Term
| What are some health and fitness professions |
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Definition
- Group exercise intructor
- fitness instructor
- health and fitness counselor
- Personal trainer
- Health and fitness director
- Specialist positions
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Term
| What is the goal of a health and fitness professsional |
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Definition
| Goal: to improve a person's physical funtioning and physical health |
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Term
| What is the scope of work of a health and fitness professional |
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Definition
| Scope of work: expanding to include a multifaceted view of health and fitness including physical, intellectual, emotional, social and spiritual dimensions. |
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Term
| What is healthy people 2010 |
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Definition
| A document set by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services in 2000 that set out over all health objective that the nation should achieve in the first decade of the new century. |
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Term
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Definition
| Leading health indicators |
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Term
| What two areas are getting worse, shown in the 2010 report? |
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Definition
- Physical education requirement in schools
- Access to school physical activity facilities
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Term
What is the only area that has shown improvement reported in the 2010 report? |
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Definition
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Term
Health and fitness programs: worksite programs.
Early programs |
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Definition
- Narrow focus (physical fitness, nutrition, weight control, stress mangement, and smoking cessation)
- Only for employees
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Term
Health and fitness setting: worksite settings
1990's-present |
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Definition
- Additional services
- Open to all people covered by company health insurance
- Partner w/ companies specializing in managing health and fitness programs
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Term
| Health and fitness settings: commercial settings |
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Definition
- For profit businesses compete for customers,which encourages innovative programming
- Sales-based facilities
- Retention-based facilities
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Term
| Health and fitness settings: clinical settings |
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Definition
- Work in partnership with both medically based professionals and clients with diagnosed medical conditions
- Goal is often to keep the subscribers of their health insurance partners and programs healthy and avoid expensive medical procedures in the future.
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Term
| Health and fitness settings: community setting |
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Definition
- Target specific groups to fill specific needs
- often are nonprofit organizations
- include health departments and local and national agencies
- have more limited funding
- provide health and wellness opportunities for as muany as they can service
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Term
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Definition
| A safe and effective work environment in which individual worker characteristics have been considered in the design and placement of equipment. Computer keyboards, chair adjustments, desk heights, and lighting are examples of equipment considerations |
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Term
Employee assistance program
(EAP) |
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Definition
| Programs supported by business and industries to help employees with personal problems that may affect their work performance. |
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Term
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Definition
| Health and fitness facilities that operate within hospital or medical facilities. |
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Term
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Definition
| Health and fitness facilities that operate within community centers, churches or other nonprofit organizations such as YMCAs or Jewish community centers. |
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Term
| What are the 5 dimensions of wellness |
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Definition
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Physical
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Intellectual
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Emotional
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Social
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Spiritual
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Term
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Definition
| Ability to carry out daily tasks with vigor |
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Term
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Definition
| Ability to control emotions and express them appropriately and comfortably |
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Term
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Definition
| Ability to have satisfying interpersonal relationships and interactions with others |
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Term
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Definition
| Guiding sense of meaning or value in life; may involve belief in some unifying or universal force |
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Term
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Definition
| Ability to learn, grow from experience, and utilize intellectual capabilities. |
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Term
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Definition
The systematic and scientific application of exercise and movement experiences to develop or restore:
1. muscular strength, endurance, or flexibility
2. neuromuscular coordination
3. cardiovascular efficiency
4. other health and performance factors |
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Term
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Definition
| Physical treatment, exercise, and educational or counseling sessions that lead to a person's attaining maximum function and personally acceptable leve of independence. |
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Term
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Definition
| The processes and treatments leading to the acquisition of skills and functions that are normal and expected for an individual of a particular age and status. |
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Term
| Rehabilitative therapeutic exercise therapy for: |
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Definition
rehabilitation of musculoskeletal injuries
rehabilitation of athletic injuries
rehabilitation of postsurgical trauma
cardiopulmonary rehabilitation
rehabilitation of older populations
rehabilitation of psychological disorders (mind-body relationship) |
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Term
| Habilitative therapeutic exercise therapy for: |
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Definition
Specialized habilitation
Habilitation of obese p
Habilitation of children with developmental disorders
Habilitation of general fitness
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Term
| Therapeutic Exercise Settings |
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Definition
- Inpatient facilities
- Outpatient clinic settings
- Sport team settings
- Private practice
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Term
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Definition
| A field of medicine and therapeutic exercise that specializes in the treatment, prevention, and rehabilitation of athletes and others who are involved in sports and other forms of streuous exercise. Sports medicine also involves the investigation of training methods and practices. |
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Term
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Definition
| Injuries to nerves and/or muscles that cause pain and limit or prevent to performance of physical activities. |
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Term
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Definition
| long-term care facility that caters to the medical, rehabilitational, and specialized needs of a patient, including assistance with the activities of daily living. |
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Term
| Outpatient clinic setting |
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Definition
| A short-term care facility where patients do not stay over night. |
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Term
Sport team setting:
Athletic training clinics |
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Definition
| A health care facility, usually associated with high school, collegiate, or professional athletic teams, that specializes in the health care needs of athletes. |
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Term
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Definition
| An entrepreneurial venture in which a professional establishes his or her own workplace with its own client pool. |
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Term
| What are the professions in therapeutic exercise? |
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Definition
Athletic trainer
clinical exercise physiologist
occupational therapist
physical therapist
