Season 1: Isa2018
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Wave 1, from September 2011 to March 2012, surveyed a subset of Agricultural Sample Survey (AgSS) households as well as new non-farm households, with a computer-assisted interview application on ultra-mobile personal computers. As with the regular AgSS, the data collection is over a period of about 5-9 months depending on the area of the country and the seasons (from post-planting in the long rainy season to the start of the short rainy season). The AgSS is carried out through multiple visits to the households by the resident enumerators. The final visit for the ERSS was done after the crops were harvested in order to get production data.
The IHS3 2010/11 sample includes 12,271 households surveyed in 768 households. The overall sample is representative at the district-, regional-, urban-rural and national-level. 3,247 IHS3 households from 204 enumeration areas were designated as \"panel\" prior to the start of the IHS3 field work who were visited twice during the IHS3 (in the post-planting and post-harvest periods with respect to the rainy agricultural seasons) and were later tracked and re-interviewed as part of the IHPS. The rest of the IHS3 sample were designated as \"cross-sectional\" and were visited only once during the IHS3 fieldwork, similar to the practice that was followed during the Second Integrated Household Survey (IHS2) 2004/05. For more detailed information on the IHS3, please see the IHS3 Basic Information Document.
The IHS4 2016/17 sample includes 12,480 households surveyed in 780 enumeration areas (the island of Likoma has been included this round). As in IHS3, the cross-sectional sample is representative at the district-, regional-, urban-rural and national-level and households were visited once throughout the 12 months of fieldwork. The IHPS 2016 ran concurrently with the IHS4. 102 of the 204 panel enumeration areas from the earlier rounds of the IHPS were selected for follow up in 2016 (two interview set-up to capture both rainy and dry seasons), and the same tracking rules as in IHPS 2013 applied. Finally, up to 4 adults per panel household were randomly selected and administered an individual-referenced questionnaire on asset ownership and control, and food security.
The IHS5 cross-sectional households were visited once. During their visit, households received both the Household and the Agriculture questionnaires. As part of the Agriculture questionnaire, the cross-sectional households reported information on the last completed rainy and dry (dimba) seasons. The field work was structured in a way that evenly spread the collection of household consumption information across the 12-month period.
To collect accurate information on each of the two agricultural seasons, the panel households received two visits. Visit 1 to IHS5-panel households was conducted in the first quarter of the survey effort which corresponded to the post-planting period with respect to the 2018/19 rainy season. In this visit, panel households reported information pertaining to land area, cultivation and input use in the 2018/19 rainy season. Visit 2 to the panel households was conducted in the second quarter of the survey effort, in the post-harvest period with respect to the 2018/19 rainy season. Households reported information on the production and post-harvest related matters pertaining to the 2018/19 rainy season, and provided information on the last completed dry (dimba) season.
The field work for each survey was conducted in two visits. The first visit was made after the planting season (between August and October). The second visit was made after the harvest season (between December and February). The field work was implemented by mobile teams. Each field team was made up of 3 enumerators who worked under the supervision of a controller. The interviews for the EAC-I 2017 were conducted via CAPI.
The Agriculture Questionnaire for the first visit collected information regarding post-planting activities and the dry season. The Agriculture Questionnaire for the second visit collected information regarding harvest activities and livestock.
Two years later in 2018, Disney announced that a second season was in the works; and one year later in 2019 prior to the second season premiere, they renewed the show for a third season, production for the third season wrapped up in June 2020 and it is set to air sometime in 2021.
It is produced by Disney Television Animation (storyboard, character design, writing, etc), and the animation was provided by Toiion Animation Studios from the first episode to the last episode of season one; and it currently is being provided by Snowball Studios and Stellar Creative Lab.
Finally, the first two episodes premiered on July 13, 2018 on Disney Junior, followed by five half-hour episodes aired once a week on a Friday. Six of those episodes were released as a DVD in November 2018, and the entire first season was released on Disney+ one year later.
Goldman was outstanding in the circle in earning her second-straight UAA honor and the fifth of her career. She threw three complete games with two shutouts to go 3-0, posting an 0.35 ERA and 12.60 strikeouts per seven innings. Against Anna Maria on April 14, she allowed three hits and just one run, striking out 11 without a walk in a 7-1 victory. Against #24-ranked Framingham State, Goldman was nearly untouchable, giving up just three hits in 13 innings of work. She fanned 12 in the first game of a four-game series, allowing one hit and one walk on April 17, then whiffed 13 Rams with two hits and two walks in Game 3 of the set on April 18. Brandeis swept FSU to improve to 8-0 on the season, making the Judges one of the final four undefeated teams in Division III. For the season, Goldman's 0.28 ERA is seventh-lowest in Division III, while her 1.68 hits allowed per seven innings and 0.36 walks and hits per inning pitched (WHIP) both lead the nation and her 13.7 strikeouts per seven inning rank third.
King hit safely and drove in runs in all five games for the Judges last week as Brandeis went 3-2. He had three multi-hit games and scored runs in four of the five contests. King led Brandeis in batting average (.625), on-base percentage (.647) and slugging (.875). He went 5-6 with three doubles and four RBI in a doubleheader sweep (7-3, 12-2) of Lasell University on April 14, then went 2-6 with three RBI in a pair of losses (5-6, 3-8) to Framingham State the next day. In a 21-11 win over FSU on April 18, King went 3-4 with one RBI and three runs scored as the Judges turned in their highest-scoring performance since 2007. Overall this season, King leads the UAA and ranks 52nd in Division III with a .469 batting average. He also leads the conference with a .528 on-base percentage and ranks fourth with a .594 slugging percentage. His 11 RBI are tied for third on the Judges, while his four doubles are tied for second. 59ce067264
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