The Theory Sample Clauses

The Theory. Walking through the halls of Columbus Collegiate during class time will be a remarkable experience. In every classroom, teachers are presenting rigorous lessons, and students rise to the challenge. CCA teachers hold students to high academic expectations and are able to focus on effective instruction because consistent classroom management expectations are enforced by every teacher. Teachers deliver great lessons, students are engaged and on-task throughout the entire class period, and there is a “buzz” of learning in class. Classes run fluidly, with clear communication between students and teacher. Teachers proactively plan to avoid misbehavior. Consistency in application of consequences drives student actions away from negative behaviors, while positive incentives encourage students to succeed. Overall, however, academic success and opportunity serve as the greatest motivators. Teachers use school-wide systems, individual techniques, strong student-teacher relationships, and strong teacher-family relations to promote and reinforce behavioral excellence. Students hold each other accountable and support each other in reaching ambitious goals. Our values are internalized, and students make good decisions even when they know no one is watching. Parents feel welcome at the school, and teachers feel that they are well supported by school leaders. The staff, teachers, students, and families of Columbus Collegiate work together to achieve a college-preparatory environment. The Philosophy Students are capable of making choices. Students can choose to follow the rules or to break the rules. At Columbus Collegiate, there are positive motivators for when a student chooses to follow a rule or procedure and negative consequences for when a student chooses to break a rule or procedure. Students quickly learn that when they do good things, good things happen, and when they do bad things, bad things happen; every positive contribution results in a positive motivator; conversely, every negative infraction results in a negative consequence. This is the basis of our student Code of Conduct. Students who choose not to meet the school community’s clearly defined standards for reasonable and acceptable behavior will not be permitted to disrupt the education of others. Without a firm and consistent discipline policy, none of what we envision for the school can happen. Straightforward rules, coupled with consistently applied consequences, make clear to students what is expected ...
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The Theory. You don’t have to have a discount on either, but they are pretty normal. As we discussed, they are very similar to a SAFE. The investor then gets shares in the future when they convert at your series-a. A startup raising $500k from 10 angels ($50k each) has different considerations than raising $2m from a single institutional investor Founders and investors got confused as to which round the pro rata applied. There are only a few things to agree. SAFE doesn’t have this issue as it is built in. The difference being that they have a maturity date (deadline), they are longer, and there is an interest rate (which makes them debt). Convertible notes are less certain as they dilute one another etc as I mentioned before. The reality is more nuanced. Interest accumulation There is no interest accumulation on the SAFE as there is no interest rate. The original safe was intended to be a replacement for convertible notes. No maturity date A Convertible Note has a ‘best before date’ of say a year. I promise you the math to calculate SAFE are not simple. Yes, I know that’s a pain, but if you keep learning you will eventually know a lot. Conversion into the same class of shares as the next financing round Assuming both converts at a ‘normal’ round where preference shares are being issued, then both SAFE and the Convertible Note get preference shares (normally) and the same terms as the investors. This can cause some issues when the maturity date comes a knocking. It’s that simple. Once you reach the date of maturity, you have two choices: Pay back the principal plus interest (if you have enough money to do that), or Convert the debt into equity Paying back your principal is rationally not going to happen if you aren’t doing well (and even if you are doing well!), and investors want their cash back. Because simplicity is one of its primary goals, SAFE offers a straightforward option. It was created by the Silicon Valley accelerator Y-Combinator as a new financial instrument to simplify seed investment in 2013. You’re taking a huge ass risk on setting up a company and you want to save cash on your ownership structure? Why is a convertible note better for founders? Read more here: Convertible note terms that you don’t understand Deferred equity In both cases, the SAFE and note will convert into equity. Both investors don’t know what the exact terms of the shares will be. In the words of Xxxxxxxx Xxxx, the YC partner and former Xxxxxx Xxxxxxx lawyer who created the SAFE “[t...
The Theory. Xxxxxxx and Xxxxxx (1969) provide a theoretical framework for a computer oriented solution of record linkage which is still nowadays considered a milestone. In the following we recall the main aspects of this theory. Let us consider the number of pairs composed by the A and B units: A × B ={(a, b): a ∈A, b ∈B} . Record linkage aims at partitioning the A×B set into the disjunctive subsets M and U, where: M = {(a,b)∈A× B : a = b} U ={(a,b)∈A× B : a ≠ b} The M and U subsets are named matched and unmatched datasets respectively. Each unit in the population is identified by the k variables recorded values. Two distinct record generating processes, one for each of the two population, give rise to one record for each population unit. These records, denoted as α(a) and β(b), contain the k variables values observed on the a and b units respectively. The assignment of a unit pair to the M or U subsets depends on the k variables values observed on the a and b units. A comparison is to be made in order to decide whether or not the compared units represent the same person.

Related to The Theory

  • Theory Counseling is designed to assist an employee in eliminating a problem so that formal discipline will not be necessary.

  • No Consequential Damages Other than the Liquidated Damages heretofore described and the indemnity obligations set forth in Article 18.1, in no event shall any Party be liable under any provision of this Agreement for any losses, damages, costs or expenses for any special, indirect, incidental, consequential, or punitive damages, including but not limited to loss of profit or revenue, loss of the use of equipment, cost of capital, cost of temporary equipment or services, whether based in whole or in part in contract, in tort, including negligence, strict liability, or any other theory of liability; provided, however, that damages for which a Party may be liable to another Party under separate agreement will not be considered to be special, indirect, incidental, or consequential damages hereunder.

