It Specialist
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Specialist One with special training.
See also Educational Specialist (Ed.S.)
''For its use in the most general context see expert.''
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Specialist insignia (U.S. Army)
When used in a military context, Specialist is one section of the fourth enlisted rank in U.S. Army, just above Private First Class and below Sergeant. It shares this placement with Corporal, which is a rank for non-commissioned officers (NCO).
Originally, there were six separate grades of Specialist, officially known as Specialist 4 through Specialist 9 in ascending order of rank; each such grade parallelled the corresponding grade of non-commissioned officer (E-4 through E-9) in terms of pay, but without the NCO authority conferred on the latter. Only the lowest Specialist grade survives today, as the higher grades were phased out, beginning with Specialist 8 and 9 in 1965. Specialist 8 and 9 had existed on paper only; there were never any actual promotions to these ranks.
Specialist 7 was abolished in 1978 and Specialist 5 and 6 in 1985. At that time, the rank of Specialist 4 simply became known as "Specialist", to which it is referred to today.
During World War II, the specialist grade was known as Technician; the designation was done away with in 1948 but the concept was brought back under the new title of Specialist in 1955.
Prior to 1942, an Army Specialist was known as a "Private Specialist" or simply "Specialist". Specialists of this time period wore chevorns of a Private First Class but drew PFC pay in addition to specialist pay in relationship to the specialist level possessed. While no special insignia was authozied for these Private Specialists, typically a solider would wear PFC chevrons beneath which would be worn additional chevrons to denote specialty level.
Corporal
U.S. Army enlisted rank insignia
Comparative military ranks
Category:Noncommissioned
Specialist
Specialist vs. Corporal
What is the difference between Specialist and Corporal? RickK 05:52, 16 May 2004 (UTC)
: Corporal is NCO. See Corporal. - Wguynes 18:58, May 16, 2004 (UTC)
The Specialists ''The Specialists'' is a multiplayer mod for the popular first-person shooter computer game ''Half-Life''. It is currently at version 2.1, released on June 27, 2004.
Gameplay
''The Specialists'' is based on a generic action movie. It contains over 20 weapons and many powerups. The object of the Deathmatch game mode is to get as many frags as you possibly can. Other options include The One Mode, where one player with enhanced abilities takes on all others until he is killed, therefore making his killer The One. The game makes heavy use of stunts, and many stunt combinations can multiply your frags you get for killing characters.
Weapons
The game contains over 20 weapons separated into 5 types: Pistols, Shotguns, Sub-machine guns, Rifles, and Special Purpose. Each is modeled realistically. Several of the pistols can be wielded akimbo.
Pistols
Glock 18
Glock 20
MK23 SOCOM
FN Five-seveN
IMI Desert Eagle .50AE
Golden Colts
Beretta 92FS
Ruger Mk-1
Taurus Raging Bull
Sub-machine guns (SMGs)
Steyr TMP
HK MP5K
HK MP5SD5
HK UMP
HK MP7
IMI Mini Uzi
Shotguns
Benelli M3 Super 90
Franchi SPAS-12
USAS-12
Mossberg 500
Sawed-off Shotgun
Rifles
AK-47
Colt M4A1
Steyr AUG
Colt M16A4
Barrett M82A1
Special purpose
Combat Knife
M61 hand grenade
SEAL Knife
Katana
M60E3
Half-Life
Steam
List of Half-Life mods
Valve Software
http://www.specialistsmod.net/ Official website for The Specialists
http://www.specialistscentral.com/ Site where most Specialists maps and models are hosted
Category:Half-Life mods
SPECIALIST Lexicon The SPECIALIST lexicon is one of three UMLS Knowledge Sources under development by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) as part of the Unified Medical Language System project.
The SPECIALIST lexicon has been developed to provide the lexical information needed for the SPECIALIST Natural Language Processing System. It is intended to be a general English lexicon that includes many biomedical terms. Coverage includes both commonly occurring English words and biomedical vocabulary. The lexicon entry for each word or term records the syntactic, morphological, and orthographic information needed by the SPECIALIST natural language processing system.
Scope and Content of the SPECIALIST lexicon
Lexical entries may be single or multi-word terms. Each lexical record has a base form, a part of speech, a unique identifier and optionally a set of spelling variants. The base form is the uninflected form of the lexical item; the singular form in the case of a noun, the infinitive form in the case of a verb, and the positive form in the case of an adjective or adverb. Lexical information includes syntactic category, inflectional variation (e.g., singular and plural for nouns, the conjugations of verbs, the positive, comparative, and superlative for adjectives and adverbs), and allowable complementation patterns (i.e., the objects and other arguments that verbs, nouns, and adjectives can take). The lexicon recognizes eleven syntactic categories, or parts of speech: verbs, nouns, adjectives, adverbs, auxiliaries, modals, pronouns, prepositions, conjunctions, complementizers, and determiners.
The basic sentence patterns of a language are determined by the number and nature of the complements taken by verbs. The lexicon recognizes five broad complementation patterns: intransitive, transitive, ditransitive, linking and complex-transitive. Verb entries also encode each of the inflected forms (principal parts of the verb). Verbs are inflectionally classified as regular,
Computer Specialists This is one of the minor occupational groups based on the Standard Occupational Classification System.
The root :category: SOC occupations.
SOC divisions within this category:
:15-0000 – Computer and mathematical occupations
::15-1000 – Computer specialists
::::15-1011 – Computer and information scientists, Research
::::15-1021 – Computer programmers
::::15-1031 – Computer software engineers, Applications
::::15-1032 – Computer software engineers, Systems software
::::15-1041 – Computer support specialists
::::15-1051 – Computer systems analysts
::::15-1061 – Database administrators
::::15-1071 – Network and computer systems administrators
::::15-1081 – Network systems and data communications analysts
::::*Web designer; Webmaster
:::15-1090 – Miscellaneous computer specialists
::::15-1099 – Computer specialists, All other
Computer specialists
Category:Occupations
Category:Computer and mathematical occupations
ja:Category:情報技術者
Specialist School The specialist schools programme is a UK government programme which encourages secondary schools to specialise in certain areas to boost achievement. Currently there are over 2,000 specialist schools; which is over two thirds of the schools in England. The government plans that eventually all schools will specialise.
There are certain criteria which a school must meet to become a specialist school. This includes raising a minimum of £50,000 from private sector sponsorship. Microsoft has invested £1.5m in this programme.
The main benefit of becoming a specialist school is extra funding, both from the private sponsorship and government funds. Once a school has achieved specialist status the government gives the school a grant of £100,000 and an extra £126 per pupil for four years. Another benefit for the programme is that the school is able to select up to 10% of its students, although some choose not to.
Specialisms
The fields a school can specialise in are as follows:
Arts
Business & Enterprise
Engineering
Humanities
Languages
Mathematics & Computing
Music
Science
Sports
Technology
A school can also specialise in more than one area; combining specialisms.
Criticisms
The specialist schools programme has been critisised by both teaching unions and the opposition Conservative Party. The NASUWT for creating a two-tier education system, made up of specialist schools with extra funding and non-specialist schools which cannot benefit from any extra money. The Conservatives have critisised the programme for failing to deliver results, because although results have improved in specialist schools, this could be attributed to the extra funding.
City Academy
City Technology College
Education in the United Kingdom
http://www.specialistschools.org.uk/ Specialist Schools Trust
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/education/4388285.stm BBC News: ''Specialist schools
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