therapeutic recreation specialist
strength and conditioning specialists |
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Term
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Definition
| American College of Sports Medicine |
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Term
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Definition
| Nationael Athletics Training Association |
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Term
| Employment settings for OT |
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Definition
hospitals, rehabilitation centers, nursing homes, orthopedic clinics
aslo provide outpatient occupational therapy in secondary schools and colleges |
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Term
| Seven specialty certifications for physical therapist |
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Definition
cardiopulmonary
clinical electrophysiology
geriatrics
neurology
orthopedics
pediatrics
sports physical therapy |
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Term
| clinical exercise physiologist |
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Definition
cardiac, pulmonary, and metabolic disease care
exercise testing
exercise prescription
program administration |
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Term
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Definition
| Helps injured or ill individuals reach their maximum level of independence by emphasizing the acquisition and retention of functional skills |
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Term
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Definition
| Provides rehabilitative care to a diverse patient population with a wide range of injuries, illnesses and diseases |
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Term
| Therapeutic recreation specialist |
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Definition
Treats patients with physical disability or impaired mental function
- restores, remediates, or rehabilitates to improve function and independence;
- also focuses on social integration (treatment team approach)
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Term
| Strength and conditioning specialist |
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Definition
| maximizes physical performance, reduces the frequency of injury, and decreases the possibility of cardiovascular disease by designing programs for the specific needs of the individual ( sport and activity specific) |
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Term
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Definition
| National Strength and Conditioning Association |
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Term
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Definition
| Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist |
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Term
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Definition
The art, science or profession of teaching.
Teaching behaviors and producing learning in students. |
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Term
| Time on task (aka engaged time) |
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Definition
| Thme students spend actually doing physical activity or sport |
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Term
| What % of time should students spend appropriately engage (performing correctly with frequent success) |
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Definition
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Term
| Appropriately engaged time is.... |
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Definition
| academic learning time or functional learning |
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Term
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Definition
| organizing students in such a way that learning is most likely to occur |
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Term
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Definition
| teaching rules, enforcing them when they are broken, and rewarding exceptional behavior |
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Term
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Definition
| allows learners to choose one activity from a wide selection of activities |
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Term
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Definition
emphasizes cardiorespiratory efficiency, muscular strength, and en durance, flexibility and body composition
(components of fitness) |
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Term
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Definition
| teachers treat students as athletes |
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Term
| wilderness and adventure education curriculum |
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Definition
| outdoor activities such as: canoeing, backpacking, camping |
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Term
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Definition
| concerned with teaching students self-control and responsibility as well as social development |
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Term
| teaching games for understanding model |
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Definition
| emphasizes teaching tactical awareness, game strategies and game appreciation while placing less emphasis on initial motor skill development |
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Term
| Self fulfilling prophecy (aka pygmalion effect) |
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Definition
| influence of teacher expectations on student performance |
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Term
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Definition
| American Alliance foor Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance |
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Term
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Definition
| National Association for Sport and Physical Education |
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Term
| What is a synonym for Pygmalion Effect |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
| The sport industry is "the market in which the products offered to its buyers are fitness, spor, recreation, and leisure related. These products include goods, services, people, and ideas" |
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Term
| The sport industry is 2x larger than what other industry |
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Definition
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Term
| The sport industry is the ____ largets industry in the U.S. |
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Definition
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Term
| What are the three segments the sports industry is divided into? |
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Definition
- Entertainment
- Support services
- Participation
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Term
| How much money was spent on sporting goods in 2006 in the U.S.? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
| Sport industr sector comprised of organizations that seek to attract consumers to watch athletes compete |
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Term
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Definition
| sport industry sector composed of businesses providing needed services to other sport organizations |
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Term
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Definition
| the study of the teaching of physical education |
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Term
| How much money was spent in the U.S. by sport spectators |
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Definition
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Term
| The ____ of sport coaching and sport instruction are more similar than distinct |
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Definition
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Term
| The ________ of sport coaching and sport instruction are more distinct than similar |
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Definition
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Term
| Profession Expertise involve: |
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Definition
- Professional practice knowledge
- Workplace knowledge
- Theoretical kinesiology knowledge
- Physical activity experience
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Term
| How do our values shape our professional conduct? |
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Definition
- mechanical, market-driven professionalism
- social trustee, civic professionalism
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Term
| Social trustee, civic professionalism |
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Definition
pracitioners value clients & the social good more than themselves or their profession
" Healthy people and good society first me and my profession second" |
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Term
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Definition
| Theoretical knowledge about physical activity as emboied in the subdisciplines of kinesiology |
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Term
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Definition
| listening, communicating, and motivating others |
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Term
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Definition
| requires little formal knowledge, is task associated with their jobs |
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Term
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Definition
analysis, deduction, diagnosis, prescription, and high-level reasoning
human act that requires complex modes of thought, including rational analysis and problem soving to achive a predetermined goal. |
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