1,946 research outputs found
How do we do race in design and technology?
This chapter deliberately takes a different format to others within this book. The authors and contributors have come together to co-author and collaborate on this work, which we think breaks new ground within design and technology. For the contributors, we are drawing on the teacher as researcher and teacher as reflexive practitioner; the authors are drawing on their lived experiences to explore the question, how do we do race in design and technology, and begin the road to exploring some possible answers.
We also wondering: Who are the voices that have shaped the design & technology curriculum around raceissues of decolonisation, definitions and clarifications?
The chapter starts with an overview of decolonisation and diversity in design and technology, and then broadens out into understanding the language around race and diversity. The design discourse takes us to globalisation and cultural values and the monolithic space taken by only structuring the current design and technology curriculum with a Eurocentric modelling of design history. The narrative voices of teachers then provide the backdrop to rest of the chapter, their voices speak of the differing experiences, their perspectives asreflective practitioners are there to offer thoughts and reflections, they do not yet provide answers. The chapter ends with a call to reclaim the curriculum and bring the marginalised voices in from the margins
Regularidad de la función maximal de Hardy-Littlewood
We treat some properties of the Hardy-Littlewood maximal function in which the author has made contributions to their knowledge. We will focus on issues related to regularity.Tratamos algunas propiedades de la función maximal de Hardy-Littlewood en las que el autor ha realizado aportaciones a su conocimiento. Nos centraremos en cuestiones relativas a la regularidad
Weighted Calderón-Hardy spaces
summary:We present the weighted Calderón-Hardy spaces on Euclidean spaces and investigate their properties. As an application we show, for certain power weights, that the iterated Laplace operator is a bijection from these spaces onto classical weighted Hardy spaces. The main tools to achieve our result are an atomic decomposition of weighted Hardy spaces furnished by the author, fundamental solutions of iterated Laplacian and pointwise inequalities for certain maximal functions
Dr. Hardy Jackson, JSU Professor of History and Author 4
Dr. Hardy Jackson was an author and a Professor of History at Jacksonville State University.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib_ac_histimg_1990/1903/thumbnail.jp
Dr. Hardy Jackson, JSU Professor of History and Author 2
Dr. Hardy Jackson was an author and a Professor of History at Jacksonville State University.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib_ac_histimg_1990/1901/thumbnail.jp
Dr. Hardy Jackson, JSU Professor of History and Author 3
Dr. Hardy Jackson was an author and a Professor of History at Jacksonville State University.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib_ac_histimg_1990/1902/thumbnail.jp
Dr. Hardy Jackson, JSU Professor of History and Author 1
Dr. Hardy Jackson was an author and a Professor of History at Jacksonville State University.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib_ac_histimg_1990/1900/thumbnail.jp
sustainable tourism (France, 1997; Hall & Lew
Abstract Concern for the degradation of the environment (Holden, 2000; Russo, 1999) has seen the emergence of a small but steadily increasing number of UK organisations, which are primarily situated in the third sector (Office of the Third Sector, 2008). These are increasingly cited (Benson, 2004; Clifton & Benson, 2006; Coghlan, 2006) in the emerging and growing niche of volunteer tourism (Wearing, 2001). The organisations bring paying volunteers (tourists) and scientists together to work on research projects, and offer similar services but the range of specific research projects available to volunteers is both complex and diverse. This allows the organisations to differentiate their portfolio based around the projects' destinations (the locations are often remote), the type of ecosystem involved (e.g. marine, terrestrial, rainforest) and the actual activity or purpose around which the project is based (e.g. diving coral reefs, or related to wildlife). Despite this diversity, the organisations all operate in essentially a common framework of sustainability, that involve notions of sustainable development (Holden, 2000; IUCN, 1980; Murphy, 1994; World Commission on Environment and Development, 1987), sustainable tourism (France, 1997; Hall & Lew, 1998; Holden, 2000; UNWTO, 2004) and the triple bottom line (Rogers & Ryan, 2001; Vanclay, 2004; Willard, 2002). The framework of sustainability is built on three pillars: economic, environmental and social. The literature clearly indicates that a balance between the three pillars is essential if sustainability is to be achieved (Burns & Holden, 1995; Clarke, 1997; Cronin, 1990; Hardy, Beeton, & Pearson, 2002; Ko, 2005; Swarbrooke, 1999; United Nationals Development Programme, 2005). In order for this balance to be achieved and therefore, sustainable tourism development to be successful a range of stakeholders (Freeman, 1984; Friedman & Miles, 2002; Phillips & Freeman, 2003) (Hogg & Vaughan, 2002). Consequently, the aim of this research was to explore the complexity of trying to work within a framework of sustainability, with a given number of stakeholders (in this case, a UK organisation, its customers (volunteers, primarily British) and the local community (Indonesian) where the project operates) that may hold different values and the extent t
Writing for fun: Interview with Peter Corris, author of the Cliff Hardy detective novels
Australian author Peter Corris (1942–) talks about his transformation from anxious academic to lighthearted writer of detective novels, especially the Cliff Hardy series. He reveals the real-life models he used in creating Cliff Hardy, the authors he took as role models, and where he gets ideas for the plots and settings
Gaussian Hardy Spaces
In this thesis we study a preprint by Pierre Portal that introduces Gaussian Hardy Spaces and proves equivalence of norms.AnalyseDIAMElectrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Scienc
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