use a dish cloth for wiping dry the different kitchen wares. 14. Remove accessories like bracelets, wrist watch, and ring while working in the kitchen. 15. Clean the kitchen before and after cooking. Why is it important to follow health and safety practices at home? ï Knowing safety tips at home prevents common injuries like burns, cuts, poisoning, choking and falls. ï Observing health practices at home prevents illness, spread of diseases or even death. ï Safety measures at home prevent accidents from happening thus save time, money and energy. ï Following safety measures at home ensures a healthy and peaceful life. Did you understand the lesson? If you did, observe and practice them at home for your own good and your love ones.