1,915 research outputs found

    “Making data matter with Ken Casey” [edited interview transcript—blog post]. In Virapongse, A. (ed.), Making Data Matter (blog series)

    No full text
    ESIP is 20 years old! To celebrate, we interviewed ESIP community members on their perspectives on the progress of making Earth science data matter from over the last 20+ years. This is one in a series of interviews released over 2019. Original blog post: https://www.esipfed.org/esip-interviews/making-data-matter-with-ken-casey

    Strategic Communications for Influence: Lessons From the Annie E. Casey Foundation and Its KIDS COUNT Initiative

    No full text
    · This article describes how the Annie E. Casey Foundation is using the KIDS COUNT Network in a new way: as a strategic communications tool in its focused efforts toward policy change, broad social change, and improved conditions for vulnerable children and families. An outcome map illustrates links between this strategy and the intended outcomes. · Case illustrations of KIDS COUNT grantee activities surrounding the release of the 2008 KIDS COUNT Data Book describe the efforts of grantees in six states where the quantity and quality of media coverage surrounding the national data book reflected the kind of coverage that Casey believes will help achieve its desired outcomes. · Strategic communications approaches such as relationships with journalists, use of locally relevant information, use of locally relevant media advocacy strategies, good preparation, and a solution orientation were present in states demonstrating desirable media coverage. · Prescribing specific communications tactics matters less than supporting the network’s general capacity to engage in year-round strategic communications approaches to create conditions (e.g., reputations, relationships) that will contribute to successful media advocacy related to a specific event such as the release of the national data book

    African American Storyteller, Victoria A. Casey McDonald

    No full text
    In the deep resonance of storyteller Victoria A. Casey McDonald’s voice, you will hear her tell stories about growing up in Western North Carolina, and the kind of Christmas she had as a child. The late Victoria was our friend, a CSA board member, author, and “Stories of Mountain Folk” interviewer

    Peer Networking and Community Change: Improving Foundation Practice

    No full text
    · This article brings together the Annie E. Casey Foundation’s 15 years of experience with peer networking— examining through two research studies the process of peer networking and its impact, both with community-based and funder groups. · Peer networking helps people with common interests to exchange information, disseminate good practices, and build a leadership structure for work they do together, such as a community change initiative. · Casey’s research identified 10 good practices for effective peer networking, as well as 10 challenges that can affect its success; a four-level model was created to provide context for these findings. · The research indicates that peer networking can have significant impact for communities and in meeting philanthropic goals, but it is costly and must be carefully structured if it is to be successful. · Casey is working to synthesize its peer networking practices into a more strategic framework, and other foundations might use some of its lessons learned to enhance their own practices in this area

    The Family History of Casey Christall

    No full text
    Casey Christall authored this family history as part of the course requirements for HIST 550/700 Your Family in History offered online in Spring 2020 and was submitted to the Pittsburg State University Digital Commons. Please contact the author directly with any questions or comments: [email protected]

    Municipal Elections, 1993

    No full text
    A letter to Anna and Todd Casey encouraging them to vote for Craig McDaniel and requesting campaign funds

    Juvenalia, or How I came to own a Blu-Ray of Point Break

    No full text
    Agony Klub and Publication Studio Vancouver are pleased to present Whitney Houston, vol. 2. A continuation of Whitney Houston, et. al., editor/author Casey Wei invites six writers to reflect on their relationship to popular music in film, keeping in mind that popular music has always been as much about the desire for an image as about the catchiness of a song. The resulting essays on Elliot Smith, Amélie, Real Genius, The Pixies, Drive, and The Conversation explore themes of time, love, and evolution.final article publishedReal Genius (1985

    [[alternative]]COMMENTARY ON THE TRANSLATION OF Marriage, Divorce, and Children’s Adjustment

    No full text
    [[abstract]]Based on the study of an in-house English-to-Chinese translation work of Robert E. Emery’s Marriage, Divorce, and Children’s Adjustment, the author studies a number of strategies that evidently help improve quality of such work. In this thesis, the author discusses techniques including segmented translation and reader orientation proposed by several professional practitioners and researchers in the field of English-Chinese translation. The evaluation of a translated text is a vital factor to assuring the quality of translation. In this thesis, the translated work is evaluated against Juliane House’s modal of translation quality assessment, which employs both linguistic-textual and social approaches to translation evaluation. In addition, Nicole Martinez Melis and Amparo Hurtado Albir’s notion of translation competence is used as a yardstick to evaluate the translator’s knowledge and skills in translation. The author finds in conclusion that while the fluency of a piece of translation work seems more critical than literal fidelity when evaluated for effectiveness in delivering the message of the original text, only a set of ad-hoc measurements in the current evaluation tools is available to point out deficiencies and flaws in a translation work. It would be desirable to develop an objective and consistent set of criteria for such evaluation in the future.

    Glaciology Data Report, Casey 1981

    No full text
    Progress Code: completedA collection of the data from the 1981 Glaciology program at Casey, collected from several inland traverses. Measurements include accumulation and density, barometric profiling, ice movement, gravity, ice thickness and bedrock profiling, temperatures at 10m depth, surface density, and oxygen isotopes.<br/><br/>These documents have been scanned and are available for download from the provided URL. The dataset download contains the following file:<br/><br/>Glaciology Data Report Casey 1981.pd
    corecore