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Sample Activity March 29 2023
Quiz by Marites A. Gorospe
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Recognizing and Identifying Sounds Familiar Sounds: Bells ringing, dogs barking, cars honking. Letters from Words: Sound out letters in simple words like cat (C-A-T) or dog (D-O-G). Activity: Play "Guess the Sound" (e.g., imitate a dog bark or a clock ticking). Game: Match letters to words (e.g., "What word starts with B?").
âThereâs No Such Thing as Sound Scienceâ by By Christie Aschwanden was a lead science writer for FiveThirtyEight. FiveThirtyEight, Science, Dec. 6, 2017 Science is being turned against itself. For decades, its twin ideals of transparency and rigor have been weaponized by those who disagree with results produced by the scientific method. Under the Trump administration, that fight has ramped up again. In a move ostensibly meant to reduce conflicts of interest, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt has removed a number of scientists from advisory panels and replaced some of them with representatives from industries that the agency regulates. Like many in the Trump administration, Pruitt has also cast doubt on the reliability of climate science. For instance, in an interview with CNBC, Pruitt said that âmeasuring with precision human activity on the climate is something very challenging to do.â Similarly, Trumpâs pick to head NASA, an agency that oversees a large portion the nationâs climate research, has insisted that research into human influence on climate lacks certainty, and he falsely claimed that âglobal temperatures stopped rising 10 years ago.â Kathleen Hartnett White, Trumpâs nominee to head the White House Council on Environmental Quality, said in a Senate hearing last month that she thinks we âneed to have more precise explanations of the human role and the natural roleâ in climate change. The same entreaties crop up again and again: We need to root out conflicts. We need more precise evidence. What makes these arguments so powerful is that they sound quite similar to the points raised by proponents of a very different call for change thatâs coming from within science. This other movement strives to produce more robust, reproducible findings. Despite having dissimilar goals, the two forces espouse principles that look surprisingly alike: Science needs to be transparent. Results and methods should be openly shared so that outside researchers can independently reproduce and validate them. The methods used to collect and analyze data should be rigorous and clear, and conclusions must be supported by evidence. These are the arguments underlying an âopen scienceâ reform movement that was created, in part, as a response to a âreproducibility crisisâ that has struck some fields of science.1 But theyâre also used as talking points by politicians who are working to make it more difficult for the EPA and other federal agencies to use science in their regulatory decision-making, under the guise of basing policy on âsound science.â Scienceâs virtues are being wielded against it. What distinguishes the two calls for transparency is intent: Whereas the âopen scienceâ movement aims to make science more reliable, reproducible and robust, proponents of âsound scienceâ have historically worked to amplify uncertainty, create doubt and undermine scientific discoveries that threaten their interests. âOur criticisms are founded in a confidence in science,â said Steven Goodman, co-director of the Meta-Research Innovation Center at Stanford and a proponent of open science. âThatâs a fundamental difference â weâre critiquing science to make it better. Others are critiquing it to devalue the approach itself.â Calls to base public policy on âsound scienceâ seem unassailable if you donât know the termâs history. The phrase was adopted by the tobacco industry in the 1990s to counteract mounting evidence linking secondhand smoke to cancer. A 1992 Environmental Protection Agency report identified secondhand smoke as a human carcinogen, and Philip Morris responded by launching an initiative to promote what it called âsound science.â In an internal memo, Philip Morris vice president of corporate affairs Ellen Merlo wrote that the program was designed to âdiscredit the EPA report,â âprevent states and cities, as well as businesses from passing smoking bansâ and âproactivelyâ pass legislation to help their cause. The sound science tactic exploits a fundamental feature of the scientific process: Science does not produce absolute certainty. Contrary to how itâs sometimes represented to the public, science is not a magic wand that turns everything it touches to truth. Instead, itâs a process of uncertainty reduction, much like a game of 20 Questions. Any given study can rarely answer more than one question at a time, and each study usually raises a bunch of new questions in the process of answering old ones. âScience is a process rather than an answer,â said psychologist Alison Ledgerwood of the University of California, Davis. Every answer is provisional and subject to change in the face of new evidence. Itâs not entirely correct to say that âthis study proves this fact,â Ledgerwood said. âWe should be talking instead about how science increases or decreases our confidence in something.