Academic literature on the topic 'Checkbook balance'

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Journal articles on the topic "Checkbook balance"

1

Paull, Sandra. "Balancing a Checkbook: Children Using Mathematics Skills." Arithmetic Teacher 33, no. 9 (May 1986): 32–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.5951/at.33.9.0032.

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My fourth and fifth grader needed to practice addition and subtraction skills in a practical way. Many realized that adults commonly use these kills to balance checkbooks. The use of checkbook balance registers in class seemed to be an opportunity for children both to experience a ritual they will perform in the future and to practice kills they needed to review. Little did I know how this simple activity would develop into a eries of le sons that included general computation, estimation, problem solving, and economics.
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2

Kolars, Kelsey, Xinhua Jia, Dean D. Steele, and Thomas F. Scherer. "A Soil Water Balance Model for Subsurface Water Management." Applied Engineering in Agriculture 35, no. 4 (2019): 633–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.13031/aea.13038.

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Abstract. Most cropland in the upper Midwest will experience periods of excess water and drought conditions during a growing season. When the objective is to produce high yields, effective use of a subsurface water management system can help provide optimal soil moisture conditions for growth. A subsurface water management system includes draining excess water from the soil profile through subsurface drainage (SSD), managing the water table through controlled drainage (CD), or adding water to the drainage system during dry conditions (Subirrigation – SI). Subsurface water management can become difficult when determining the time and amount needed for SSD and SI, and (or) the optimal water table (WT) depth when using CD due to water movement in both the upward and downward directions. In this study, a 21 ha field with CD, a 17-ha field with CD + SI, and a 16 ha control field (surface drained only) over clay loam and silty clay loam soils were used to evaluate subsurface water management scheduling for corn (2013) and soybean (2014). The Checkbook Irrigation Scheduling method (Lundstrom and Stegman, 1988) was modified to include an algorithm to estimate the daily water balance contribution due to upward flux (UF) from a shallow water table. For the 2013 growing season, the UF reduction of the daily soil moisture deficit (SMD) was minimal due to deeper WT over the growing season and there was little difference between the modified and original Checkbook methods. For the 2014 growing season, the SMD estimates from the Modified Checkbook method produced closer estimates to the in-field SMD compared to the original Checkbook method. Therefore, adding SSD and shallow WT contributions in the Checkbook method produces similar, if not more accurate, estimations of daily SMD that can be used for subsurface water management. Keywords: Checkbook irrigation scheduling method, Model development, Subirrigation, Subsurface drainage.
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3

Page, Anita. "Helping Students Understand Subtraction." Teaching Children Mathematics 1, no. 3 (November 1994): 140–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.5951/tcm.1.3.0140.

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A friend, who e adult mathematical skills enable him to balance his checkbook and decide which brand of coffee is a better buy, still remembers the trauma of first grade. “There I was, happily adding away,” he says. “Then one day they hit me with subtraction.”
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4

Filho, Jose F. Da Cunha Leme, Brenda V. Ortiz, Damianos Damianidis, Kipling S. Balkcom, Mark Dougherty, and Thorsten Knappenberger. "Irrigation Scheduling to Promote Corn Productivity in Central Alabama." Journal of Agricultural Science 12, no. 9 (August 15, 2020): 34. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/jas.v12n9p34.

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Agriculture is the largest consumer of water in the United States. Results from previous studies have shown that it is possible to substantially reduce irrigation amounts and maintain corn yield. The objectives of this study were to evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of two irrigation scheduling methods for corn production in Alabama. Two irrigation scheduling methods evaluated were: a) Checkbook, which is one of the conventional methods used by farmers that is based on the soil water balance estimated using water lost by evapotranspiration and its replacement through rainfall or irrigation, and b) Sensor-based, which was based on soil matric potential values recorded by soil moisture tension sensors installed in the field. The experimental field was divided into two irrigation management zones (zone A and zone B) based on soil properties of each field. During the 2014 season in zone A, significant grain yield differences were observed between the two irrigation methods. The Checkbook plots exhibited greater yield than Sensor-based plots: 10181 kg ha-1 and 9696 kg ha-1, respectively. The greater yield on the Checkbook plots could be associated with higher irrigation rate applied, 148 mm more, compared with the Sensor-based plots. In zone B, there were no significant yield differences between both irrigation methods; however, Sensor-based plots out yielded Checkbook plots, with 9673 kg ha-1 and 9584 kg ha-1, respectively. Even though the irrigation amount applied in Checkbook located in zone B was higher, 102 mm more, there were no significant yield differences. Therefore, it suggests that the Sensor-based method was promissory irrigation scheduling strategy under the conditions of zone B. In 2015, there were no significant grain yield differences between zone A and zone B when the data from the Checkbook plots were analyzed. However, the Sensor-based treatment produced a statistically significant difference of grain yield of 13597 kg ha-1 in zone A and 11659 kg ha-1 in zone B, also both zones received the same amount of irrigation. Overall results of both growing seasons indicated that the use of the Sensor-based irrigation scheduling treatment resulted in similar values of total profit per hectare when compared to Checkbook method. The Sensor-based method seems a promising strategy that could result in water and financial savings, but more research is required.
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5

Feger, Danielle L., George W. Rebok, Sherry Willis, and Alden L. Gross. "INCIDENT DIFFICULTY IN INSTRUMENTAL ACTIVITIES OF DAILY LIVING: WHICH COMES FIRST?" Innovation in Aging 3, Supplement_1 (November 2019): S522. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.1924.

