The gap trap Wills, Bob
Supply management (London, England),
01/1998, Letnik:
3, Številka:
2
Magazine Article
An alternative view of the gas market begins with the question: What do you do if the product you supply is environmentally challenged, made on plant that will require significant capital investment ...to meet legislation, but you have access to a co-product that has for many years been little more than a nuisance, with only one, essentially captive, customer? The first task is to find an administration that is wedded to the concept of competition and the action of market forces. The second is to convince the people buying your original product that, although you have something much better to offer them, the system is stopping you from selling it. The only way that it will become available is through a change of law or regulation, and that their assistance is required to lobby the administration.
This collection of reprints from the IDEAS section of the "Arithmetic Teacher," has been selected from those activities appropriate for students in grades 4 through 8. The selections have been ...reprinted just as they originally appeared in the journal. The ideas are grouped under the headings computation, fractions, problem solving, geometry, and measurement. On one side of each page is the pupil activity sheet; the teacher directions are on the back of the page. This booklet is perforated so that the pages can be easily removed and reproduced for classroom use. (MP)