â The tobacco industryâs brilliant tactic was to turn this baked-in uncertainty against the scientific enterprise itself. While insisting that they merely wanted to ensure that public policy was based on sound science, tobacco companies defined the term in a way that ensured that no science could ever be sound enough. The only sound science was certain science, which is an impossible standard to achieve. âDoubt is our product,â wrote one employee of the Brown & Williamson tobacco company in a 1969 internal memo. The note went on to say that doubt âis the best means of competing with the âbody of factââ and âestablishing a controversy.â These strategies for undermining inconvenient science were so effective that theyâve served as a sort of playbook for industry interests ever since, said Stanford University science historian Robert Proctor. The sound science push is no longer just Philip Morris sowing doubt about the links between cigarettes and cancer. Itâs also a 1998 action plan by the American Petroleum Institute, Chevron and Exxon Mobil to âinstall uncertaintyâ about the link between greenhouse gas emissions and climate change. Itâs industry-funded groupsâ late-1990s effort to question the science the EPA was using to set fine-particle-pollution air-quality standards that the industry didnât want. And then there was the more recent effort by Dow Chemical to insist on more scientific certainty before banning a pesticide that the EPAâs scientists had deemed risky to children. Now comes a move by the Trump administrationâs EPA to repeal a 2015 rule on wetlands protection by disregarding particular studies. (To name just a few examples.) Doubt merchants arenât pushing for knowledge, theyâre practicing what Proctor has dubbed âagnogenesisâ â the intentional manufacture of ignorance. This ignorance isnât simply the absence of knowing something; itâs a lack of comprehension deliberately created by agents who donât want you to know, Proctor said.2 In the hands of doubt-makers, transparency becomes a rhetorical move. âItâs really difficult as a scientist or policy maker to make a stand against transparency and openness, because well, who would be against it?â said Karen Levy, researcher on information science at Cornell University. But at the same time, âyou can couch everything in the language of transparency and it becomes a powerful weapon.â For instance, when the EPA was preparing to set new limits on particulate pollution in the 1990s, industry groups pushed back against the research and demanded access to primary data (including records that researchers had promised participants would remain confidential) and a reanalysis of the evidence. Their calls succeeded and a new analysis was performed. The reanalysis essentially confirmed the original conclusions, but the process of conducting it delayed the implementation of regulations and cost researchers time and money. Delay is a time-tested strategy. âGridlock is the greatest friend a global warming skeptic has,â said Marc Morano, a prominent critic of global warming research and the executive director of ClimateDepot.com, in the documentary âMerchants of Doubtâ (based on the book by the same name). Moranoâs site is a project of the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow, which has received funding from the oil and gas industry. âWeâre the negative force. Weâre just trying to stop stuff.â Some of these ploys are getting a fresh boost from Congress. The Data Quality Act (also known as the Information Quality Act) was reportedly written by an industry lobbyist and quietly passed as part of an appropriations bill in 2000. The rule mandates that federal agencies ensure the âquality, objectivity, utility, and integrity of informationâ that they disseminate, though it does little to define what these terms mean. The law also provides a mechanism for citizens and groups to challenge information that they deem inaccurate, including science that they disagree with. âIt was passed in this very quiet way with no explicit debate about it â that should tell you a lot about the real goals,â Levy said. But whatâs most telling about the Data Quality Act is how itâs been used, Levy said. A 2004 Washington Post analysis found that in the 20 months following its implementation, the act was repeatedly used by industry groups to push back against proposed regulations and bog down the decision-making process. Instead of deploying transparency as a fundamental principle that applies to all science, these interests have used transparency as a weapon to attack very particular findings that they would like to eradicate. Now Congress is considering another way to legislate how science