Encuentra de forma automática horarios semanales para centros educativos de cualquier tipo y complejidad. Orientado a colegios, institutos de enseñanza secundaria, bachillerato, centros de formación profesional, educación superior, universidades, facultades, escuelas de arte, conservatorios de música, etc.
Ofrecemos servicio a cada usuario a través de un software de calidad. Nuestro equipo te acompañará hasta la obtención de la solución para tu horario, con la experiencia de más de 25 años ayudando a miles de centros de enseñanza de todo el mundo.
Organiza el horario para que cumpla tus requisitos y se optimice con tus criterios. Busca y encuentra un compromiso que permita (1) incrementar el rendimiento de los alumnos, (2) mejorar el aprovechamiento de las aulas, y (3) ofrecer mayor satisfacción al profesorado en su trabajo.
Utiliza nuestra aplicación web y móvil para colaborar en la elaboración y la gestión del día a día del horario. Publica y visualiza los horarios sobre el calendario con GHC App, gestiona las ausencias y suplencias del profesorado y genera informes de desempeño laboral.
Here is a short experimental piece, treating the string as a kind of cryptographic ghost, a forgotten username, or a stuttering spell.
The first vowel is a , open and surrendered. The second vowel is o , round as a swallowed key. Between them, two dashes — not gaps, but the negative space where consonants used to breathe.
And then c , final as a closing parenthesis, or the soft click of a hard drive parking its head.
ithm arrives like a mechanical stammer: ithm — almost rhythm , but with the breath caught. ithm — close to algorithm , but missing the algo (the pain, the Greek origin, the decision tree).
Perhaps it is a password you once set in 2009, now recovered from a database leak — a pet’s name (A–o), a birth month (10th month? October?), and ithmc as an acronym you’ve long forgotten. Or a username on a forgotten forum, where you argued about the nature of code and consciousness, before drifting away.
Here is a short experimental piece, treating the string as a kind of cryptographic ghost, a forgotten username, or a stuttering spell.
The first vowel is a , open and surrendered. The second vowel is o , round as a swallowed key. Between them, two dashes — not gaps, but the negative space where consonants used to breathe.
And then c , final as a closing parenthesis, or the soft click of a hard drive parking its head.
ithm arrives like a mechanical stammer: ithm — almost rhythm , but with the breath caught. ithm — close to algorithm , but missing the algo (the pain, the Greek origin, the decision tree).
Perhaps it is a password you once set in 2009, now recovered from a database leak — a pet’s name (A–o), a birth month (10th month? October?), and ithmc as an acronym you’ve long forgotten. Or a username on a forgotten forum, where you argued about the nature of code and consciousness, before drifting away.
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