https://news.temple.edu/news/2023-04-27/future-affirmative-action-experts-explain-upcoming-supreme-court-cases
The upcoming Supreme Court cases on affirmative action could potentially change the landscape of higher education, specifically regarding race-conscious admissions. Temple law experts discuss the history of this policy and possible outcomes of the ruling.
https://ronlevygroup.cst.temple.edu/courses/2020_fall/chem5302/lectures/chem5302_lecture2.pdf
Canonical Ensemble: An ensemble with the same Number of molecules, Volume and Temperature, but different Energy per system. (N, V, T)
https://cis.temple.edu/~latecki/Courses/CIS166-Fall06/Lectures/ch8.3-8.4.ppt
Isomorphism of Graphs Definition: The simple graphs G1 = (V1, E1) and G2 = (V2, E2) are isomorphic if there is a bijection (an one-to-one and onto function) f from V1 to V2 with the property that a and b are adjacent in G1 if and only if f(a) and f(b) are adjacent in G2, for all a and b in V1.
https://cst.temple.edu/sites/cst/files/AlgebraFall1999.pdf
2. Let R be a commutative ring with 1, and let e ∈ R be an idempotent (e2 = e). Prove:
https://law.temple.edu/aer/publication/duped-why-innocent-people-confess-and-why-we-believe-their-confessions/
July 10, 2023In 1992, Willie Veasy confessed to a murder, a confession a jury accepted despite a time card showing him to have been at work as a dishwasher 8 miles away. In 2001, Jermel Lewis signed a confession admitting to participating in Philadelphia’s worst mass killing – the seven homicides in what was known
https://cis.temple.edu/~latecki/Courses/CIS2166-Fall21/Lectures/ch10.1-2.ppt
Note: Of course, H is a valid graph, so we cannot remove any endpoints of remaining edges when creating H. Example: K5 subgraph of K5 * Operations on Graphs Definition: The union of two simple graphs G1 = (V1, E1) and G2 = (V2, E2) is the simple graph with vertex set V1 V2 and edge set E1 E2.
https://cst.temple.edu/sites/cst/files/theses1/bao.pdf
Note that in the case p = 2, an explicit basis of M2k( 0(2)) is given by f(E 2)aEb 4j2a + 4b = 2kg; where E 2(z) = E2(z) 2E(2z) and E2(z); E4(z) is Eisenstein series of weight 2 and 4 respectively (see page 56 of [14]). One checks that S10( 0(2)) is one dimensional and the Fourier expansion of
https://sites.temple.edu/edvice/2022/04/06/advance-organizers-setting-the-stage-for-learning-and-retention/
Dana Dawson The Advance Organizer is a tool you can use to focus student attention during lectures, improve retention of course content and connect new information with prior knowledge. Advanced Organizers can take a variety of forms from brief expository overviews to help students make meaning of course content to graphic representations that provide a framework for information. Overview As ...
https://cis.temple.edu/~latecki/Courses/Math3033-Fall09/DekkingBook07/DekkingBook_c2.pdf
Outcomes, events, and probability The world around us is full of phenomena we perceive as random or unpre-dictable. We aim to model these phenomena as outcomes of some experiment, where you should think of experiment in a very general sense. The outcomes are elements of a sample space Ω, and subsets of Ω are called events.The events will be assigned a probability, a number between 0 and 1 ...
https://teaching.temple.edu/sites/teaching/files/resource/pdf/A%20Guide%20to%20LGBTQIA%2B%20Terminology.pdf
A Guide to LGBTQIA+ Terminology This glossary was written to give you the words and meanings to help you feel more comfortable working toward creating an LGBTQIA+ inclusive learning environment. We’d like you to note that language is always evolving and is context dependent, and thus it can never hurt to ask if a term is ok for you to use or what is meant when a term is used by others.