is used. The Honest Act, a bill sponsored by Rep. Lamar Smith of Texas,3 is another example of what Levy calls a âTrojan horseâ law that uses the language of transparency as a cover to achieve other political goals. Smithâs legislation would severely limit the kind of evidence the EPA could use for decision-making. Only studies whose raw data and computer codes were publicly available would be allowed for consideration. That might sound perfectly reasonable, and in many cases it is, Goodman said. But sometimes there are good reasons why researchers canât conform to these rules, like when the data contains confidential or sensitive medical information.4 Critics, which include more than a dozen scientific organizations, argue that, in practice, the rules would prevent many studies from being considered in EPA reviews.5 It might seem like an easy task to sort good science from bad, but in reality itâs not so simple. âThereâs a misplaced idea that we can definitively distinguish the good from the not-good science, but itâs all a matter of degree,â said Brian Nosek, executive director of the Center for Open Science. âThere is no perfect study.â Requiring regulators to wait until they have (nonexistent) perfect evidence is essentially âa way of saying, âWe donât want to use evidence for our decision-making,ââ Nosek said. Most scientific controversies arenât about science at all, and once the sides are drawn, more data is unlikely to bring opponents into agreement. Michael Carolan, who researches the sociology of technology and scientific knowledge at Colorado State University, wrote in a 2008 paper about why objective knowledge is not enough to resolve environmental controversies. âWhile these controversies may appear on the surface to rest on disputed questions of fact, beneath often reside differing positions of value; values that can give shape to differing understandings of what âthe factsâ are.â Whatâs needed in these cases isnât more or better science, but mechanisms to bring those hidden values to the forefront of the discussion so that they can be debated transparently. âAs long as we continue down this unabashedly naive road about what science is, and what it is capable of doing, we will continue to fail to reach any sort of meaningful consensus on these matters,â Carolan writes. The dispute over tobacco was never about the science of cigarettesâ link to cancer. It was about whether companies have the right to sell dangerous products and, if so, what obligations they have to the consumers who purchased them. Similarly, the debate over climate change isnât about whether our planet is heating, but about how much responsibility each country and person bears for stopping it. While researching her book âMerchants of Doubt,â science historian Naomi Oreskes found that some of the same people who were defending the tobacco industry as scientific experts were also receiving industry money to deny the role of human activity in global warming. What these issues had in common, she realized, was that they all involved the need for government action. âNone of this is about the science. All of this is a political debate about the role of government,â she said in the documentary. These controversies are really about values, not scientific facts, and acknowledging that would allow us to have more truthful and productive debates. What would that look like in practice? Instead of cherry-picking evidence to support a particular view (and insisting that the science points to a desired action), the various sides could lay out the values they are using to assess the evidence. For instance, in Europe, many decisions are guided by the precautionary principle â a system that values caution in the face of uncertainty and says that when the risks are unclear, it should be up to industries to show that their products and processes are not harmful, rather than requiring the government to prove that they are harmful before they can be regulated. By contrast, U.S. agencies tend to wait for strong evidence of harm before issuing regulations. Both approaches have critics, but the difference between them comes down to priorities: Is it better to exercise caution at the risk of burdening companies and perhaps the economy, or is it more important to avoid potential economic downsides even if it means that sometimes a harmful product or industrial process goes unregulated? In other words, under what circumstances do we agree to act on a risk? How certain do we need to be that the risk is real, and how many people would need to be at risk, and how costly is it to reduce that risk? Those are moral questions, not scientific ones, and openly discussing and identifying these kinds of judgment calls would lead to a more honest debate. Science matters, and we need to do it as rigorously as possible. But science canât tell us how risky is too risky to allow products like cigarettes or potentially harmful pesticides to be sold â those are value judgements that only humans can make.