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Abstract Background: Instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) are necessary for successful independent living. Older adults may develop difficulty completing IADLs as they become physically and/or cognitively frail. The relative ordering in which IADLs deteriorate, and the importance of this ordering, is not well understood. Methods: Participants from the Advanced Cognitive Training for Independent and Vital Elderly (ACTIVE) study who reported no difficulty with IADLs at baseline were included. Individuals were followed up to 10 years for incidence of self-reported difficulty in 19 specific IADLs. The outcome of interest was time to any incident difficulty. We used Cox proportional hazards regression to estimate the hazard ratio (HR) of incident IADL difficulty for each IADL. Results: Of N=1,273 participants who contributed 6,144 person-years to the analysis, 887 developed difficulty with at least 1 IADL during the study period. The tasks in which participants reported difficulty earliest included giving self-injections (HR=5.69, [4.77, 6.79]), balancing checkbooks (HR=5.56, [4.32-7.16]), remembering often called numbers without having to look them up (HR=5.47, [4.55-6.59]), and household chores (HR=4.18, [3.43-5.11]). The last tasks to become difficult included keeping household expenses balanced (HR=0.07, [0.04-0.14]) and hanging up at the end of a phone call (HR=0.23, [0.09-0.56]). Conclusion: Independent older adults reported earlier difficulty with balancing checkbooks, remembering often called phone numbers, and doing household cleaning. Recognizing these early difficult tasks may facilitate early planning for family members and adoption of compensatory strategies.
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6

"Keeping It Balanced." Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School 22, no. 5 (December 2016): 268–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.5951/mathteacmiddscho.22.5.0268.

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7

Ciccarelli, Gregory, and Patrick Moylan. "A Distributional Approach to Conditionally Convergent Series." Volume 7, Issue 3 7, no. 3 (December 20, 2008). http://dx.doi.org/10.33697/ajur.2008.019.

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Whether the car’s gas tank is filled up on Monday and the paycheck is deposited on Tuesday, or vice versa, the contribution of those two transactions to the checkbook’s final balance is the same. By the commutative property, order does not matter for the algebraic addition of a finite number of terms. However, for a super banker who conducts an infinite number of transactions, order may matter. If a series (sum of all transactions/terms) is convergent and the order of term does not matter, then the series is absolutely convergent. If a series is convergent but the order of terms does matter, then it is conditionally convergent. Georg Bernhard Riemann proved the disturbing result that the final sum of a conditionally convergent series could be any number at all or divergent. In two, three and higher dimensions, the matter is even worse, and such series with double and triple sums are not even well-defined without first giving sum interpretation to the (standard) order in which the series is to be summed, e.g., in three dimensions, summing over expanding spheres or expanding cubes, whose points represent ordered triples occurring in the summation. In this note we show using elementary notions from distribution theory that an interpretation exists for conditionally convergent series so they have a precise, invariant meaning.
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Books on the topic "Checkbook balance"

1

Davidson, Christine. Staying home instead: How to balance your family life (and your checkbook). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1998.

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2

Dunnan, Nancy. Never balance your checkbook on Tuesday: And 300 more financial lessons you can't afford not to know. New York: HarperPerennial, 1998.

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3

Colors, Little. Check Transaction Register Book: Personal Checkbook Balance and Checking Account Ledger for All Business Payment Records. Independently Published, 2020.

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Studio, MiniBusiness. Checkbook Register: Account Transaction Register, Check Registar for Personal Log Book, Balance Ledger for Small-Business Personal. Independently Published, 2020.

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Dunnan, Nancy. Never Balance Your Checkbook on Tuesday: And 300 More Financial Lessons You Can't Afford Not to Know. HarperResource, 1999.

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Dunnan, Nancy. Never Balance Your Checkbook on Tuesday: And 300 More Financial Lessons You Can't Afford Not to Know. HarperResource, 1999.

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7

Patermaster, Jack. Patermaster's Checkbook Balancer: America's Simplest Checkbook Balancing Program. Pcb Inc, 2000.

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8

Studio, MiniBusiness. Checking Account Transaction Log: Gold Mandala Purple Cover Account Transaction Register Check Register for Personal Checkbook Balance Ledger for Small-Business and Personal. Independently Published, 2020.

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Studio, MiniBusiness. Checking Account Ledger: Check Registers for Checkbooks, Balance Ledgers for Small-Business and Personal, Rose Pattern. Independently Published, 2020.

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