22 research outputs found

    Northern Psalms in Southern Contexts: Defining a Historical Setting for the Psalms of Asaph

    No full text
    The psalms of Asaph (50, 73-83) present an intriguing problem for their interpreters. Though these psalms show every sign of being used in the temple at Jerusalem, they contain a ponderous amount of traditions, geographic references, and names that would be more appropriate in Israel’s northern kingdom. The haphazard geographic and tradition-history provenance of these psalms is best reconciled by assuming a fundamental mixture between northern and southern material in the growing and cosmopolitan city of pre-exilic Jerusalem, beginning in the time of Hezekiah. As northern psalmists moved to Jerusalem after the conquests of the Assyrian empire in the late 8th c. BCE, they brought their traditions of worship and assimilated these traditions within the liturgies of Jerusalem’s temple. These psalms illumine how northern Israelites accommodated to their new Jerusalemite setting after 722 BCE, and how their psalms reflect their experience of forced displacement.PsalmsHistorical CriticismIsrael and JudahReligion of Ancient IsraelHistory of Ancient Israe

    Utilisation of ICT Tools and Teaching and Learning of ICT subject in A-Level Government Secondary Schools of Bukanga North, Isingiro District

    No full text
    The study assessed the utilisation of ICT tools in teaching and learning of ICT subject in A-Level government secondary schools of Bukanga North, Isingiro District. The main objective was to assess the utilization of ICT tools in teaching and learning ICT subject, with specific objectives to: examine whether the existing ICT tools are utilized in the teaching and learning of ICT as a subject; assess the effect of ICT tools on students' learning outcomes in ICT subject; and establish the relationship between the utilization of ICT tools and teaching and learning of ICT subject in A’ Level government secondary schools. The study adopted a descriptive survey research design targeting 214 participants, including 01 District Education Officer, 03 headteachers, 30 teachers, and 180 students. A sample size of 150 was selected using purposive, stratified, and simple random sampling techniques. Data were collected through questionnaires, interviews, and observation checklists, and analysed using SPSS version 24. Results revealed that ICT tools such as computers, projectors, and internet connectivity are moderately utilised (M = 3.72, SD = 0.87). ICT tools significantly improved student learning outcomes, including performance, digital skills acquisition, and motivation (M = 3.90, SD = 0.78). The study concluded that while ICT tools enhance lesson delivery and student engagement, challenges such as inadequate infrastructure, irregular power supply, and limited teacher training persist. The study recommends increased investment in ICT infrastructure, teacher capacity-building, and policy support for sustainable ICT integratio

    Active Learning Strategies and Student Attitude Towards Mathematics in Government Secondary Schools in Ruhaama County, Ntungamo District

    No full text
    The study aimed to examine the relationship between active learning strategies and students’ attitudes toward mathematics in government secondary schools in Ruhaama County. Specifically, the study aimed to identify the most commonly used active learning strategies in mathematics, analyse how students’ attitudes differ by gender in mathematics, and establish the relationship between active learning strategies and students' attitudes toward mathematics. The study adopted a descriptive survey research design. A sample of 196 Senior Four (S.4) was selected through stratified random sampling, while all 12 teachers were purposively selected, with 10 participating. Questionnaires were administered to students, while semi-structured interviews were conducted with teachers. Data analysis was performed using SPSS version 25, generating descriptive statistics and inferential analysis. Findings revealed that the most commonly used strategies were group discussions (mean = 4.32), real-life examples (mean = 3.81), and peer teaching (mean = 3.67). The study concludes that active learning strategies significantly enhance students’ attitudes toward mathematics and help bridge gender disparities in classroom engagement. It is recommended that schools promote the consistent use of strategies like group work, problem-solving, and peer teaching. Additionally, teachers should be supported with training and resources to effectively implement these approache

    Description of a New Caribou from Northern British Columbia; and, Remarks on Rangifer montanus:

    No full text
    by J.A. Allen.Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History ; v. 16, article 15. Date of publication: Apr. 16, 1902. Cf. introd. text to v. 16. Specimens classified as Rangifer osborni collected in Sept., 1897, in the Cassiar Mountains, B.C., by Andrew J. Stone during the 1897-1899 Constable Expeditions to the Northwest; Rangifer montanus originally described in 1899 by Ernest Thompson Seton from a mounted specimen collected in the Illecillewaet watershed, near Revelstoke, Selkirk Range, B.C

