5,127 research outputs found
Podcast #32: : Mini-lecture Kate Wall on 'Exploring the method of practitioner inquiry for understanding teacher professional learning'
In this episode Kate talks about her work in the area of teacher professional learning and she links this to ideas of practitioner inquiry and voice
Oral history interview with Kate Hart
Kate Hart, author and artist, talks her youth and how she became interested in writing young adult literature. She discusses her book, After the Fall, explaining the circumstances that led her to write the book. Hart comments on the creativity side as well as her process of writing and briefly talks about some of her other work.The Deep Roots: Oklahoma Authors Collection is a series of interviews with authors who discuss their lives, work, and creative processes
Interview with Kate Brown
Kate Brown talks about her Maple Syrup Farm.https://digital.kenyon.edu/elfs_interviews/1040/thumbnail.jp
IT Lightning Talks: session #2
CERN's social media manager, Kate Kahle, gives an insight into how and why CERN is using social media
Kate Glondo Interview
Kate Glondo (b. 1911 to Francis Mynavich Maritich) talks about her family\u27s Croatian roots and migration to Roslyn, Washington. She talks about gardening, wine-making, lodges, burial customs, holidays, recreation, and her career as midwife. She talks about her marriage to Joe Glondo circa 1928, and his work in the No. 3 and No. 7 Mines. She discusses the effects of Prohibition and World Wars I and II on Roslyn.
The cover image shows Roslyn, circa 1940. The photograph was taken from the intersection of First Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Many of the businesses that lined the east side of Pennsylvania Avenue can be seen. On the left in the foreground is the Brick Saloon, which was managed by W. Sullivan. The next business was the Pioneer Grocery Store owned by Stephen Kuchin. The Panerio and Ramsay Barber Shops were also on this side of the street.https://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/roslyn_history/1037/thumbnail.jp
Kate Kahan Interview, April 18, 2002
Kate Kahan discusses her midwife experiences and describes how they empowered her as a woman and led her to attend college. She talks about her leadership roles in the Women’s Center at the University of Montana. Kahan explains the evolution of and controversy surrounding the “Take Back the Night” event on campus. She concludes by describing her work with WEEL [Working for Equality and Economic Liberation].https://scholarworks.umt.edu/mtfeminist/1020/thumbnail.jp
Kate Saporta (Innovation and Ideas Series)
In response to COVID-19 and 2020 Victorian bushfires Swinburne's Social Startup Studio launched 'Studio Clinics' to support struggling Victorian social enterprises. Manager, Social Startup Studio at Swinburne’s Centre for Social Impact, Kate Saporta talks about the free program which offers practical strategic advice, including financial forecasting, business diagnosis and re-modelling, and operational support
To the Point - Kate Beckingham
Speakers: Kate Beckingham, Scott HochbergContents include: On "To the Point," Scott Hochberg talks to Dr. Kate Beckingham about recombinant DNA research in agriculture
Kate Erpelding Interview, June 15, 1977
Kate Erpelding describes growing up on a farm in Minnesota. She discusses her chores, growing up speaking Czechoslovakian, and learning to speak Polish and English. Erpelding recalls the disciplinary techniques her parents used and social events that her family participated in as she was growing up. She talks about meeting her husband and getting married as well as describing her marriage as an equal partnership. Erpelding concludes about talking about the importance of respect for both partners in a marriage.
When this interview was conducted, the interviewee requested to remain anonymous in the transcript and audio. Archives and Special Collections has chosen to lift this restriction now that the interviewee is deceased.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/mtwomen_oralhistory/1026/thumbnail.jp
EMMA Talks: Dr. Amina Wadud: Feminist Muslim Voices
A presentation from EMMA Talks, Dr. Amina Wadud talks about the evolution of Muslim women are in the 21st Century as it relates to her own personal history and story. Dr. Amina Wadud is Professor Emiratis of Islamic Studies and Visiting Scholar at Starr King School for the Ministry. Author of Qur’an and Woman; and, Inside the Gender Jihad; she is a founding member of Sisters in Islam and resource person for Musawah: the global movement for reform in Muslim Personal Status Law
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