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Text of paper presented at the first conference of the Greek Society for Music Education, held in Thessaloniki, Greece on June 26-28, 1998. It was one of a pair of papers presented as the Honor Guest Lecturer Addresses (the other being "Music Education in the U.S.A.: An Overview"). This item includes

Text of paper presented at the first conference of the Greek Society for Music Education, held in Thessaloniki, Greece on June 26-28, 1998. It was one of a pair of papers presented as the Honor Guest Lecturer Addresses (the other being "Music Education in the U.S.A.: An Overview"). This item includes the English and Greek translations of the work. 

 

ContributorsHumphreys, Jere Thomas (Author)
Created1998
Description

This paper describes the evolution of music in American public schools and universities. Included are some statistics on the number of elementary, middle, and high schools that offer each type of music instruction, including band, choir, orchestra, and music for general students. Also included are some discussions on the evolution

This paper describes the evolution of music in American public schools and universities. Included are some statistics on the number of elementary, middle, and high schools that offer each type of music instruction, including band, choir, orchestra, and music for general students. Also included are some discussions on the evolution of university music programs. The paper concludes with a description of the new national voluntary standards for music education, and some assessments of the strengths and weaknesses of American music education programs. 

This was part of a pair of papers presented as the Honor Guest Lecturer Addresses (the other being "Music Education Research in the U.S.A.: An Overview"). This item includes the English and Greek translations of the work. 

ContributorsHumphreys, Jere Thomas (Author)
Created1998-06-26
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Description

To address the dearth of knowledge about person-based and trip-level exposure, we developed the Icarus model. Icarus uses mesoscale traffic model—activity-based model—to analyze the heat exposure of regions of interest at an individual level. The goal with Icarus was to design accurate, granular models of population and temperature behavior for

To address the dearth of knowledge about person-based and trip-level exposure, we developed the Icarus model. Icarus uses mesoscale traffic model—activity-based model—to analyze the heat exposure of regions of interest at an individual level. The goal with Icarus was to design accurate, granular models of population and temperature behavior for a target region, which could be transformed into a heat exposure model by means of simulation and spatial-temporal joining. By combining and implementing the most robust software and data available, Icarus was able to capture person-based exposure with unparalleled detail. Here we describe the model methodology. We use the metropolitan region of Phoenix, Arizona, USA to carry out a case study using Icarus.

ContributorsLi, Rui (Author) / Brownlee, Ben (Author) / Chester, Mikhail Vin (Author) / Hondula, David M. (Author) / Middel, Ariane (Author) / Michne, Austin (Author) / Watkins, Lance (Author)
Description
Arizona State University's Spring 2022 Urban Infrastructure Anatomy course assessed infrastructure challenges for advanced logistics planning in Belmont, Arizona. The Belmont initiative has sought to examine how planning for future advanced logistics technologies and operations should serve as drivers for novel urban planning. The project teams focused on energy systems,

Arizona State University's Spring 2022 Urban Infrastructure Anatomy course assessed infrastructure challenges for advanced logistics planning in Belmont, Arizona. The Belmont initiative has sought to examine how planning for future advanced logistics technologies and operations should serve as drivers for novel urban planning. The project teams focused on energy systems, transportation systems, agriculture, biomimicry, and heat mitigation.
ContributorsBhandari, Viraj (Contributor) / Mirtich, Laura Christine (Contributor) / Smith, Keegan (Contributor) / AlMarzouqi, Shaymaa (Contributor) / Avaula, Munieswar Reddy (Contributor) / Britton, Britnie (Contributor) / Changela, Meet Haresh (Contributor) / Subramanian, Praveen Raj Kumar (Contributor) / Tatiparthi, Jaya Dinesh Reddy (Contributor) / Pramod, Luke (Contributor) / Guglielmi, Giovanni (Contributor) / Myers, Andrew (Contributor) / Bonham, Emma Eileen (Contributor) / Majety, Naga Venkata Krishna Anjani Kumar (Contributor) / Sripathi, Siva Sai Praneeth (Contributor) / Schoneberger, Channing (Contributor) / Chester, Mikhail Vin (Contributor)
Created2022-06-01
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Description
A methodology is presented for synthetic water distribution networks that advances previous methods by Ahmad et al. 2022 (SyNF v1.0). The methodology describes the development changes for v1.1 of the model. This includes major updates to the handling of global variables, parameterization of water treatment plants (WTP) and tanks, and

A methodology is presented for synthetic water distribution networks that advances previous methods by Ahmad et al. 2022 (SyNF v1.0). The methodology describes the development changes for v1.1 of the model. This includes major updates to the handling of global variables, parameterization of water treatment plants (WTP) and tanks, and the inclusion of flexibility in handling different demand estimates. The model advancements were designed around true data for San Juan and Mayaguez (Puerto Rico), but are generalizable to other regions.
ContributorsSearles, Ian (Contributor) / Jain, Rajan (Contributor) / Chester, Mikhail Vin (Contributor)
Created2024-07-24
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Description
The Fall 2023 Transportation Systems Planning class at Arizona State University analyzed a suite of ADOT plans and reports against the SDGs, assessing where these plans aided in achieving or harmed progress towards these goals. From this analysis, the class proposed recommendations to improve ADOT alignment with the SDGs. The