    August Tittel (1691–1756): The (Mis)fortunes of an Eighteenth-Century Translator

    No full text
    August Tittel, a Lutheran pastor, translator, ‘minor author’, and fugitive, was best known to contemporaries for his German translation of Humphrey Prideaux’s The Old and New Testament Connected and for his turbulent life. Together with his printed oeuvre, Tittel’s extant correspondence, especially with his patron Ernst Salomon Cyprian, allow us a close scrutiny of the life and work of a minor and troublesome member of the Republic of Letters. Despite its peculiarities, there is much in his career which is indicative of broader trends in early eighteenth-century scholarship, e.g. networks of patronage and a German interest in Jansenist and English biblical scholarship, theology, and confessional polemics. This view of the Republic of Letters ‘from below’ sheds light on a class of minor scholars, which often evades the radar of modern scholarship, but was an essential part of the early modern Republic of Letters.</jats:p

    The clergy of the deaneries of Rochester and mailing in the diocese of Rochester, c. 1770 – 1870

    No full text
    This is a study of the concerns and life - style of the clergy of the established Church in two Kent Deaneries throughout the hundred year period, 1770 -1870. How far, it is considered, were episcopal hopes, which were expressed in the Charges of Bishop and Archdeacon, fulfilled in the parishes, especially in the matters of residence and education. The extent of non-residence is deduced from. such evidence as is available for the earlier part of the period and after 1830 from Visitation and other returns. The provision of Sunday Schools is used as an example of clerical response to a diocesan policy in the field of education. The exercise of patronage, residence, plurality, the length ofincumbencies, the employment of curates and their prospects, are looked at throughout the period. The provision of new churches, agrarian unrest, tithe and clerical emoluments, church rate, relationship with dissent, worship provision , the visitation process, the clergyman's role in society, the differing demands of town ministry and rural ministry are examined as events bring them to the fore . The priorities of successive bishops are noted and the lives of sample clergymen are taken for each period, both to flesh-out the statistics and to illustrate the evolving pattern of ministry

    Lessons from Uganda on strategies to fight poverty

    No full text
    Countries receiving debt relief under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries initiative will be among the first to benefit from the new World Bank -- International Monetary Fund approach to strengthening the impact on poverty of concessional assistance in low-income countries. The new approach features a more inclusive and participatory process for helping recipient countries develop poverty reduction strategies. From these strategies, joint Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) will bring together the country's own priorities and Bank-Fund assistance to the country. In Uganda, such a strategy has existed for several years. Uganda was one of the first low-income countries to prepare a comprehensive national strategy for poverty reduction using a participatory approach. Indeed, its experience contributed substantially to the design of the PRSPs. Uganda's top leadership is heavily committed to poverty reduction. Formulation of Uganda's Poverty Eradication Action Plan (PEAP) in 1996-97 was the executive branch's effort to make that commitment and vision operational.The authors draw lessons from the drafting of Uganda's PEAP. First, the plan made extensive use of existing data and research about Uganda to refocus a range of public policies and interventions relevant to poverty reduction. Second, the government's approach was highly participatory, with central and local governments, the donor community, nongovernmental organizations and civil society, and academics invited to contribute. Third, the government was quick to translate the plan into its budget and medium-term spending framework. Public expenditures on basic services were significantly increased after adoption of the PEAP in 1997. The authors discuss the general characteristics of a poverty reduction action plan, drawing on Uganda's experience; discuss what is known about poverty in Uganda and identify shortcomings in the data; examine the macroeconomic and fiscal policies that were considered most important to poverty reduction during the participatory process; discuss the delivery of public services, especially those that directly affect the poor; and highlight problems associated with land issues, including problems with access to credit and financial services and with the security of productive assets.Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Environmental Economics&Policies,Public Health Promotion,Health Economics&Finance,Services&Transfers to Poor,Poverty Assessment,Environmental Economics&Policies,Achieving Shared Growth,Governance Indicators,Health Economics&Finance

    The historical and antiquarian interests of Thomas Tanner, 1674-1735, Bishop of St. Asaph

