developing

(adjective)

Of a country: becoming economically more mature or advanced; becoming industrialized.

Related Terms

  • World Bank
  • poverty
  • loan

Examples of developing in the following topics:

  • Kohlberg and Moral Development

  • Freud's Psychosexual Theory of Development

  • Technological Developments in Textiles

  • The Developing World

  • Stages of Cognitive Development

    • Review the four major stages of cognitive development: Piaget's Stages (http://epltt.coe.uga.edu/index.php?
  • The development of life on Earth

  • Employee Development

    • Employee development helps organizations succeed through helping employees grow.
    • Human resource development consists of training, organization, and career-development efforts to improve individual, group, and organizational effectiveness.
    • The sponsors of employee development are senior managers.
    • The participants are the people who actually go through the employee development, and also benefit significantly from effective development.
    • Talent development, part of human resource development, is the process of changing an organization, its employees, and its stakeholders, using planned and unplanned learning, in order to achieve and maintain a competitive advantage for the organization.
  • Levinson

    • Levinson was one of the founders of the field of positive adult development.
    • In this dissertation, he attempted to develop a way of measuring ethnocentrism.
    • Now that there is scientific proof that individuals continue to develop as adults, researchers have begun investigating how to foster such development.
    • Rather than just describing, as phenomenon, the fact that adults continue to develop, researchers are interested in aiding and guiding that development.
    • Summarize Daniel Levinson's theory of positive adult development and how it influenced changes in the perception of development during adulthood
  • Developmental Psychology

    • They view development as a lifelong process that can be studied scientifically across three developmental domains—physical, cognitive, and psychosocial development.
    • There are several theories of development that focus on the following issues: whether development is continuous or discontinuous, whether development follows one course or many, and the relative influence of nature versus nurture on development.
    • The continuous-development perspective views development as a cumulative process, gradually improving on existing skills.
    • In contrast, theorists who view development as discontinuous believe that development takes place in unique stages: it occurs at specific times or ages.
    • The concept of continuous development can be visualized as a smooth slope of progression, whereas discontinuous development sees growth in more discrete stages.
  • Development of Human Resources

    • Human resource development combines training and career development to improve the effectiveness of the individual, group, and organization.
    • Human resources development (HRD) as a theory is a framework for the expansion of human capital within an organization through the development of both the organization and the individual to achieve performance improvement.
    • Human resource development is the integrated use of training, organization, and career development efforts to improve individual, group, and organizational effectiveness.
    • Training and development (TD), the development of human expertise for the purpose of improving performance
    • Human resource development combines training and career development to improve the effectiveness of the individual, group, and organization.
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