The Fall 2023 Transportation Systems Planning class at Arizona State University analyzed a suite of ADOT plans and reports against the SDGs, assessing where these plans aided in achieving or harmed progress towards these goals. From this analysis, the class proposed recommendations to improve ADOT alignment with the SDGs. The findings and recommendations have been organized in this report.
ContributorsPorto, Mattheus (Editor) / Searles, Ian (Editor) / Wolfinbarger, Robert (Editor) / Apeji, Samuel (Author) / Arthur, Cole (Author) / Aviles, Hirvin (Author) / Banzon, Lana (Author) / Bhagia, Manav Sandeep (Author) / Catanese, Joseph (Author) / Corral, Oscar (Author) / Doyle, Carter (Author) / Duquella, Frederic (Author) / Gallerani, Cecilia (Author) / Gaspar, Maria (Author) / Gomez, Angela (Author) / Hall, Adam (Author) / Hamdan, Amir (Author) / Hermann, Aleksander (Author) / Hunyada, Tyler (Author) / Italo, Marcus (Author) / Jasarevic, Elma (Author) / Jimenez, Mikayla (Author) / Jones, Shepherd (Author) / Lafont, Eliott (Author) / Liu, Brennan (Author) / Mendez Aceves, Carlos (Author) / Nguyen, Sophie (Author) / Nwe, Theint (Author) / Tun Oo, Si Thu (Author) / Varela, Xenia Perez (Author) / Ray, Zachary (Author) / Reames, Isaac (Author) / Rodriguez Ocana, Miguel (Author) / Tang, Fang (Author) / Chester, Mikhail Vin (Author)
Created2024-03-07
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Description
Current efforts to drive business Sustainability are improving but still falling short of the transformational impact needed. This paper explores the potential of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to contribute to improved business Sustainability. Research revealed significant challenges including: a disconnect between the design of the SDGs and

Current efforts to drive business Sustainability are improving but still falling short of the transformational impact needed. This paper explores the potential of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to contribute to improved business Sustainability. Research revealed significant challenges including: a disconnect between the design of the SDGs and the needs of businesses, significant measurement difficulties and an already existing momentum to integrate the SDGs without disrupting the status quo. The big opportunity is that the SDGs are a universally agreed upon definition of Sustainability which fully integrates the “social” side. The specificity and structure of the SDGs also creates the opportunity for accountability based on outcomes and impacts rather than inputs and the development of businesses strategies with the potential for transformation. Work is needed to transform the SDGs themselves into a tool which can usefully contribute to business Sustainability, but the opportunities suggest it will be worthwhile.
ContributorsRedman, Aaron (Author)
Created2017
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Description

Businesses, as with other sectors in society, are not yet taking sufficient action towards achieving sustainability. The United Nations recently agreed upon a set of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which if properly harnessed, provide a framework (so far lacking) for businesses to meaningfully drive transformations to sustainability. This paper proposes

Businesses, as with other sectors in society, are not yet taking sufficient action towards achieving sustainability. The United Nations recently agreed upon a set of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which if properly harnessed, provide a framework (so far lacking) for businesses to meaningfully drive transformations to sustainability. This paper proposes to operationalize the SDGs for businesses through a progressive framework for action with three discrete levels: communication, tactical, and strategic. Within the tactical and strategic levels, several innovative approaches are discussed and illustrated. The challenges of design and measurement as well as opportunities for accountability and the social side of Sustainability, together call for transdisciplinary, collective action. This paper demonstrates feasible pathways and approaches for businesses to take corporate social responsibility to the next level and utilize the SDG framework informed by sustainability science to support transformations towards the achievement of sustainability.

ContributorsRedman, Aaron (Author)
Created2018-06-30
Description

This project explores the current building and land use within the South Mountain Village (SMV) area. The South Central Light Rail extension corridor serves as a focus area, including a half mile radius around each of the five proposed light rail stations. Research of the area included analyzing SMV demographic

This project explores the current building and land use within the South Mountain Village (SMV) area. The South Central Light Rail extension corridor serves as a focus area, including a half mile radius around each of the five proposed light rail stations. Research of the area included analyzing SMV demographic information, analyzing land use and zoning, conducting a site visit, researching case studies, and information on current City of Phoenix, and other transit oriented development plans. Based on the research and case studies, recommendations and propositions are made for:

1. The implementation of a community-based transit oriented development.
2. The integration of green infrastructure and urban agriculture.
3. Best land management practices.
4. Policy to ensure appropriate and sustainable planning for the future.

ContributorsAlford, Tari (Author) / Alhashmi, Hanan (Author) / Burks, Aric (Author) / Gomez, Matthew (Author) / Waldman, Matthew (Author)
Created2018-05-14