    No full text
    The Tanner collection of printed books and manuscripts today forms one of the most important bequests ever to have been received by the Bodleian Library, Oxford, and the present study is an attempt to throw some light on the formation and history of this collection, and to enable students to oome to a better understanding of its contents through an account of the historical and antiquarian interests of Thomas Tanner. From comparatively humble beginnings Tanner won his way to the episcopal bench, but he was an undistinguished cleric and he owed his ultimate success in the Church to a lifelong devotion to his duties and to his wide reputation as a scholar. Born at Market Lavington in 1674, he matriculated at Queen's College, Oxford, at a time when that foundation was the hub of antiquarian activity within the University and his natural abilities in this direction were soon developed to the full. His worth was quickly recognised and he was welcomed into a wide circle of scholars who were amongst the foremost antiquarians of the day. Arthur Charlett, the Master of University College, took an especial interest in the young student and under his guidance Tanner undertook a number of literary projects which enjoyed varying degrees of success; it was partly through Charlett's influence that he later became first Chaplain and then fellow of All Souls College. By now his lifetime's work as an antiquary had taken shape. As an undergraduate he had started work on a county history of Wiltshire but had laid this aside in order to bring to completion a small handbook on religious houses entitled Notitia Monastica. This was an immediate success, but instead of returning to his study of Wiltshire Tanner now found himself at work on a project which was to develop into his Bibliotheca Britannico-Hibernica. He was to labour at this and at a revision of the Notitia for the remainder of his life. Before the turn of the century Tanner had established himself as a young scholar of promise and his name was widely known. His reputation was built on firm foundations for he had passed many hours in the libraries of Oxford. He had prepared catalogues of collections in the Bodleian Library the Ashmolean Museum for the mighty Catalogi Librorum Manuscriptorum Angliae et Hiberniae and his work on the Bibliotheca had led him to examine several of the college libraries in some detail. During the summer months he enlarged the field of his researches by travelling to London to work in the libraries of the metropolis and it was on one of these visits that he met John Moore, Bishop of Norwich. Moore had collected one of the finest private libraries in the land and he was immediately impressed by Tanner's love Of books and wide knowledge of them, so much so that he very soon made Tanner his private chaplain. The appointment was purely a nominal one and Tanner's duties were confined to the management of Moore's library during those months when the preparation of the Bibliotheca took him to London. It was not until 1701 that his association with Moore brought about the first major change in Tanner's adult life. In that year he was made Chancellor of Norwich and he also married Moore's eldest daughter. His new appointment obliged him to leave Oxford and set up house in Norwich and his academic undertakings were temporarily laid on one side as he devoted himself to the study of canon law. Even when he had mastered his new duties he was still unable to devote as much time as he would have liked to his studies for his Chancellorship involved him in a law suit, and his only daughter died at an early age and was soon followed by his wife. In 1712 he married once again and in the follow- ing year Moore, now Bishop of Ely, collated him to a preben- dal stall in that cathedral; but when Moore died in 1714 Tanner was left without any influential patron, and for several years he received no further preferment. He does not seem to have worried unduly over this and he settled down to a quiet life revolving around his ecclesiastical duties and hie beloved studies. After almost perpetual childbearlng Tanner's second wife died in 1713 having not long before given birth to the only one of his children to survive. It was probably the need to provide for his son that made him at last make an effort to improve his position and, after once more gaining a welcome footing in Oxford as a Canon of Christ Church, he eventually obtained the Bishopric of St. Asaph in 1732. As a bishop Tanner made little impact on ecclesiastical or political affairs and his episcopate was scarcely more than the conscientious discharge of his duties as far as his ill-health would allow; however, his frequent indispositions did not prevent him from marrying for a third time. His tenure of the see was very short and he died at Oxford in 1735. The bare recital of the facts of Tanner's life is unimpressive. A slow progression through minor preferments to a bishopric is indicative of a devoted rather than an outstanding clergyman and the publication at the age of twenty-one of an octavo volume is in itself hardly sufficient to entitle Tanner to be remembered as a scholar. Much of his reputation today can obviously be attributed to the fact that both the Notitia and the Bibliotheca were published posthumouely, but in fact he enjoyed a very similar reputation whilst he was still alive. His antiquarian knowledge was very wide and his researches were thorough; moreover, as a result of several discriminating purchases he had formed a fine collection of books and manuscripts and it is not sur- prising that his many academic friends turned to him with their problems. He was always ready with advice and assistance and the help that he dispensed so widely is often acknowledged in the learned works of the day. His unseen hand must surely remain untraced in many other pub- lications and his academic ability is fully reflected by the calibre of the people with whom he became genuinely friendly. Tanner's antiquarian interests fall into two distinct groups: his projected works and his collections. During the course of his life he embarked upon several scholarly undertakings but he only made any appreciable degree of progress with four of these. Although his History of Wiltshire was the least successful it played an important part in bringing him to the notice of the academic world. In Tanner's youth the county history was very much in vogue and as no full account of Wiltshire had as yet appeared it is not surprising to find his early researches directed towards the preparation of such an account. It was in this connection that he came into contact with