719 research outputs found

    Indicators of the Sustainability of NSF's Advanced Technological Education Program

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    This research briefing paper from Wayne Welch and Liesel Ritchie, produced as part of the DECA project, takes a look at the sustainability of NSF's Advanced Technological Education Program. This report summarizes the research done via a peer-generated Likert survey of current and past Principal Investigators, or PIs

    Letter from Ricardo Ritchie, Chairman, C.A. Board of Trustees, to Mr. Shoji Nagumo, Block Councilman, Heart Mountain, November 10, 1943

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    Correspondence from Ricardo Ritchie to Shoji Nagumo regarding recreation equipment at Heart Mountain incarceration camp. Includes funding, equipment purchase, and available recreation equipment.The Japanese American Archival Collection documents the people, places, and daily life of Japanese Americans, primarily those who lived in the once thriving community of pre-war Florin in the Sacramento region, as well as the conditions in American incarceration camps during World War II. The approximately 7,000 original items include personal and official letters, photographs, diaries, arts and crafts, newsletters, textiles, camps artifacts, yearbooks and other publications

    The Study of Scottish Missionary Rev. Hugh Ritchie to Formosa

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    The Presbyterian Church of England designated Missionary Rev. Hugh Ritchie to Formosa in 1867 is my research target in this study. According the related literatures, try to understand Rev. Hugh Ritchie contributions including doing missionary work, building churches, getting woman education moving, and etc. is the main purposes in the research to honor his contribution in Formosa. Firstly, the author discussed and understood the observation of getting missionary moving in Formosa. Secondly, Rev. Hugh Ritchie biographical notes consisting of his birth in Scotland in 1840, his education, his appointed to Formosa in 1867, the history of twelve years in doing his priesthood job and passing away and tomb in Kaohsiung, Formosa in September 1879. Finally, the author discussed more detailed Rev. Hugh Ritchie twelve years life and doing missionary work in Formosa to lay a foundation in the history of Christianity in Formosa then manifest his contributions in the wilderness Formosa

    Directions for sailing in the northern part of the Bay of Bengal / by Capt. John Ritchie, and Barth. Plaisted, marine surveyors to the Honorable East-India Company, and by Benjamin Lacam, proprietor of New-Harbour, in Bengal.

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    Published to accompany a number of charts, later revised and published in 1803 with title: Complete pilot for the northern part of the Bay of Bengal.; Electronic reproduction. Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, 2010

    Examination of social supports during graduate school and how they moderate stressors, anxiety, depression, flourishing, and positive well-being

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    Considering the significant number of graduate students (nearly 4.1 million in the U.S.) and the apparent lack of contemporary research on graduate students and mental health, this study strove to apply past research to an understudied population with hopes of sparking action for institutional change and change to a proactive versus reactive approach to mental health care. This study examined both negative and positive mental health outcomes of graduate students and how those outcomes were impacted by stressors and social support. An online survey broken into sections over stress, mental health, and social support was sent to all graduate students at a four year institution. The sample size was 260; an important note is that missing data analysis has not yet been conducted. The mean age was 31 years old, 67.50% of participants identified as a cisgender woman, 52.92% were out-of-state students, and half of the sample reported excellent or good physical health. Pearlin et al.'s (1981) stress process model was applied to the stressors, social support, and mental health of graduate students. Aneshensel and Uchechi (2014) summarize how beneficial the stress process model has been in stress research due to the study of what influence our social environments have on exposure to stressors, how the variance of access to personal and socials resources can play, and the roles of moderators on the effect of stressors on mental health. The following hypotheses were confirmed: graduate students who experience more stressors will have higher anxiety and depressive symptoms and lower flourishing and positive well-being; graduate students who have stronger social support will have lower levels of mental distress. These findings may serve as a starting place for discussing and discerning intervention practices to implement in graduate school to enhance and improve the mental health of graduate students and doing so from a positive well-being approach

    Dr Debbie Bird Rose

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    Anthropologist and author, Dr Debbie Bird RoseDonated by David Ritchie, 22/06/2016Photographs of the Kenbi Handover 2016, the resolution of the 37 year Kenbi Land Claim over the Cox Peninsula. The handback, presided over by Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, took place at Mandorah on 21 June 2016 and was attended by many of the people who had worked on, or been involved in the landclaim processes

    Dr Darrell Lewis

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    Northern Territory author and anthropologist, Dr Darrell LewisDonated by David Ritchie, 22/06/2016Photographs of the Kenbi Handover 2016, the resolution of the 37 year Kenbi Land Claim over the Cox Peninsula. The handback, presided over by Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, took place at Mandorah on 21 June 2016 and was attended by many of the people who had worked on, or been involved in the landclaim processes

    A Review of “Disaster and Development”

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    Mountain Born: Jean Ritchie\u27s Musical Voice

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    Experience and participate in Jean Ritchie\u27s songs, and explore their context in Appalachian music and culture. Join the “Forks of Troublesome Band” (an ad hoc group of ASA musicians, scholars and writers including Dana Wildsmith, Deborah Thompson, Ron Pen, Rich Kirby, and Margaret and Beth Folkemer) to experience, sing, and play varied selections from Jean Ritchie’s song repertoire, and to explore their context in Appalachian music and culture. “Song-ballets” with the texts will be provided so that everyone participates! Jean Ritchie, born 1922, Viper, Kentucky, has collected and performed traditional mountain songs, as well as being a songwriter, author, leading figure in the mountain dulcimer revival, recipient of a Fulbright scholarship, and activist for Appalachian environmental and human causes. Song selections will represent the following categories: songs from her family and community traditions; songs addressing Appalachian and world social issues such as peace, economic and ecological sustainability, and human equality; original songs published under the pseudonym “Than Hall;” original songs expressing love for her Appalachian home and culture; songs remade from traditional material; and songs from her Fulbright travel or with roots in the British Isles and Ireland

    Protection of the rights of children – failures in residential care in the UK

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    The author considers “Lost in care” – the Report of the Tribunal Inquiry into the Abuse of Children in care in the Former County Council Areas of Gwynedd and Clwyd since 1974 (The Waterhouse Report) – and its influence on the reform of child care. Article by Graham Ritchie (IALS) based on a paper delivered at a conference, “Legal Protection of Children”, held in Bloemfontein, South Africa, 21-23 August 2000. Published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies and its Society for Advanced Legal Studies. The Journal is produced by the Society for Advanced Legal Studies at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London
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