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  2. Field trip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_trip

    Field trip. A field trip or excursion is a journey by a group of associated peers, such as co-workers or school students, to a place away from their normal environment for the purpose of education or leisure, either within their country or abroad. When done by school students as organised by their school administration, as it happens in several ...

  3. Monitoring in clinical trials - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monitoring_in_clinical_trials

    Clinical monitoring is the oversight and administrative efforts that monitor a participant's health and efficacy of the treatment during a clinical trial.Both independent and government-run grant-funding agencies, such as the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the World Health Organization (WHO), require data and safety monitoring protocols for Phase I and II clinical trials conforming to ...

  4. List of FBI forms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_FBI_forms

    An FD-1023 (CHS Reporting Document) is the form FBI agents use to record raw, unverified reporting from confidential human sources. FD-1023s merely document that information; they do not reflect the conclusions of investigators based on a fuller context or understanding. Recording this information does not validate it, establish its credibility ...

  5. Virtual field trip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_field_trip

    A virtual field trip is a guided exploration through the World Wide Web that organizes a collection of pre-screened, thematically based web pages into a structured online learning experience. (Foley, 2003). Since 2007, another dynamic and interactive form of a virtual field trip has been – and is – freely available.

  6. Bluebook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluebook

    The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation (commonly known as the Blue Book or Harvard Citator) is a style guide that prescribes the most widely used legal citation system in the United States.

  7. Jay P. Greene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jay_P._Greene

    Jay P. Greene [1] is a senior research fellow at The Heritage Foundation. [2] He was previously a distinguished professor and head of the Department of Education Reform [3] at the University of Arkansas. Greene’s current areas of research interest include school choice and the effects of education on character formation and civic values.

  8. Trip distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trip_distribution

    Trip distribution (or destination choice or zonal interchange analysis) is the second component (after trip generation, but before mode choice and route assignment) in the traditional four-step transportation forecasting model. This step matches tripmakers’ origins and destinations to develop a “trip table”, a matrix that displays the ...

  9. Correlation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Correlation

    Example scatterplots of various datasets with various correlation coefficients. The most familiar measure of dependence between two quantities is the Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient (PPMCC), or "Pearson's correlation coefficient", commonly called simply "the correlation coefficient".