I. DĂ©finition L'appel d'offres est donc une procĂ©dure par laquelle un acheteur public choisit l'offre Ă©conomiquement la plus avantageuse, sans nĂ©gociation, sur la base de critĂšres objectifs prĂ©alablement dĂ©finis Son but est de mettre en concurrence plusieurs entreprises privĂ©es pour obtenir la meilleure offre possible. Les caractĂ©ristiques principales sont les suivantes : âą Absence de nĂ©gociation : L'acheteur sĂ©lectionne l'offre uniquement sur la base des propositions reçues, sans nĂ©gociation avec les candidats âą CritĂšres objectifs : La sĂ©lection se fait selon des critĂšres dĂ©finis Ă l'avance et communiquĂ©s aux candidats âą Transparence : Les appels d'offres publics sont soumis Ă des rĂšgles strictes de publicitĂ© et de transparence Ce principe dâappel dâoffre garantie donc lâĂ©galitĂ© de traitement des entreprises privĂ©es candidates et une certaine transparence. II. Les diffĂ©rentes formes dâappel dâoffres Il existe deux formes principales d'appels d'offres dans les marchĂ©s publics : âą Appel d'offres ouvert : Toute entreprise intĂ©ressĂ©e peut rĂ©pondre Ă lâappel dâoffre âą Appel d'offres restreint : Seuls les candidats prĂ©sĂ©lectionnĂ©s par l'acheteur sont autorisĂ©s Ă soumettre une offre. Cette procĂ©dure est particuliĂšrement adaptĂ©e aux marchĂ©s complexes ou spĂ©cialisĂ©s, oĂč l'acheteur souhaite prĂ©sĂ©lectionner les entreprises les plus qualifiĂ©es avant d'examiner leurs offres en dĂ©tail. III. Les objectifs pour une PME de prospecter des nouveaux marchĂ©s via les appels dâoffres Il y a plusieurs objectifs pour une entreprise de prospecter de nouveaux marchĂ©s : â trouver de nouveaux clients ; â garantir le dĂ©veloppement de lâactivitĂ© de lâentreprise ; â compenser lâĂ©rosion du portefeuille clients existant ou remplacer les clients peu ou pas rentables Ainsi, au-delĂ du simple gain commercial, les appels d'offres reprĂ©sentent un vĂ©ritable levier stratĂ©gique de dĂ©veloppement pour les entreprises, quelle que soit leur taille. IV. La procĂ©dure de rĂ©ponse aux appels dâoffre 1. Les Ă©tapes principales Voici les principales Ă©tapes pour rĂ©pondre efficacement Ă un appel d'offres : âą Identifiez les appels d'offres pertinents âą Activez des alertes automatiques sur les plateformes dĂ©diĂ©es âą TĂ©lĂ©chargez le Dossier de Consultation des Entreprises (DCE) âą Analysez minutieusement le cahier des charges et le rĂšglement de consultation âą PrĂ©parer la rĂ©ponse soit constituez le dossier de candidature avec les documents administratifs requis âą Transmettre la rĂ©ponse soit dĂ©poser le dossier complet sur la plateforme de dĂ©matĂ©rialisation avant la date limite âą Suivre la rĂ©ponse : en cas de rejet, demandez un retour pour identifier les points d'amĂ©lioration 2. La consultation des appels dâoffre Les PME doivent dâabord identifier les appels d'offres pertinents. Cela peut se faire par : âą Les rĂ©seaux professionnels : Participer Ă des salons, des confĂ©rences et des Ă©vĂ©nements rĂ©seaux aide Ă dĂ©couvrir des opportunitĂ©s. âą La veille : S'abonner Ă des bulletins d'information et des alertes sur les marchĂ©s pertinents. âą La consultation de plateformes en ligne : De nombreux sites web rĂ©pertorient les appels d'offres publics, utilisateur aux PME de filtre