14,541 research outputs found

    Portrait of David Forbes, District Court Judge, N.S.W. [picture] /

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    Title from inscription on reverse.; Condition: Fair.; Inscriptions: "David Forbes, District Court Judge, N.S.W." --In ink on reverse. "Freeman & Co. Ltd., 346 George St., Sydney" --Printed beneath photograph

    IWU Freeman Yoon

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    Blog created by Hyeon-Bin (David) Yoon for the 2016 Freeman Asian Internship Progra

    Book review : Multigenerational family therapy by David S. Freeman

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    Review of: David S. Freeman. Multigenerational family therapy. New York: Haworth Press, 199

    Jan Freeman, 35th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Jan Freeman is the author of Hyena, Autumn Sequence, and Simon Says, which was nominated for the National Book Critics Circle Award in poetry. Her poems have been published in numerous journals and several anthologies. She co-edited the acclaimed Sisters: An Anthology (2009). Freeman founded Paris Press in 1995 in order to bring into print Muriel Rukeyser’s The Life of Poetry. She has been its director and publisher since. Paris Press educates the public about groundbreaking yet overlooked literature by women and has also championed the work of Virginia Woolf, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Ruth Stone and numerous other women writers of the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries

    Enseñanza de lenguas a través de contenido académico

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    Content-based language teaching is broadly used as it helps students develop both academic language, linguistic proficiency, and literacy, simultaneously building academic content knowledge.How to reference this article: Freeman, David e Yvonne S. Freeman, “Enseñanza de lenguas a través de contenido académico”, Revista Educación y Pedagogía, Medellín, Universidad de Antioquia, Facultad de Educación, vol. XX, núm. 51, (mayo-agosto), 2008, pp. 97-110.Recieved: may 2008Accepted:  may 2008La enseñanza de lenguas basada en contenidos es ampliamente usada porque ayuda a los estudiantes a desarrollar tanto el lenguaje académico, la suficiencia lingüística, como la literacidad, al tiempo que desarrollan el conocimiento del contenido académico.Cómo citar este artículo: Freeman, David e Yvonne S. Freeman, “Enseñanza de lenguas a través de contenido académico”, Revista Educación y Pedagogía, Medellín, Universidad de Antioquia, Facultad de Educación, vol. XX, núm. 51, (mayo-agosto), 2008, pp. 97-110.Recibido: mayo 2008Aceptado: mayo 200

    The effects of reducing worry in patients with persecutory delusions: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

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    BACKGROUND: Our approach to advancing the treatment of psychosis is to focus on key single symptoms and develop interventions that target the mechanisms that maintain them. In our theoretical research we have found worry to be an important factor in the development and maintenance of persecutory delusions. Worry brings implausible ideas to mind, keeps them there, and makes the experience distressing. Therefore the aim of the trial is to test the clinical efficacy of a cognitive-behavioral intervention for worry for patients with persecutory delusions and determine how the worry treatment might reduce delusions.METHODS: An explanatory randomized controlled trial - called the Worry Intervention Trial (WIT) - with 150 patients with persecutory delusions will be carried out. Patients will be randomized to the worry intervention in addition to standard care or to standard care. Randomization will be carried out independently, assessments carried out single-blind, and therapy competence and adherence monitored. The study population will be individuals with persecutory delusions and worry in the context of a schizophrenia spectrum diagnosis. They will not have responded adequately to previous treatment. The intervention is a six-session cognitive-behavioral treatment provided over eight weeks. The control condition will be treatment as usual, which is typically antipsychotic medication and regular appointments. The principal hypotheses are that a worry intervention will reduce levels of worry and that it will also reduce the persecutory delusions. Assessments will be carried out at 0 weeks (baseline), 8 weeks (post treatment) and 24 weeks (follow-up). The statistical analysis strategy will follow the intention-to-treat principle and involve the use of linear mixed models to evaluate and estimate the relevant between- and within-subjects effects (allowing for the possibility of missing data). Both traditional regression and newer instrumental variables analyses will examine mediation. The trial is funded by the UK Medical Research Council (MRC)/NHS National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) Efficacy and Mechanism Evaluation (EME) Programme.DISCUSSION: This will be the first large randomized controlled trial specifically focused upon persecutory delusions. The project will produce a brief, easily administered intervention that can be readily used in mental health services.Trial registration Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN23197625

    Portrait of David (or Daniel) Freeman, 1902

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    Photograph of a portrait of David (or Daniel) Freeman, ca.1902. A man with a trimmed beard and smiling eyes looks toward the left. He is wearing a dark suit, with a gray vest and light under-garment, as well as a tie.; He was born in Canada in 1837 and came to California in 1873. He was the owner of the Centinela Ranch when it was divided and Inglewood was sold off

    Two Concepts of Value, Two Rates of Profit, Two Laws of Motion

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    Article that appeared as Zarembka, P (ed) Economic Theory of Capitalism and its Crises, Research in Political Economy 18, pp241-48. Stanford, CT: JAI Press. (http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/bookdescription.cws_home/621298/description#description) Responds to debate initiated in Research in Political Economy 17 (http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/bookdescription.cws_home/621907/description#description) This article formed part of a four-way exchange on the rate of profit which appeared in Research in Political Economy 17 and 18 in 1999 and 2000, between David Laibman, Duncan Foley, Andrew Kliman and Alan Freeman. This piece constituted Freeman and Kliman’s response to the contributions of Foley and Laibman, themselves a response to our reactions to Laibman’s initial critique of the Temporal Single System Interpretation (TSSI) of Marx’s value theory. Our response establishes that both Laibman and Foley concede the fundamental point in the debate: there exist circumstances under which the rate of profit falls under cost-saving technical change, refuting Okishio’s theorem which states that the rate of profit cannot fall on these presuppositions in any circumstances. Our response assesses the reasons that, although Okishio’s theorem has been disproved, Marxist authors are unable or unwilling to acknowledge this fact. We dissect the faulty mathematical reasoning that lies behind the following notion: ‘the temporal rate of profit may fall, but it may also rise. Since it does not inevitably fall, Okishio’s theorem holds’. In fact, Okishio’s theorem asserts that the rate of profit may never fall. Therefore, mathematically, if a case is exhibited in which, under Okishio’s assumptions, the rate of profit does fall, the theorem is thereby disproved. Our response then establishes the general conditions under which the rate of profit does, or does not, fall.TSSI; MELT; value; Marx; price; profit rate; Okishio; non-equilibrium; equilibrium; money; sraffaTSSI, MELT, value, Marx, price, profit rate, Okishio, non-equilibrium, equilibrium, money
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