  • NO LIABILITY FOR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES In no event shall either Party be liable to the other Party for, and no arbitral panel is authorized to award, any punitive, special, indirect or consequential damages of any kind or character resulting from or arising out of this Agreement, including, without limitation, loss of profits or business interruptions, however they may be caused.

  • Breach of Contract The failure of the Contractor to comply with any of the provisions, covenants or conditions of this Contract shall be a material breach of this Contract. In such event the County may, and in addition to any other remedies available at law, in equity, or otherwise specified in this Contract:

  • Indemnity Consequential Damages and Insurance 18.1 Indemnity 18.1.1 Indemnified Party 18.1.2 Indemnifying Party 18.1.3 Indemnity Procedures 18.2 Consequential Damages 18.3 Insurance 18.3.1 18.3.2 18.3.3 18.3.4 18.3.5 18.3.6 18.3.7 18.3.8 18.3.9 18.3.10 18.3.11

  • No Liability for Consequential Loss Except as otherwise expressly provided in Clauses 12.8 and 19.3(b), neither Party shall in any circumstances be liable to the other for (and the indemnities in Clauses 14.1 and 14.2 shall not extend to) any Consequential Loss.

  • NO LIABILITY FOR DAMAGES In no event shall the author of this Software be liable for any special, consequential, incidental or indirect damages whatsoever (including, without limitation, damages for loss of business profits, business interruption, loss of business information, or any other pecuniary loss) arising out of the use of or inability to use this product, even if the Author of this Software is aware of the possibility of such damages and known defects.

  • HOLD HARMLESS/INDEMNIFICATION Contractor agrees to protect, defend, and save State, its elected and appointed officials, agents, and employees, while acting within the scope of their duties as such, harmless from and against all claims, demands, causes of action of any kind or character, including the cost of defense thereof, arising in favor of Contractor's employees or third parties on account of bodily or personal injuries, death, or damage to property arising out of services performed or omissions of services or in any way resulting from the acts or omissions of Contractor and/or its agents, employees, representatives, assigns, subcontractors, except the sole negligence of State, under this Contract.

  • Hold Harmless/Indemnity Project Sponsor shall indemnify and hold harmless the Air District, its employees, agents, representatives, and successors-in-interest against any and all liability, loss, expense, including reasonable attorneys’ fees, or claims for injury or damages arising out of their performance of the Project or operation or use of the equipment that is subject to this Agreement. Project Sponsor shall also indemnify and hold harmless the Program Manager, its employees, agents, representatives, and successors-in-interest against any and all liability, loss, expense, including reasonable attorneys’ fees, or claims for injury or damages arising out of their performance of the Project or operation or use of the equipment that is subject to this Agreement, or payments made pursuant to this Agreement brought for, or on account of, any of the following: (A) injuries to or death of any person, including the Project Sponsor and its employees/officers/agents; (B) damage to any property of any kind whatsoever and to whomsoever belonging; (C) any sanctions, penalties, or claims of damages resulting from the Project Sponsor’s failure to comply, if applicable, with the requirements set forth in the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) and all Federal regulations promulgated thereunder, as amended; or (D) any other loss or cost, including but not limited to that caused by the concurrent active or passive negligence of the Program Manager and/or its officers, agents, employees, or servants. However, the Project Sponsor’s duty to indemnify and save harmless under this Section shall not apply to injuries or damage for which the Program Manager has been found in a court of competent jurisdiction to be liable by reason of its own negligence or willful misconduct. The duty of the Project Sponsor to indemnify and save harmless as set forth by this Section shall include the duty to defend as set forth in Section 2778 of the California Civil Code. In the event that, for any reason other than Program Manager’s sole misconduct, the Air District seeks return of funds already distributed to the Project Sponsor pursuant to this Agreement, the Project Sponsor shall indemnify and reimburse the Program Manager in the amount the Program Manager is required to return to the Air District under the funding Agreement between the Program Manager and the Air District. This indemnification provision will survive termination or expiration of this Agreement.

  • Responsibility For Damages Or Injury The County its elected and appointed officials, officers, employees, agents and those special districts and agencies which County’s Board of Supervisors acts as the governing Board (“County Indemnitees”) shall not be answerable or accountable in any manner: for any loss or damage that may happen to the Project or any part thereof; for any loss or damage to any of the materials or other things used or employed in performing the Project; for injury to or death of any person either workers or the public; or for damage to property from any cause which might have been prevented by the Contractor, or his workers, or anyone employed by him. The Contractor shall be responsible for any liability imposed by law and for injuries to or death of any person or damage to property resulting from defects or obstructions or from any cause whatsoever during the progress of the Project or at any time before its completion and final acceptance. The Contractor shall indemnify, defend with counsel approved in writing by County and save harmless the County Indemnitees from all claims, suits or actions of every name, kind and description, brought for, or on account of, injuries to or death of any person or damage to property resulting from the construction of the Project or by or in consequence of any negligence in guarding the Project; use of improper materials in construction of the Project; or by or on account of any act or omission by the Contractor or his agents during the progress of the Work or at any time before the completion and final acceptance of the Project. In addition to any remedy authorized by law, so much of the money due the Contractor under and by virtue of the Contract as shall be considered necessary by the County may be retained by it until disposition has been made of such suits or claims for damages as aforesaid. If judgment is entered against Contractor and County by a court of competent jurisdiction because of the concurrent active negligence of County and County Indemnitees, Contractor and County agree that liability will be apportioned as determined by the court. Neither Party shall request a jury apportionment. Notwithstanding anything stated above, nothing contained herein shall relieve Contractor of any insurance requirements of obligations created elsewhere in this Contract.

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