par secteur et localisation. Lâassistant(e) de gestion dispose de plusieurs sites de marchĂ© publics Voici les principaux sites français pour consulter les appels d'offres publics : Les Sites officiels : ïŒ BOAMP (Bulletin Officiel des Annonces des MarchĂ©s Publics) : C'est le site officiel qui publie les appels d'offres de l'Ătat, des collectivitĂ©s territoriales et des Ă©tablissements publics ïŒ PLACE (Plateforme des Achats de l'Ătat) : C'est la plateforme de dĂ©matĂ©rialisation des marchĂ©s publics de l'Ătat. La publication y est obligatoire pour les marchĂ©s de l'Ătat Ă partir de 40 000 ⏠HT ïŒ JOUE (Journal Officiel de l'Union EuropĂ©enne) : Il publie les appels d'offres europĂ©ens Les plateformes privĂ©es : ïŒ France MarchĂ©s : Ce portail agrĂšge les appels d'offres de plus de 300 journaux rĂ©gionaux, du BOAMP, du JOUE et de plus de 1000 sites d'acheteurs publics ïŒ MarchĂ©s Online : Cette plateforme donne accĂšs Ă l'ensemble des appels d'offres publiĂ©s, quel que soit le secteur d'activitĂ© ïŒ E-marchespublics : Ce site permet d'accĂ©der aux appels d'offres publiĂ©s sur diverses sources comme le BOAMP, le JOUE, la presse et les profils d'acheteurs Les Autres sources : ïŒ Journaux d'Annonces LĂ©gales (JAL) : Environ 540 journaux en France sont habilitĂ©s Ă publier des annonces lĂ©gales, dont les appels d'offres ïŒ Sites internet des administrations publiques : La plupart des administrations publient leurs appels d'offres directement sur leur site internet ïŒ Presse spĂ©cialisĂ©e : Certaines revues sont spĂ©cialisĂ©es dans les appels d'offres de leur dĂ©partement ou rĂ©gion Pour une veille efficace, il est recommandĂ© d'utiliser des outils de veille Ă©lectronique ou de s'abonner aux alertes proposĂ©es par ces diffĂ©rentes plateformes. Cela permet de recevoir automatiquement les appels d'offres correspondant Ă vos critĂšres de recherche 3. Les candidatures dâappels dâoffre Pour concourir Ă un marchĂ© public, il est possible de se prĂ©senter seul, de prĂ©senter une candidature groupĂ©e avec plusieurs entreprises : âą La candidature seule : l'entreprise se prĂ©sente pour exĂ©cuter personnellement le marchĂ©. Elle a la capacitĂ© technique et financiĂšre dâexĂ©cuter seule et dans son entier le marchĂ©. âą Le groupement : le groupement conjoint (lâentreprise n'est responsable que de la part du marchĂ© qu'elle exĂ©cute) ou le groupement solidaire : (chaque membre du groupement est engagĂ© financiĂšrement pour la totalitĂ© du marchĂ©. Cela signifie que tous les membres sont collectivement responsables de l'exĂ©cution complĂšte du contrat). 4. La rĂ©ponse Ă lâappel dâoffre La rĂ©ponse Ă un appel d'offres doit contenir les Ă©lĂ©ments suivants : âą une lettre de prĂ©sentation : PrĂ©senter briĂšvement l'entreprise et son intĂ©rĂȘt pour le projet. âą une proposition technique : DĂ©tails sur la façon dont le projet sera rĂ©alisĂ© soient les mĂ©thodes et leurs chronologies. âą Une proposition financiĂšre : faire une estimation des coĂ»ts et des conditions de paiement Le dossier de rĂ©ponse Ă©tant lâinterface entre la PME et le donneur dâordre, il convient de lui apporter le plus grand soin. Il faut donc prĂ©parer le dossier de rĂ©ponse et remplir le document unique de marchĂ© europĂ©en appelĂ© DUME : dĂ©claration sur l'honneur standardisĂ©e et Ă©lectronique utilisĂ©e dans les procĂ©dures de marchĂ©s publics Le certificat Ă©lectronique est un Ă©lĂ©ment essentiel pour rĂ©pondre aux appels d'offres publics dĂ©matĂ©rialisĂ©s. Voici les principaux points Ă retenir : ïŒ Depuis le 1er octobre 2018, la dĂ©matĂ©rialisation est obligatoire pour les marchĂ©s publics supĂ©rieurs Ă 40 000 ⏠HT ïŒ Dans ce cadre, une signature Ă©lectronique valide est requise pour signer les documents de rĂ©ponse aux appels d'offres. L'utilisation d'un certificat Ă©lectronique pour les appels d'offres prĂ©sente plusieurs avantages : ïŒ Gain de temps dans les Ă©changes avec les acheteurs publics ïŒ Ăconomies sur les frais d'impression et d'envoi ïŒ SĂ©curisation accrue des documents transmis ïŒ PossibilitĂ© de signer Ă distance Les certificats Ă©lectroniques pour rĂ©pondre aux appels d'offres sont dĂ©livrĂ©s par des prestataires de services de confiance qualifiĂ©s, conformes au rĂšglement europĂ©en eIDAS et au RĂ©fĂ©rentiel GĂ©nĂ©ral de SĂ©curitĂ© (RGS) français. Les principaux Ă©metteurs de ces certificats sont : ïŒ CertEurope ïŒ ChamberSign France ïŒ Certigna (filiale de Docaposte) ïŒ Dhimyotis ïŒ Universign La date limite de rĂ©ception des offres (DLRO) est un Ă©lĂ©ment crucial dans le processus des appels d'offres pour les marchĂ©s publics. La DLRO, Ă©galement appelĂ©e date limite de remise des offres ou des plis, correspond Ă la date et l'heure limites auxquelles les candidatures ou offres doivent ĂȘtre reçues par l'acheteur public1 Le dĂ©lai commence le lendemain de la date d'envoi de l'avis d'appel Ă la concurrence par l'acheteur. Dans cette dĂ©marche, lâentreprise peut rĂ©aliser un tableau de suivi des appels dâoffres dont voici un exemple : 5. La rĂ©ponse Ă lâappel dâoffre Une fois la dĂ©cision prise, l'acheteur doit envoyer une notification officielle Ă l'entreprise retenue. Cette communication doit ĂȘtre faite par Ă©crit, gĂ©nĂ©ralement par lettre recommandĂ©e avec accusĂ© de rĂ©ception ou par voie Ă©lectronique sĂ©curisĂ©e. Tout candidat Ă©vincĂ© peut demander par Ă©crit des informations complĂ©mentaires sur les motifs du rejet de son offre. L'acheteur doit alors rĂ©pondre dans un dĂ©lai de 15 jours en fournissant : âą Les motifs dĂ©taillĂ©s du rejet de la candidature ou de l'offre âą Les caractĂ©ristiques et avantages de l'offre retenue âą Le nom de l'attributaire V. Le paiement des marchĂ©s en appel dâoffres Le dĂ©lai maximal de paiement est gĂ©nĂ©ralement de 30 jours. Ce dĂ©lai est portĂ© Ă 50 jours pour les hĂŽpitaux et 60 jours pour les entreprises publiques. . Le paiement intervient aprĂšs constatation du "service fait", c'est-Ă -dire une fois que la prestation a Ă©tĂ© rĂ©alisĂ©e et vĂ©rifiĂ©e conforme par l'acheteur public Des avances et acomptes peuvent ĂȘtre versĂ©s : ïŒ L'avance est obligatoire pour les PME sur les marchĂ©s de plus de 50 000 ⏠HT et d'une durĂ©e supĂ©rieure Ă 2 mois. Elle reprĂ©sente 20% du montant pour l'Ătat, 10% pour les autres acheteurs publics ïŒ Les acomptes sont versĂ©s tous les 3 mois maximum, ou tous les mois pour les marchĂ©s de travaux avec des PME
Sample activity
110.31.b.17.C
Topic: Reading/Vocabulary Development
STAAR English II High School 2014 - Past Paper
110.31.b.1.B