John Aubrey who had formed large collections relating to Wiltshire which Tanner eventually managed to borrow, but they did not prove to be as informative as he had hoped and when Edmund Gibson asked him to contribute Wiltshire material to a new edition of William Camden's Britannia he was forced to rely for the most part on collections that he himself had made. The Britannia of 1695 was a complete success and linked Tanner's name with those of several established scholars. Early in 1694 Tanner issued printed proposals for his Wiltshire but he seems to have made very little progress after this. For the rest of his life he was to be regarded as an authority on the county but his move to Norwich, an event that finally made him abandon the project altogether, led him to take an equal interest in East Anglia and he supplied the additions for Norfolk and Suffolk in a later revision of the Britannia. Tanner also encouraged and assisted Francis Blomefield with his History of Norfolk. The Notitia Monastica was published in 1695 and, although this work was one which had developed from his natural inter- ests and was to serve as the basis for much further study, Tanner's main object in putting it to the press was to attract attention and patronage to himself. Once he became established in the world he felt that he could afford to spend more time on the thorough preparation of his undertakings and he rapidly lost the drive necessary to bring them to a satis- factory completion. It was this desire to make his works as comprehensive as possible that led him to enlarge the original design of the Bibllotheca out of all recognition, and in this case his delays eventually resulted in another scholar partially forestalling his work. He repeatedly told his friends and occasionally advertised in the press, that the Notitia and the Bibliotneca would soon be forth- coming and then postponed his final preparation in order to visit yet another library or to consult yet another book. Both were unfinished at his death and had to undergo editor- ial adaptation before they could be printed. The Notitia and the Bibliotheca are still regularly consulted by research workers and a study of their preparation is not without interest. The problems that faced Tanner were those that faced other antiquaries, and his dealings with his publisher and the learned, if somewhat erratic, correspondence that he maintained in connection with his researches are typical of the period. No one could deny the truth of Tanner's plea that his ecclesiastical duties seriously interfered with his studies, but many of his contemporaries produced numerous learned works under similar conditions and Tanner'sfailure in this respect must be regarded as unusual for a man of his reputation. The fourth of Tanner's undertakings to be considered did in fact see the light of day but only after he had delegated the preparation of the work to another. As an undergraduate Tanner had been friendly with Anthony Wood and on his death- bed the Oxford antiquary had charged him with the continuation of his Athenae Oxonienses. The first edition of the Athenae had resulted in the prosecution of its author for libel, and Tanner was not unnaturally reluctant to publish the continuation. After many years he wae prevailed upon to part with Wood's papers in order that they might be incorporated into a new edition but he only did so after much hesitation and he reserved the right to strike out some of the material that Wood had written. The Athenae has become a standard work of reference and it is important to establish whether Tanner's assertion that he only made minor alterations to Wood's text is correct. Little of the original material now remains, but the present account attempts to make a definite contribution to an appreciation of the Athenae from an aspect that has hitherto received little attention. Tanner's collection of books and manuscripts was a particularly fine one and a study of its formation and history and an analysis of its content is extremely interesting. Tanner started his collection during his early years at Oxford and he consistently added to it for the remainder of his life. From time to time his journeys around the diocese of Norwich enabled him to obtain some of the valuable material that lay in the country houses of East Anglia, and on two occasions he made very important bulk purchases. When he became Bishop of St. Asaph he transferred his library to Oxford, which seemed to be the most convenient resting-place for it and meant that it was already near to the Bodleian where he intended it should be deposited after his death, but on the journey it was sunk in the River Thames and could not be recovered for twenty-four hours. Tanner effected what repairs he could and since its deposit in the Bodleian the collection hae been extensively restored. It is hard to assess the extent of the damage suffered in this disaster for there are many other reasons why the collection as we know it today can only be regarded as forming part of Tanner's original library. The terms of Tanner's will permitted the Bodleian to reject unwanted items and there are indications that many of the volumes were not even offered to the library; moreover, problems of administration have meant that several of the books accepted have either been dispersed from the collection or disposed of as duplicates. A detailed analysis of the printed books has revealed several interesting facts about Tanner's habits as a collector and it has been possible to formulate general principles which often give an indication of the provenance of certain individual items. This is particularly important because the restoration of the collection involved the removal of many of the original end- papers, with the consequent elimination of valuable information relating to the previous owners of the books. The present arrangement of the Tanner manuscripts has been said to be the least satisfactory of any in the Bodleian Library and, although most of the papers were bound after their deposit, it is possible to trace many aspects of the present order back to the time when they were in Tanner's possession. A similar analysis to that carried out on the printed books has revealed several additional facts about Tanner's interests as a collector, and also shows that considerably more of the collection than has hitherto been thought was obtained in his purchase of the manuscripts of Archbishop Sancroft. Where possible the results of the analyses have been appended in tabular form in order that they may be more readily available to the many people who consult the Tanner collections
    corecore